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    • if you mean post stuff here for us to read you redact it and use PDF  read UPLOAD dx  
    • tell her to simply ignore all the harassment and laugh at them.  
    • you dont need to hide times dates and £figures can you please type the POC out in full not your abridged version above. dx  
    • you mean you've done AOS? not filed a defence yet? dx  
    • Rather than dsunaks lies, lets look at the reaL Data and real black holes in the UKs budget - all created by the poop Tories   Public sector finances, UK: April 2024   Main points Borrowing – the difference between public sector spending and income – was (a black hole of) £20.5 billion in JUST April 2024, the fourth highest April borrowing since monthly records began in 1993. Borrowing in April 2024 was £1.5 billion more than in April 2023 and £1.2 billion more than the £19.3 billion forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR). Public sector receipts grew by £1.6 billion compared with April 2023, however, this growth was outstripped by a £3.1 billion increase in spending over the same period. Since our March 2024 publication, we have increased our initial estimate of borrowing in the financial year ending March 2024 by £0.8 billion to £121.4 billion, now £7.3 billion more than the £114.1 billion forecast by the OBR. Public sector net debt excluding public sector banks (debt) at the end of April 2024 was provisionally estimated at 97.9% of gross domestic product (GDP); this was 2.5 percentage points more than at the end of April 2023, and remains at levels last seen in the early 1960s. Excluding the Bank of England, debt was 89.9% of GDP, 8.0 percentage points lower than the wider debt measure. Public sector net worth excluding public sector banks was in deficit by £703.4 billion at the end of April 2024, a £93.5 billion larger deficit than at the end of April 2023.     and the Tory legacy of financial mismanagement  to be passed on :   UK government debt 2023 | Statista WWW.STATISTA.COM Government debt in the United Kingdom reached over 2.25 trillion British pounds in 2022/23, compared with 1.83 trillion pounds in... - and graph does NOT show the increases as it should  
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Tom Brennan v NatWest - This is a must-read!!!


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Blimey - what time does your postman deliver then. We get ours by 11:00. Nah, this is tooooo important to be left to the postal service.

 

Now if they had been required to deliver the CB information it would have got there safely I'm sure.

 

 

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:(

 

All good karma to you for trying, Tom.

:p Wanting out of the red and into the pink! :p

 

If I've been nice please tip my scales. If I've been naughty, tip 'em twice! ;)

 

CURRENTLY CAGGING -

 

NatWest Bank - no response to S.A.R - (Subject Access Request), 40 days passed

 

Natwest CC - no response to CCA, 12+30 days passed. Calls continue, I ignore.

 

Sainsburys CCs x 2 - Current T&Cs rec'd in response to CCA request. Letter sent re lack of prescribed terms. Calls continue, mobile set to auto ignore.

 

Capital One - Copy application form rec'd in response to CCA. Letter sent re lack of prescribed terms. Standard final response received. Calls continue, I ignore.

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So gutted for you Tom, you put up a great fight.

Wishing you well.

Night Owl

Keep up the fight against Bank Charges.

 

 

Got Debt problems?

Don't panic, put the kettle on and read this

 

:-) Everything I write comes from my heart and head! The large filling cabinet that is my knowledge of life, however warped that may be!! :-)

 

<<< Please tickle my star!! if I have managed to help you or just made you chuckle!

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Bad luck Tom

 

It seems very unjust that the banks have been able to get away with not only continuing to levy these charges, but not being made to reveal their true costs by the courts. My understanding of the OFT case is that the banks still wont have to do this, and until they do I dont see how this issue can be resolved. If the OFT is protecting our interests as the judge seems to believe then heaven help us as its done a rubbish job of it so far. I wouldnt put it past the OFT to manage to lose the case, but even if it does anyone with a brain can see these charges are unfair and this issue wont go away. Also, the judges assertion that the banks arent making additional profits off these charges seems incredibly naive.

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Tom, I have always felt you were fighting a battle against the tide of financial institutions and like minded fiduciaries.Ostriches and sand spring to mind with some of the decisions being returned from our C.Cs. With the continuing support of this most excellent C.A.G.and a little luck the tide may turn hopefully in our favour. You have given lots of people hope in your endeavour for a FAIR hearing.You have been very brave in the attempt and I am sure some good will come of it. However it is an uphill battle against very powerful forces. "EXEMPLO DUCEMUS"

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Best Wishes Tom, a valiant attempt, I'm sure we haven't heard the last of Tom Brennan. Keep snapping at the monsters heels, eventually you will find the weakness, even if next time it is for a Client.

 

I take my hat off to you Sir (and bite my thumb at them).

 

All the very best.

 

Tide

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A valiant try by Tom on behalf of the public interest, at substantial personal cost. I am sure his courage and effort is much appreciated by millions.

 

CB018387.jpg

 

This court battle has always been fought between two unequal armies -- a phalanx of six NatWest barristers with legal fees no object, ranged against Tom himself plus an unpaid helper or three. Although this action failed to attain the holy grail, namely exposing in open court NatWest's £2 cost multiplied nineteen-fold into an extortionate £38 penalty charge, nevertheless this action brought before the gaze of millions something which UK banks are desperate to hush up. Irish Republic banks would not be embarassed by such exposure, as they levy an equitable £3 penalty charge, whereas across the border Northern Ireland banks (owned by UK banks) would be, as they too charge extortionate UK-level penalties.

 

Both judges would not accept Tom volunteering to speak for the public interest. This was not completely surprising as Tom did not walk into court with explicit endorsements from, for instance, the 140,000 members of CAG, or from MoneySavingExpert.co.uk, PenaltyCharges.co.uk, WhichMagazine.co.uk, etc.

 

The OFT was recognised by both judges as defender of the public interest. Within six short weeks, if the OFT were to press for lowering bank penalty charges to £12, this would still remain a painfully high figure, because of the clustering of penalty charges which characteristically terrorise any bank accounts falling into cashflow difficulty with no way out. Any account which, for being overdrawn £5 could previously have been punished with £600 penalties within a month made up of £35 charges, could still be punished with repeated new charges of £12 adding up to £200. In the case of Lloyds Bank since 1st November 2007, I understand their new rules stipulate the levy of penalty charges up to a maximum of £400 per month.

 

Time to awake, the Great British Public, from John O'Groats to Lands End.

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