T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Gill 05. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It also depends on why they possibly deserve to be shopped. A dozy bint near me had two blokes living there with her and was causing a heck of a lot of problems with noisy cars in the early hours and drunken abuse to neighbours at all hours. It got to be really upsetting for the old couple next door. The slapper rented the house privately and the landlord and his wife were being threatened by her two blokes when they tried to evict them. The only thing that worked was telling the local authority about her goings on and they stopped paying her rent and council tax. She has had to move now cos they were spending the rent money instead of paying their landlord and so the two mates trashed the house and they left.
So yes, there are times when it is for the greater good and not just cos you don't like someone.
I'd give them a chance - maybe two weeks - to rectify the situation themselves first - and then report them if they didn't stop claiming what they weren't entitled to.
However, be aware that reporting someone isn't an anonymous process. One of my sister's friends reported someone who claimed invalidity benefit saying she was unable to work because of MS because the woman was working full time as a hotel cleaner at the same time - for cash in hand, as well as having a bar job in the evenings.
The benefit fraud investigation team told the woman the name and address of the person who reported her. This woman then went on to harrass my sister's friend and commited criminal damage to her car. The police didn't want to know and basically said that she deserved it for poking her nose in someone else's business.
Hi Gill, I'd agree with the others who suggested that it really does depend on the circumstances. I know many people on benefits who SERIOUSLY struggle to get by on the money they get from the Benefits Agency. They have children, don't spend any money on themselves and really find it difficult to cope. If they went out and earned a little bit of money on the side to make their life a little easier, I wouldn't blame them at all. However, if there's someone claiming incapacity benefit and running around drunk every night before collapsing in front of their widescreen telly, for example, I might be inclined to tell but as long as they're not doing anything to bother me, I'd probably stay out of it. If it was phoning the NSPCC because you suspect child abuse or the police because you suspect domestic violence, then you can't ignore it but something like this... I don't know. You need to consider the circumstances involved and the possible consequences for your actions.
Good luck! It's a tricky one! xxx