Post Office Scandal

A women of God is about to be her Interrogator, the KC asking awkward questions at the Post Office Inquiry over said institution using Mafia tactics to get money out of innocent postmasters.

It is a moment wrongly convicted post office operators have waited years for. From today, Wednesday the former Post Office chief executive Paula Vennells will appear before the long-running inquiry into how hundreds were pursued in the courts, fined and jailed over accounting shortfalls that were actually the fault of the Horizon IT system.

Vennells, who held the top job between 2012 and 2019, has become the highest-profile face of the scandal since the ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office galvanised public opinion when it was screened in January – despite her keeping a low public profile in the past decade. Over that time, questions have arisen about what exactly she knew and when. Here are some of the apparent discrepancies the judge-led inquiry is likely to ask her to explain over her three days of testimony.

Why did Vennells tyell MPs in 2012 the Post Office had not lost a case?

Vennells met six MPs in 2012, shortly after becoming chief executive. A note of meeting given to the inquiry showed that Vennells told those present: “Every case taken to prosecution that involves the Horizon system thus far has found in favour of the Post Office.”

However, Jason Beer KC, counsel to the inquiry, told the hearings this claim simply was “not true” as at that time there had been three acquittals.

Why did the post Office not highlight problems with prosecutions?

In July 2013, Simon Clarke, a barrister advising the Post Office, concluded there was a serious problem with past prosecutions because of an “unreliable witness”. Clarke said there were issues with evidence from the Fujitsu engineer Gareth Jenkins because he had failed to disclose information he knew about bugs in the Horizon software to defendants. Clarke told the inquiry his advice had been sent to several Post Office lawyers. He added: “Where it went thereafter, I can’t say.”

Vennells is likely to be asked about whether she or the board had ever seen Clarke’s advice, how she had responded to it and why it had not been disclosed to defence lawyers before 2020.

Chris Aujard, a former senior lawyer at the Post Office, has told the inquiry that in 2013 the Post Office’s executive committee “were in favour of ceasing prosecutions entirely”, but Vennells said “limited” prosecutions should continue.

When Vennells wrote to the business, energy and industrial strategy (BEIS) select committee in June 2020, she said she “played no role in investigatory or prosecutorial decisions or in the conduct of prosecutions” and the legal team responsible for prosecutions reported to the general counsel. She added she was not a lawyer and relied on internal and external legal advice.

Before appearing before the business, innovation and skills committee in 2015, Vennells sent an email to her head of corporate communications asking if the Horizon system developed by Fujitsu was indeed secure: “What is the true answer?” she asked. “I need to say: ‘No, [remote access] is not possible.’”

The day after her testimony, the Post Office sent MPs a letter saying there was “no functionality in Horizon” for anyone at the company or Fujitsu to “edit, manipulate or remove transaction data” in a branch’s accounts. However, the inquiry has seen a transcript of a call from 2013 in which a senior lawyer confirmed twice that Vennells had been briefed about a “covert operations team” that could adjust accounts remotely. ITV has reported a further call from 2013 that details a meeting at which Post Office executives including Vennells were present, where the conversation explicitly mentioned allegations that accounts could be accessed remotely by Fujitsu.

Liam Byrne, the chair of the business and trade committee, said in April this year he was “deeply concerned” by the call transcripts and was considering options against Vennells, including “the Commons exercising its powers in relation to contempt of parliament”.

Alan Bates and 554 other post office operators brought a high court lawsuit against the state-owned company to overturn their convictions in 2016 and the first part of the trial opened in November 2018. By 2017, the Post Office had received a draft report by Deloitte, seen by the inquiry, which questioned whether Fujitsu could “edit or delete transactions recorded by branches in a way that could impact on the branch’s overall accounting position”. It concluded: “Yes – transactions can be deleted at database layer.”

Yet the company did not disclose the existence of that report to defence lawyers, instead choosing to spend millions maintaining that the branch operators were at fault. The Post Office ended up settling the litigation for £57.75m in 2019. The convictions were finally overturned on appeal in 2021.

About 100 Scots were wrong prosecuted. Let the dice roll where they may.

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1 Response to Post Office Scandal

  1. twathater says:

    I watched about 5 mins of her appearance where she was all contrite and apologetic reaching out for tissues in her dramatic failed sturgeon mirrored attempt to convince people that she was unaware of the misery and devastation she had inflicted on INNOCENT people

    It enrages me that these greed driven amoral scum treat this whole situation with contempt, they are enthused and energised to take the massive salaries and enhanced pensions and benefits that their exalted position (in their mind) entitles them to receive ,BUT when they are exposed as the rapacious unfeeling monsters that they are they then suddenly transform themselves into a weak empathetic person who was UNAWARE and UNINFORMED of the machinations being carried out behind her back

    This woman and anyone like her should be charged with corporate corruption and face a lengthy prison term , just to make her reflect on the injustice she FORCED on innocent conscientious people

    I watched the uk head of fujitsu being interviewed where as usual he was so apologetic (fake) for the injustice people had suffered, he then went on to say that he, representing fujitsu would like to CONTRIBUTE to any compensation package decided by the government, I almost exploded with anger and disbelief , CONTRIBUTE , they are the ones whose software was NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE, they CREATED the software that CREATED the problem , contribute , the government should INSIST that fujitsu pay every piece of compensation

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