IT grapples with all the big boys, from multi-million pound property developers to UK-wide retail chains, and it won't rest until it gets justice. It's X-Ray (Monday, May 20, BBC1 Wales), the programme that has crooks across the country running scared, and BBC Wales' massively popular consumer programme is back on TV screens to tackle the issues that really matter.

The main mission for presenters Tanni Grey-Thompson, Jane Harvey and Rupert Moon is to stop viewers getting stitched up. With cons costing ordinary people in Wales thousands of pounds a year, it's an issue that remains relevant to everyone.

In the first programme of the new run, Rupert visits the rugby club with a brand new pitch on which no one can play. Rupert helps dig out some of the vast boulders that lie just below the surface and discovers that the cost of putting the problem right will run into thousands of pounds.

Tanni presents the first X-Ray Red Tape Award for bungling bureaucracy. Throughout the series, Tanni is on the lookout for examples right across Wales, and this week she meets the man who, according to the DVLA, doesn't have a driving licence, even though he's been driving for most of his life.

Jane returns to X-Ray lawyer Simon Mumford, who is held hostage in a secret location somewhere in Wales and forced to answer viewers' legal problems for free. The Cardiff-based lawyer, who originally comes from Narberth, took part in a web chat during the last series and received more than 300 questions from X-Ray viewers. Jane also come face to face with a reclusive builder accused of ripping off old ladies.

And dizzy with power, Rupert dons his famous wig and gown for more consumer tests in the Trial by TV slot. As the summer gets under way, he begins by testing lawn mowers, three very different machines, three different gardens, but which is the best for the job?

There's also a new web site for interactive X-Ray fans.With highlights from each week's programme, it can be accessed at http://www.bbc.co.uk/Wales">www.bbc.co.uk/Wales.