It has also been disclosed that 56 people have been wrongly charged with offences relating to the pandemic.
The National Police Chiefs' Council says 13,445 fines were issued by forces in England and 799 in Wales for breaches of social distancing rules brought in to fight the coronavirus outbreak.
The figures,
from 27 March to 11 May, show the most fixed penalty notices - 906 - were
handed out in London, by the Metropolitan Police.
The data
covers the period before the penalty rose from £60 to £100 in England after the
rules were eased.
These include
restrictions on people's right to move around or be part of a gathering.
After the Met
Police, the Thames Valley force imposed the next highest number of notices
(866), followed by North Yorkshire (843) and Devon and Cornwall (799).
By contrast,
Warwickshire Police issued only 31, the Staffordshire force just 52 and Gwent
71.
There were
862 repeat offenders, including one person who has been fined nine times.
The times
when the most fines were imposed were during sunny weather at Easter, with
almost 600 handed out on Saturday 11 April and another 500 the following day.
But the
National Police Chiefs' Council says its figures show officers are taking a
"proportionate" approach - with only one in 5,000 people across
England and Wales fined.
It comes as the
Department of Health said it recorded another 384 deaths of people in the UK,
bringing the total number to have died following a positive coronavirus test to
33,998, as of 17:00 BST on 14 May.
The
coronavirus laws were drawn up and implemented at such pace that problems were
inevitable.
When the
measures came into force in March, police didn't have any bespoke tickets for
lockdown fines because they had not yet been printed, so they had to improvise
by scribbling details on other penalty notices.
Then it
emerged that children had been fined - even though the regulations don't allow
it; and now we've learned that all 44 of those charged under the Coronavirus
Act should not have been prosecuted at all under the emergency legislation.
It seems,
from what the CPS and police have said, that the errors have caused no great
injustice to those involved.
Nevertheless,
the number of mistakes suggests there's been a serious failure to explain the
purpose and reach of the new laws to those who have to apply it.
There are
separate rules for managing the threat of coronavirus in England, Wales,
Scotland and Northern Ireland.
The first
fine someone could receive if police believed they were flouting restrictions
in England rose from £60 to £100 on Wednesday.
This will be
lowered to £50 if paid within 14 days but fines will double for each repeat
offence, up to a maximum of £3,200.
The fine
imposed in Wales is £60, reduced to £30 if paid within two weeks. It can be
doubled for each repeat offence up to a £960 maximum.
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