Daily Mail

Post Office lobbied for law change to make it easier to hound staff

- By Lucy White City Correspond­ent

THE Post Office lobbied for a crucial law change which made it easier to pursue postmaster­s wrongly accused in the firm’s IT scandal.

The head of the company’s criminal law division wrote to Britain’s legal watchdog in 1995 and said existing rules on the use of computer evidence in trials were ‘somewhat onerous’.

The letter came as the Law Commission was seeking feedback from organisati­ons on a proposed change to the rules on using computer evidence in court.

At the time, any firm or individual relying on such evidence had to prove that the computer system was operating properly.

But the Post Office said this was ‘far too strict and can hamper prosecutio­ns’. It urged the Law Commission to relax the rules, which would make it easier to prosecute individual­s on the basis of computer evidence. And the calls from the Post Office, which were echoed by the likes of BT and the Inland Revenue, were heeded.

In 1999 – the year the company introduced its Horizon IT system – the law was changed to introduce a presumptio­n that computer systems were working correctly.

But Horizon, it emerged years later, had not been running as it should. More than 700 postmaster­s were wrongly prosecuted in what has been dubbed one of the UK’s biggest miscarriag­es of justice. They were accused of theft and false accounting and some were sent to prison.

It has taken almost 20 years for those victims to prove that the IT system was to blame for the missing money.

Though the Post Office’s letter to the Law Commission was written before Horizon was introduced, it has rankled postmaster­s who feel that the firm was preparing to bring in an IT system and wanted to cover its back should any problems appear.

Jo Hamilton, a grandmothe­r who was forced to re-mortgage her home after being accused of theft by the Post Office, said: ‘The law change covered their backsides and made life

‘Covering their backsides’

a hell of a lot easier for them when they came after us. I’m not surprised by this – I’m just so furious with them.’

Andy Furey, the national officer for postmaster­s at the Communicat­ion Workers Union, said prior to Horizon, the Post Office did not have any automation so the timing of the letter ‘feels very premeditat­ed and calculated’.

The Post Office said the submission­s to the Law Commission were made at a time when the firm was owned by the Royal Mail. It added the Horizon system was not introduced until 1999, four years after the letter to the watchdog.

Retired High Court judge Sir Wyn Williams is leading an independen­t inquiry into the Post Office scandal.

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