The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Appeal joy for theft accused in IT fault row

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

Postmaster­s who were falsely accused of theft and fraud have welcomed a Court of Appeal decision to consider pleas for false conviction­s.

The Sunday Post revealed how a Scots postmaster paid out a five-figure sum after the Post Office’s computer system insisted they had stolen funds.

But faults in the IT Horizon system were uncovered showing many of the accusation­s were unfounded.

Another postmaster, Fiona Mcgowan from Edinburgh, died after mistakenly overdosing on antidepres­sants after being hounded by the Post Office for £30,000.

Kashif Nadeem from The Borders paid the Post Office £28,000 when they accused him of theft.

“The IT system was flawed in favour of the Post Office,” said Ashrif. “Money often transferre­d from my own post office shop account twice to head office without alerting us. Now justice will be done through the Appeal Court.”

How we revealed the story last month

A compensati­on scheme has been set up to repay families.

Former postmaster Tim Mccormack, said: “I welcome this. It has taken five years to reach this conclusion and justice will now be seen to be done.”

More than 500 postmaster­s and postmistre­sses were accused of false accounting with some being jailed, after the faulty Horizon IT system showed their branches to be running unexplaine­d deficits. The Criminal Cases Review Commission found prosecutio­ns had been an abuse of process.

Thirty nine out of 61 cases are to be referred, with the remainder still under scrutiny.

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