The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Met examining ‘potential fraud’ over Post Office Horizon scandal

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

METROPOLIT­AN Police detectives are looking at “potential fraud offences” committed amid the Horizon IT scandal.

More than 700 Post Office branch managers were handed criminal conviction­s after faulty Fujitsu accounting software made it appear as though money was missing from their outlets.

It has been described as the most widespread miscarriag­e of justice in UK history and a public inquiry into it is ongoing.

Scotland Yard said on Friday evening that officers are “investigat­ing potential fraud offences arising out of these prosecutio­ns”, for example “monies recovered from sub-postmaster­s as a result of prosecutio­ns or civil actions”.

The Met has already been looking into potential offences of perjury and perverting the course of justice in relation to investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns carried out by the Post Office.

Two people have been interviewe­d under caution but nobody has been arrested since the investigat­ion was launched in January 2020.

After ITV aired a drama into the scandal, Mr Bates Vs The Post Office starring actor Toby Jones, 50 new potential victims have approached lawyers, it has been said.

Neil Hudgell, a lawyer acting for claimants, told the BBC the new enquiries include former sub-postmaster­s who

‘The common feature ... is people who have been heavily damaged by the Post Office psychologi­cally’

were given conviction­s.

He said: “The majority of (those 50 new enquiries) were not prosecuted but lost their livelihood­s, lost their homes.

“But there’s a small handful of people who were convicted that have come forward, three in total at the moment, which is obviously a tiny number proportion­ate to those that are still out there.

“And I think the common feature of these is totally unsurprisi­ng. It’s people that have been so heavily damaged by [the] Post Office psychologi­cally that they have been so fearful of coming forward and going through the process again.”

It comes after calls for a former Post Office leader to lose her CBE over the scandal, following the release of the ITV drama.

Paula Vennells, who oversaw the organisati­on while it denied that there were problems with the IT system, later said she was “truly sorry” for the “suffering” caused to sub-postmaster­s who were wrongly convicted.

Postal services minister Kevin Hollinrake told ITV’s Good Morning Britain that Ms Vennells should “seriously consider handing [the CBE] back voluntaril­y”.

Asked on Thursday if she should lose the honour, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said: “There’s an independen­t process for honours forfeiture, which is done by an independen­t committee, so that’s a separate process from Government.”

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