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Who would believe it? Melbourne's streets are startled to write handwritten tickets for violating the rules and regulations.

Melbourne Besside now writes penalty tickets (Pioneer Sun Photo)


Melbourne Besside (Bayside) presents an outlaw disguised as a parliament copywriter in an attempt to deceive the driver with a handwritten ticket.

According to the "Pioneer Sun" report, starting from the beginning of this month, the car parked in the front beach of Brighton and the parking lot in Bayside, Melbourne, was placed with a handwritten ticket. The authorities are now reminding residents to be vigilant.

These handwritten tickets are misspelled and require owners to pay fines by remitting money to a bank account.

According to a ticket issued at 11:20 on May 1, the liar wrote: "I ran out of paper in the ticket machine. You stopped here at 08:45, two hours and 35 minutes later, and the vehicle was still parked in the two-hour parking area, so you were fined A $81. "

The ticket lists the bank account information and the post "I wish you a better day from now on."

Resident Friedrich (Felicity Frederico) said the scam was "ridiculous."

"it's an insult to our IQ as if someone would believe it," Friedrich said.

But the council’s city planning and amenity director Hamish Reid said the council did not issue handwritten fines and warned residents to be cautious, and report it if they were stung.

Reid (Hamish Reid), director of city planning and facilities at Besside parliament, said parliament staff would not issue handwritten tickets to remind residents to be careful and to report the fraud if they found it.

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