More than 250 people were convicted and fined for breaching coronavirus laws in Thames Valley last year, figures show.
The financial penalties have been criticised by campaign groups who also say many nationally did not get a fair hearing due to the introduction a fast-track court process.
Ministry of Justice data shows in 2020, there were 361 court prosecutions in the area served by Thames Valley Police for breaches of restrictions introduced at the beginning of the pandemic.
They resulted in 277 convictions, with all leading to fines.
The largest number of fines – 193 – ranged from £100 to £150 while six convictions resulted in fines of between £300 and £500.
In total, £34,926 in fines were issued by the courts in Thames Valley.
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Almost all the convictions – 274 –were for breaches of emergency restrictions, while three were for people who left their home while potentially infected with Covid-19.
The figures detail all prosecution outcomes, so the same defendant could have been listed more than once.
The figures come amid criticism of the enforcement of coronavirus restrictions, in particular the use of a fast-track system which sees cases dealt with by a legal adviser and a single magistrate out of court.
This process, known as the single justice procedure, is aimed at reducing paperwork and freeing up court time, but in a report, the Joint Committee on Human Rights, MPs and peers said it meant defendants were unable provide any reasonable excuse for why they breached the law.
More than 1,000 defendants were tried for Covid offences using this fast-track process between July and September last year, the committee said.
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Campaign groups including Fair Trials and Transform Justice have since sent a letter to the Government calling for the practice to be stopped.
Griff Ferris, legal and policy officer at Fair Trials, a criminal justice watchdog, said it was unjust for people to be criminalised and fined by an "opaque and unchecked process behind closed doors”.
He added: “The single justice procedure is rushed justice, on the cheap, and it is completely inappropriate for assessing charges under confusing lockdown laws.”
The MoJ said the decision to use the single justice procedure lay with the prosecutor.
A spokesperson said: "The single justice procedure allows those who plead guilty to low-level, non-imprisonable crimes to resolve their case without going to court – it would not be used for more serious offences.
"All defendants can request an open hearing and have their conviction voiced and reheard if necessary."
The MoJ figures also show men were far more likely to be convicted of breaching Covid laws in Thames Valley last year – in 240 of the 277 convictions where the sex and age were recorded, the defendant was male.
People aged between 30 and 39 accounted for the largest proportion of convictions, while one was against a person aged 70 and over.
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