Those “Bailiff” letters and knocks at the door might not be what you think.

People assume that when a letter arrives marked “Bailiff” — or when someone bangs on the door demanding money — everything must be legitimate. They believe that because a debt is owed to a council or Government body, they will only ever be asked to pay what the law says they must pay.

But enforcement is carried out by private, profit-driven companies who win the right to enforce debts for their own financial gain — and you might not even owe the money at all.

Some companies behave responsibly — and we have no quarrel with them. But others rely on bonuses, commissions and pressure-based tactics that push people into fear, distress and unlawful fees. These are the rogue operators — and we will not hesitate to cost staff their jobs or companies their contracts whenever the evidence allows.

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The £6 Billion ULEZ Fine About To Land On Every Taxpayer’s Doormat

Vulnerable people who are often already struggling are being pressured into paying unlawful fees, inflated charges, or debts that should never have reached enforcement. But this isn’t just their problem — it’s everyone’s.

It could cost the taxpayer up to £6 billion, once unlawful fees, misconduct and regulatory failures are formally recognised and compensated. And because many rogue enforcement companies operate on fat margins, short contracts and aggressive bonus schemes, they are unlikely to stick around and pay for the fallout themselves — they’ll simply salt the money away and disappear, leaving the public to pick up the bill.

Fair enforcement protects everyone. Rogue enforcement costs everyone.

One example of good practice is Nottingham City Council, which runs an in-house enforcement service where staff receive a fixed salary, no bonuses, and have strict controls to ensure personal data is used only for enforcement — never for performance metrics.

What Fair Enforcement Looks Like

We appreciate that enforcement is a necessary industry. People remain responsible for their debts, and we are not here to “get anyone off the hook.” When enforcement is lawful, proportionate and professional, it keeps the system fair for everyone.

The good companies don’t pay bonuses, commissions or targets linked to how much money their staff can extract.

A lawful system would:

  • Use fixed-salary staff with no collection bonuses.
  • Apply fees correctly and transparently.
  • Follow proportionality at every stage.
  • Respect vulnerability and safeguarding.
  • Use personal data only for lawful enforcement.
  • Be audited by councils, not left to self-police.

Roy v3 is designed not just to protect people — but to push the industry toward this higher standard.

What Makes Us Different

  • Attack the debt, not the debtor. We focus on legality, not obedience.
  • Real-case data. Built from live cases, DSARs, contracts and call recordings.
  • Strategic escalation. Letters and complaints drafted for regulators, councils and MPs.
  • Independent. No funding from enforcement companies, ever.

Meet Roy v3 – The New AI Enforcement Compliance Officer Fighting the Rogues for You

Roy v3 didn’t start life as an enforcement tool. It began as an AI project Leon Gruneberg was building for Abbas — a system designed to check marketing compliance automatically. It was complex, demanding, and arrived during a time of high stress and poor mental health.

The last thing Leon needed then was to be hounded by an enforcement company acting like a loan-shark with a badge.

One night, stressed and exhausted, he turned on the TV and saw Donald Trump on the news. Leon drifted into a thought: “What would happen if someone like Trump – with a golf course in England – had his works van clamped?” The answer was simple: he’d fight back, aggressively, strategically and relentlessly.

It wasn’t political. It was tactical. Leon researched, experimented, and built a tool that emulated Trump’s most influential lawyer, Roy Cohn — known for his ruthless legal strategy: Attack. Never defend. Control the narrative. Turn pressure back on the attacker.

Roy v3 takes the same mindset — but uses it for the public, powered by data, law and evidence. It analyses correspondence, flags misconduct, escalates complaints and even produced a full income & expenses form — treating it exactly as Trump would if anyone dared to ask for his income.

From Roy Cohn to Roy v3

We took the ruthless “always attack” doctrine and rewired it for people facing enforcement:

  • Focus on the weakest legal link in the enforcement chain.
  • Exploit procedural errors, missing documents and unlawful fees.
  • Turn every abusive encounter into evidence and complaints.
  • Use AI to generate letters, timelines and escalation packs in minutes.

Real Human Stories Behind the Data

Behind every case is a person who should have been treated lawfully and with dignity — but wasn’t.

  • A pregnant woman pressured to pay immediately, even though enforcement must stop in pregnancy.
  • A single mother whose young child was terrified as an “angry man” knocked and shouted outside.
  • A 17-year-old girl handed a threatening notice meant for her father, even though the agent was legally required to withdraw.
  • A man with severe mental health issues convinced his house was going to be raided — despite having done nothing wrong.

Roy v3 exists to stop this from happening and to hold abusers to account.

Why This Matters to Councils, MPs and Journalists

Roy v3 isn’t just a lifeline for victims. It is a live intelligence layer for people trying to fix the system:

  • MPs and councillors who need to see what is happening on the ground.
  • Journalists looking for evidence-backed stories, not anecdotes.
  • Regulators and oversight bodies who need patterns, not noise.

The Humane Enforcement Act – A Data-Driven Reform Blueprint

We believe Britain can lead the world in fair, proportionate, data-driven enforcement. That’s why we are drafting the Humane Enforcement Act — the first ever piece of legislation written with the help of AI, ready for any MP with the courage to propose it.

The Act would:

  • Ban commission-driven enforcement permanently.
  • Mandate transparency, proportionality and proper vulnerability checks.
  • Require councils to audit enforcement companies properly — not rely on self-policing.
  • Build a national database to track misconduct across firms and agents.
  • Ensure personal data is used only for lawful enforcement, never for bonus schemes.
  • Guarantee the public is protected from abusive practices.

Roy v3 is more than a tool — it is the start of a national reform movement.

How Roy v3 Supports Reform

  • Creates consistent, structured data that makes patterns impossible to ignore.
  • Links behaviour to specific companies, contracts and councils.
  • Provides evidence packs that can underpin inquiries and new legislation.

We Can Only Do This With Your Help

What we are uncovering is bigger than anyone expected. We’re up against companies with huge profits, opaque contracts and a long history of getting away with things in the shadows. Every letter Roy v3 generates, every investigation we launch, every case file we build and every council we challenge costs real time, real hosting, real legal support and real work.

We’re not backed by Government funding. We’re not backed by industry money. We are backed by the public — or we are backed by no one. If you believe in stopping unlawful enforcement, protecting vulnerable people, and ending the culture of fear-based collections, please support this mission.