March 15, 2010 4:02 PM

New Yorkers Scammed for $8.3 Million

(AP)  Thousands of New York City taxi drivers overcharged passengers by more than $8.3 million over the past two years by setting their meters at a rate that was supposed to be used for trips to the suburbs, the Taxi and Limousine Commission said Friday.

At least 1.8 million trips were wrongly charged at the suburban rate, which is double the rate within city limits, the commission said.

The city has about 48,300 licensed cabbies, and data shows that 35,558 have illegally charged a rider at least once, the city said. A smaller group of drivers is responsible for the majority of overcharged trips - 3,000 cabbies were found to have doubled the meter rate more than 100 times.

The commission has referred its findings to the Department of Investigation.

"Some of these people could face serious charges," Mayor Michael Bloomberg said. "Now, how we would ever recoup the money and get it back to the individual payers, no, but we can stop the practice and we can make sure there's penalties."

The scammed passengers overpaid by an average of $4.45 per trip, the commission found.

Read about the plan to reimburse New Yorkers

Officials discovered the discrepancy by scouring data from global-positioning devices that are required in the city's yellow cabs. The data goes back 26 months because GPS was first required in 2007.

A passenger complaint last year led the commission to find one driver engaging in the scam hundreds of times in one month, they said.

The city said that while 1.8 million overcharged trips is a significant number, there were 361 million taxi trips in the past two years, so the illegal fare was charged in half of one percent of all rides.

A taxi driver advocacy group cautioned that the scam appears so widespread that it might actually be the fault of problems with the technology, not deliberately dishonest drivers.

"There should be a thorough investigation before judgment is cast on an entire work force," said Bhairavi Desai of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance.

In a few weeks, taxi riders will see an alert on the television screen in the back seat when the higher rate code has been activated.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by lorrfrock February 1, 2011 9:34 AM EST
Got ripped off by a cabbie, fare was way way out of line. I found a fantastic FREE app called Faircab NYC - lets you know exactly what the fare should be before you step a foot in the cab. Other great features as well - send receipts to your phone. As far as I'm concerned this app is a must have for New Yorkers and tourist alike. - It's something you really can't do without
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by NowBeWithThat March 15, 2010 4:29 PM EDT
Doh! I knew that meter was jumping way too fast but I could never prove it.

Most NYC cabbies are racist hindus (and thieves by the looks of it).

Welcome to New York. Rent a car. Save money.
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by ajvw March 15, 2010 4:08 PM EDT
"New Yorkers Scammed for $8.3 Million"

nothing compared to what their government scams out of them every year.
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by I_am_me1953 March 15, 2010 12:37 PM EDT
Six or so years ago I was in chicago iding in a cab and the cabbie had to change the rate charge during the middle of the trip because we crossed some magical line. I happened to observe him change the rate and asked why and he told me something about being in a certaion area cost more or less than another area. At least later when the next trips the same thing occurred I wasn;t surprised.
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by tsigili March 15, 2010 11:42 AM EDT
Nice to know that NY hasn't changed much.
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