"A Tangled Web: Bidfood's Fleet Management Firm Holds Cars to Ransom"
A string of bizarre incidents has left two motorists in a desperate bid to reclaim their cars, which were taken into custody by the fleet management company VMS on behalf of food wholesaler Bidfood.
In January, driver BN had his car damaged while parked outside his home after a delivery lorry from Bidfood reversed into it. The incident was reported to VMS, and the company arranged for repairs and provided a hire car, but since then, BN has received no meaningful updates. What's more, he's been slapped with five penalty charge notices for unpaid Ulez charges while his car was in storage.
BN's experience is not unique; just months later, driver NC from Hertfordshire had her car damaged by another Bidfood lorry. Similarly, she too has been left in limbo, awaiting news of her car's return after VMS took it into custody for repairs and hire car arrangement.
The problem, however, ran far deeper than initially suspected. The two cars were taken to a repair shop in Kent, Cobra Coachworks, where they remain to this day, held hostage by an unrelated commercial dispute between VMS and the company. This revelation came straight from the horse's mouth – or rather, from both parties' representatives.
According to Cobra's managing director, Greg Ebeling, his company is refusing to release the vehicles until VMS pays £189,000 in arrears that are allegedly owed for unrelated contracts. However, VMS has yet to provide any evidence of these debts.
As the saga unfolded, Bidfood came under fire for its handling of the situation. The company claimed it had no idea about NC's case until August and was unaware of BN's predicament until it was alerted by this publication. It swiftly ended its relationship with VMS, advising customers to report their cars as stolen due to unacceptable delays.
Despite assurances from Bidfood, both drivers remain skeptical that they'll ever get back behind the wheel of their vehicles. NC's car is still waiting, and although she finally received a replacement, it was returned with 46 extra miles on the clock. BN's car was returned nine months after its initial confiscation, albeit with an unexplained mileage discrepancy.
It seems both drivers owe a great debt of gratitude to this publication for shedding light on VMS's alleged misdeeds. Without our intervention, there's little doubt that their cars would still be languishing in storage, and they'd be facing financial ruin as a result.
A string of bizarre incidents has left two motorists in a desperate bid to reclaim their cars, which were taken into custody by the fleet management company VMS on behalf of food wholesaler Bidfood.
In January, driver BN had his car damaged while parked outside his home after a delivery lorry from Bidfood reversed into it. The incident was reported to VMS, and the company arranged for repairs and provided a hire car, but since then, BN has received no meaningful updates. What's more, he's been slapped with five penalty charge notices for unpaid Ulez charges while his car was in storage.
BN's experience is not unique; just months later, driver NC from Hertfordshire had her car damaged by another Bidfood lorry. Similarly, she too has been left in limbo, awaiting news of her car's return after VMS took it into custody for repairs and hire car arrangement.
The problem, however, ran far deeper than initially suspected. The two cars were taken to a repair shop in Kent, Cobra Coachworks, where they remain to this day, held hostage by an unrelated commercial dispute between VMS and the company. This revelation came straight from the horse's mouth – or rather, from both parties' representatives.
According to Cobra's managing director, Greg Ebeling, his company is refusing to release the vehicles until VMS pays £189,000 in arrears that are allegedly owed for unrelated contracts. However, VMS has yet to provide any evidence of these debts.
As the saga unfolded, Bidfood came under fire for its handling of the situation. The company claimed it had no idea about NC's case until August and was unaware of BN's predicament until it was alerted by this publication. It swiftly ended its relationship with VMS, advising customers to report their cars as stolen due to unacceptable delays.
Despite assurances from Bidfood, both drivers remain skeptical that they'll ever get back behind the wheel of their vehicles. NC's car is still waiting, and although she finally received a replacement, it was returned with 46 extra miles on the clock. BN's car was returned nine months after its initial confiscation, albeit with an unexplained mileage discrepancy.
It seems both drivers owe a great debt of gratitude to this publication for shedding light on VMS's alleged misdeeds. Without our intervention, there's little doubt that their cars would still be languishing in storage, and they'd be facing financial ruin as a result.