Martin Heath
BBC News, Essex
Steve Hubbard/BBC
Adrian and Joanne Fenton were ordered to pay a £1,500 fine
A couple who were fined £1,500 after they reported a migrant had clung to a bike rack on their motorhome have been told the penalty has been cancelled.
The Home Office had ordered Adrian and Joanne Fenton, from Heybridge in Essex, to pay the fine for "failing to check that no clandestine entrant was concealed" in the vehicle as they crossed the English Channel.
Mr Fenton said Border Force had now told him it had taken his objection to liability into consideration and reduced the fine to £0.
Mrs Fenton said she was "ecstatic" about the Home Office's change of heart.
Mr Fenton, 57, had boarded Le Shuttle from Calais to Folkestone in Kent on the evening of 15 October after they had been travelling around France.
Mrs Fenton, 55, told the JVS show on BBC Three Counties Radio that, after a six-hour drive, her husband had unzipped the cover of the bicycle rack and found the migrant inside.
Joanne Fenton
Mrs Fenton said the migrant told police he was 16 and from Sudan
The couple said they called the police to tell them they had found the stowaway.
Mrs Fenton said the boy later informed the police he was 16 years old and from Sudan.
They then received an email saying they were being fined.
Mrs Fenton argued that the man had been clinging to the outside of the motorhome rather than being inside it.
Mr Felton said he had thought he had done the right thing by calling the police.
Steve Hubbard/BBC
The couple say the stowaway was found under a bicycle rack cover
The couple have now received an email from Border Force, which is part of the Home Office, reducing the fine to £0.
Mrs Fenton said: "It's about motorhomes and caravaners coming through the borders - how many more people are going to get caught out exactly the same?"
Steve Hubbard/BBC
Joanne Fenton said the stowaway had been clinging to the outside of the vehicle rather than being inside
Her husband added: "We don't want anyone else to go through what we've gone through.
"If someone does call the police because they've got someone discovered in their motorhome, Border Force shouldn't even be considering fining them because everyone's doing the moral and the right thing."
He said the Home Office should "be looking at their policy and make sure that it's fit for purpose and not targeting holidaymakers".
Mrs Fenton said the couple would still take their motorhome abroad but would be "ultra careful - there'll be no covers over the bike rack".