Ministers scramble to clear names of victims of
Post Office Horizon scandal
Government draws up plans to speed up process of
justice for those who were wrongfully convicted as public pressure grows
Pippa
Crerar Political editor
@PippaCrerar
Mon 8 Jan
2024 21.04 GMT
Ministers
have drawn up urgent plans to clear the names of hundreds of post office
operators who were wrongly convicted of theft and fraud in the Horizon IT
scandal as the government scrambled to get on the front foot over the major
miscarriage of justice.
The justice
secretary, Alex Chalk, will hold talks with the senior judiciary to confirm how
the convictions can be overturned as soon as possible, so victims can have
speedier access to millions of pounds of compensation.
Rishi Sunak
said the government would do “everything we can to make this right for all
those affected” and was looking at ways of “speeding up” the compensation
process. “People should know we are on it and want to make it right,” he added.
Options are
understood to include blocking the Post Office from challenging appeals by
hundreds of victims of the scandal, allowing post office operators to appeal en
masse and passing legislation that would automatically quash convictions.
Downing
Street said the prime minister “shares the public’s feeling of outrage” on the
issue and would “strongly support” the honours forfeiture committee if it
decided to review the CBE of former Post Office boss Paula Vennells.
The role of
the Post Office in private prosecutions is also under review. “If we are to
make sure that a scandal like this can never happen again, we need to look at
the way in which private prosecutions like these have been undertaken,” Kevin
Hollinrake, a business minister, told MPs.
However,
the government remains under pressure to exonerate the post office operators in
full after an ITV drama, Mr Bates vs the Post Office, returned the widespread
miscarriage of justice, which took place between 1999 and 2015, to the
spotlight.
The shadow
business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, said: “It is still an urgent priority to
get compensation to all those affected and it is unconscionable that
convictions still remain where it is clear that no wrongdoing has been
committed.”
Liberal
Democrat leader Ed Davey, a former post office minister between 2010 and 2012,
accused ministers of “dragging their feet” on overturning convictions and
issuing compensation payouts as he defended his role in the scandal.
In an
interview with the Guardian, Davey questioned why the Tories had recognised
Vennells in the 2019 new year honours list, even though hundreds of post office
operators had launched a group action in the high court two years before.
A petition
demanding that the honours forfeiture committee remove the honour from
Vennells, who was in charge of the Post Office while it routinely denied there
were problems with its IT system, over the scandal has already attracted more
than 1 million signatures.
Vennells,
who was also appointed as a nonexecutive board member to the Cabinet Office in
February 2019, has said she is “truly sorry” for the “suffering” caused to
those wrongly convicted of offences.
Only 93 of
up to 900 post office operators wrongfully prosecuted have seen their
convictions quashed, while more than 50 appeals have failed or been withdrawn.
Two former
justice secretaries, Tory MP Robert Buckland and Labour peer Charlie Falconer,
claimed that legislation to exonerate the remaining 750 post office operators
with convictions “could be done tomorrow”.
Buckland
wrote in a letter to the Times: “We should recognise these exceptional
circumstances by asking parliament to pass legislation … such legislation would
help to right a clear wrong. Too many sub-postmasters have already died without
seeing justice being done, so there is no more time to be lost.”
Lord
Falconer, the justice secretary under Tony Blair, added: “The government could
introduce that [legislation] tomorrow and there would be no resistance in
parliament.
“It’s an
absolutely shocking scandal that’s been there for years and years, and now it’s
at the top of the political agenda. Everyone agrees it will take years to get
rid of those other convictions unless there is a change in procedure.”
During a
Commons statement on the scandal, Hollinrake said he was concerned at the “slow
pace” at which criminal convictions were being overturned by the courts.
“We have
devised some options for resolving the outstanding criminal convictions much
more quickly,” he said. “The [justice secretary] will, quite rightly, need to
speak to senior figures in the judiciary about those options before we put them
forward.”
He added:
“We want a more rapid means of overturning convictions. Yes, we want to make
sure the Post Office doesn’t challenge unfairly any attempt to overturn
convictions. Yes, in terms of making sure the investigatory process happens
more quickly.”
Hollinrake
confirmed the government was reviewing the right of any company to make private
prosecutions in the wake of the scandal.
“There is
clearly great concern about the role of the Post Office in prosecuting these
cases. The Post Office quite rightly decided to stop undertaking private
prosecutions some years ago,” he said.
The
Metropolitan police are looking into potential offences in relation to the
company’s investigations and prosecutions. Hundreds were jailed or left
bankrupt and at least four people took their own lives. Most victims have not
received compensation.
Downing
Street hinted that Fujitsu, which provided the faulty accounting software,
could be expected to contribute to the compensation bill. “It should not be
[taxpayer money] alone which picks up the tab for Horizon compensation,” a
spokesperson said.
Hollinrake
told MPs that dozens more post office operators who were wrongly convicted
after taking part in a pilot scheme of the faulty Horizon system, revealed by
the Guardian, would qualify for compensation.
“We want to
make sure every single victim is properly covered by the various schemes, I’ve
asked anybody who has evidence of any kind … to furnish me with details and
I’ll make sure we pick up anybody who’s left outside the schemes,” he said.
He
confirmed that a retired high court judge, Sir Gary Hickinbottom, would chair
an independent panel with oversight of compensation payments to postmasters.

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