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- Have YOU been unfairly fined? Email katherine.lawton@dailymail.co.uk
A woman was slapped with a £150 fine for pouring the remnants of her coffee down a drain after she was 'chased' by three council officers.
Burcu Yesilyurt, from Kew, west London, said she tipped a small amount of the drink from her reusable cup down the road gully because she didn't want to spill it on the bus.
But moments later, she was 'shocked' to see three male enforcement officers 'chasing' her down the street as she stood at the bus stop near Richmond station.
The officers fined her £150 under Section 33 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990, reduced to £100 if she paid within 14 days.
Ms Yesilyurt said she found the encounter 'quite intimidating' and was left feeling 'shaky' on her way to work.
But Richmond-upon-Thames Council insisted its officers 'acted professionally and objectively' and said the punishment was issued in accordance with its policies.
Ms Yesilyurt told the BBC: 'I noticed my bus was approaching, so I just poured the leftover bit. It wasn't much, it was just a tiny little bit.
'As soon as I turned around, I noticed three men, enforcement officers, chasing me, and they stopped me immediately.'
The local claimed she was not aware that pouring liquid down a drain was against the law when she did so on October 10.
It is an offence under Section 33 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 to dispose of waste 'in a manner likely to pollute water or land.'
Tipping liquids into street drains falls under this rule.
Ms Yesilyurt said she asked the officers if there were signs informing people of the law but they did not respond.
A spokesperson for Richmond Council said body-worn camera footage was reviewed and they did 'not agree that officers behaved aggressively'.
The Daily Mail has contacted Richmond Council for further comment.
Last year, Stoke City Council jobsworths slapped a couple with a £400 littering fine after one of them put an envelope in a public bin, and they were tracked down by the address on the front.
Deborah and Ian Day were hit with individual fines of £200 after fishing out the envelope which contained their address.
Deborah, who lives in Bentilee, Stoke-on-Trent, was on her way to work when she put the envelope in the public bin on her street.
But council investigators said this breaches sections 87 and 88 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990 and constituted it as an offence of littering because household waste cannot be put in a public bin.
A Stoke-on-Trent City Council spokesperson said at the time: 'Stoke-on-Trent City Council is maintaining its zero-tolerance approach to illegal dumping in our towns and with that comes enforcement. We are continuing with proactive patrolling and investigations.
'Once an area is under investigation and while evidence is being processed, we arrange for the removal of the waste with our cleansing teams. This case is currently under investigation with our Environmental Crime Team.
'Fixed Penalty Notices are issued as an alternative to prosecution proceedings in court. We are committed to working together to clean up our city and will enforce, where evidence supports, against waste offences.'