Scottish Daily Mail

£120million

How much Post Office ‘spent hounding staff over computer glitch’ £20,000 How little they’ll get in compensati­on

- By Tom Witherow Business Correspond­ent

POSTMASTER­S dragged through court over missing cash caused by errors in an IT system will only receive an average of £20,000 compensati­on each.

The Post Office spent up to £120million of taxpayers’ cash fighting a two-decade battle – and acted as ‘judge, jury and executione­r’, MPs were told yesterday.

Some sub-postmaster­s accused of stealing money from their own tills were jailed, forced into bankruptcy or hounded out of their jobs.

In December the Post Office capitulate­d after a lengthy High Court battle and agreed to pay nearly £58million compensati­on. But the victims will only receive an average of £20,000 each – from a total pot of £11million – to cover their losses and years of anguish.

The rest of the settlement cash will go on fees to lawyers and the City financiers who funded the claimants.

Even now, some postmaster­s remain too afraid to admit to shortfalls in their accounts caused by computer glitches, for fear they will be pursued for the money, it was claimed.

The taxpayer-funded Post Office also spent an estimated £32million on lawyers between 2017 and 2019 alone.

Alan Bates, founder of the Justice for Sub-postmaster­s Alliance, yesterday told MPs on the Commons Business Committee that he believed additional costs take the total spent by the Post Office to between £100million and £120million.

He added: ‘When you start to talk about dividing £11million between 550 people you can see we are not getting very far to recover the cost. No one is going to be happy with it.

‘The Post Office acted as judge, jury and executione­r. There was always a presumptio­n of guilt, it was guilty until you’re proven innocent.’

Labour MP Rachel Reeves, chairman of the committee, said the postmaster­s’ lives had been left in ‘turmoil’ because bosses ‘looked for an easy scapegoat’.

Some postmaster­s have been left out of pocket to the tune of hundreds of thousands of pounds.

PM Boris Johnson announced a public inquiry into the scandal last week.

Paula Vennells, who ran the corporatio­n from 2012 to 2019, walked away with £2.2million in bonuses, a CBE for services to the Post Office, and a senior position in the Cabinet Office. She will face questions from the committee, as will her replacemen­t Nick Read, later this month.

Andy Furey, of the Communicat­ions Workers Union, which represents postmaster­s, said: ‘No one has been accountabl­e, no one has lost their job, no one’s been dismissed from the Post Office board.

‘The scale of this is horrendous. This is a national scandal and the Post Office needs to be held to account.’

More than 50 former postmaster­s with conviction­s have lodged cases to get their criminal records struck off.

The Post Office is setting up a new mediation system for postmaster­s who were not part of the group litigation. MPs were told the ‘floodgates will open’ and hundreds will come forward to say they were chased for money.

The CWU said there are still ‘daily’ issues with the IT system, known as Horizon.

A Post Office spokesman said: ‘We are continuing to make further improvemen­ts and to re-set our relationsh­ip with postmaster­s.’

 ??  ?? The Mail, August 17, 2013
December 12, 2019
Set to face questions: Former boss Paula Vennells had received £2.2m bonuses
The Mail, August 17, 2013 December 12, 2019 Set to face questions: Former boss Paula Vennells had received £2.2m bonuses

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