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Shocking images have shown how Sadiq Khan's TfL enforcers are hunting down and seizing the cars of thousands of Londoners refusing to pay ULEZ fines.
Around 78,000 car owners are still refusing to pay ULEZ fines - the equivalent of three per cent of all cars in the zone.
TfL has already made more than £70million in ULEZ fines from hardworking Londoners and is now sending out bailiffs to take away uncompliant people's cars.
The controversial firm said it was 'aware of a specific group of drivers who persistently refuse to pay multiple outstanding penalties', but vowed to continue going after them, adding, 'Don't wait for our agents to knock on your door.'
Last month, it suggested 'there can be a link between the behaviour of deliberate evasion and other areas of criminality'.
Now this week, TfL boasted about how its 'enforcement agents tracked down a persistent evader linked to 118 outstanding warrants' as it shared a photo of a BMW it seized.
TfL said it is 'ramping up its efforts to deliver stronger enforcement' and hoped to force people into declaring bankruptcy if they didn't pay their fines.
It claimed it also had the power to take money for fines from a person's employer - effectively pinching it from their salary before it reaches their bank account.
Outspoken ULEZ critic Claire Dyer, 47, from Biggin Hill in Bromley, told the Daily Mail: 'It's a disgrace. ULEZ is nothing more than a tax on the poorer people in society and about TfL trying to make money.'
 
 
 The mother-of-five added: 'For this to resolve, Khan would need to go, but also something would need to change with TFL.'
Sadiq Khan has faced major opposition to his expansion of the previous mayor Boris Johnson's ULEZ scheme.
There was a wave of fury at how quickly the scheme was rolled out, leaving many with uncompliant cars without the time or means to replace their vehicles.
Many people have highlighted how they can't simply fork out on a new car that pleases Sir Sadiq.
Before he became Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer said he wanted Khan to 'reflect' on ULEZ and hoped to 'see whether there are things that can be done to make it easier for people'.
Yet despite the widespread outcry, Labour mayor Sir Sadiq bulldozed ahead with the plan.
 TfL said that 94 per cent of debt owed from ULEZ fines was from persistent evaders, meaning those with at least four outstanding fines.
It shares intelligence and data with the Department for Transport and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency in its quest to purge the city of people not complying with ULEZ.
In the first six months of this year alone, TfL bailiffs secured £16.5million of unpaid fines.
Detailing how its officers respond to a driver not paying a ULEZ, TfL said: 'The enforcement process is triggered, which includes issuing warrants backed by the courts.
'Action to recover the debt involves enforcement agents visiting a home address to recover money owed.
'They can also seize particular belongings and use the proceeds of a sale to satisfy any outstanding debt, for example, clamping a vehicle and selling it at auction.
'Between January and June this year, more than 530 vehicles have been seized from drivers who have failed to pay road user charges and penalties.
'More than 350 have been sold at auction, with more than £285,000 being raised through sales as a result.'
The point of ULEZ is to lower the levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which makes asthma worse and increases the risk of lung cancer.
An independently verified study found that the expansion has had a positive effect on air quality.
The study, commissioned by the Greater London Authority, found NO2 levels in outer London were 4.8 per cent lower than the expected level if the expansion had not taken place.
Across the whole of London, NO2 levels decreased by 27 per cent. Air quality has improved at 99 per cent of monitored sites in London since 2019.
TfL's Chief Customer and Strategy Officer, Alex Williams, said: 'We know that we need bold solutions to tackle the public health crisis and poor air quality in London and ULEZ does just that.
'With 97 per cent of vehicles seen driving in London now ULEZ compliant, only a very small minority of vehicles now don't meet the standards.
'Most drivers who have vehicles that are liable for the charge are responsible and pay it. It is only a small group of persistent evaders who fail to do so.
'We want to make it clear that if you receive a penalty charge for driving in the zone, you should not ignore it.
'Your penalty will progress to enforcement agents to recover what you owe, and there is a risk that your vehicle and other items of property will be removed.
'If you're ignoring it because you are facing financial difficulties, please instead engage with our staff, who can consider your individual circumstances and work with you.'
TfL and the Mayor of London have been contacted for comment.