Police Fine UK Shopper For Buying Wine During Coronavirus Lockdown

Stories of draconian & erroneous enforcement of coronavirus rules continue to stack up.

UK police issued a fine to a shopper who bought wine and potato chips during the coronavirus lockdown, claiming that these were “non-essential” items.

“I was walking through Holyrood Park on Sunday afternoon (5 April) on my way back from Morrisons (a supermarket). Two officers asked to look inside my bag, and then fined me for only having crisps, other snacks and a bottle of wine,” the shopper told Edinburgh Live.

Another person in West Lothian tweeted to report a nurse in uniform being fined after leaving a patient’s house and someone who left a shop after purchasing a bottle of wine. Both were fined £30.

Another man reported that his friend’s daughter had also been fined £30 for buying wine and snacks.



https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

Another London resident claimed he had been fined simply for taking his dog for a walk late at night, something which is perfectly legal.

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

A woman who had finished walking her dog and was about to buy groceries for her 74-year-old mother was also fined.

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

A woman also complained to Police Scotland that officers had rifled through her friend’s shopping bag and fined her after discovering a bottle of Prosecco.

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

The fines are a misapplication of the law and should be dismissed. Downing Street clarified last week that shoppers can purchase any item that is being sold. Since any journey to buy food is treated as “essential” and the only shops that are open are food shops, all purchases are therefore technically “essential.”

The government’s intervention to clarify the law came after Cambridge Police tweeted that they were monitoring “non-essential” supermarket aisles in a local branch of Tesco to make sure people weren’t purchasing frivolous items.

Northamptonshire Police chief constable Nick Adderley also prompted outrage after he appeared in a video to warn people who were buying unessential items at grocery stores that their purchases may be scrutinized by the authorities.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Share this article
Shareable URL
Prev Post

Video: UK Police Break In to Man’s House to Check He’s Not Having a Social Gathering

Next Post

Migrant Youths Riot in Belgium Despite Coronavirus Lockdown

Leave a Reply.

Read next
0
Share
0 items

modernity cart

You have 0 items in your cart