The Sunday Post (Dundee)

‘It was them not us. They stole our lives’

Scots victims to lay bare Post Office fraud scandal

- By Janet Boyle jboyle@sundaypost.com

They deliberate­ly lied to her, wrongly accused her of theft, falsely told her she was the only one under suspicion, unfairly suspended her, left her in despair and in debt, and darkened her mother’s final days with a baseless cloud of suspicion.

On Wednesday, Louise Dar will have her say, detailing the crimes of the Post Office and how her managers ruined her life and the lives of dozens of other branch managers wrongly accused of theft because of catastroph­ic IT failures.

She lost £ 44,000 in the Post Office Horizon IT scandal and is among 10 people to give evidence when a public inquiry into the huge miscarriag­e of justice hears testimony in Glasgow. More than 700 Post Office branch managers were given criminal conviction­s when faulty accounting software made it look as though money was missing, suspected stolen, from their tills. Dozens of conviction­s have now been overturned but many lives have been ruined and some lost.

The Post Office Horizon IT inquiry is holding Human Impact Hearings in Glasgow on Wednesday, part of a series of hearings in cities around Britain. Dar, from Lenzie, lost £44,000 when the faulty system created several shortfalls in her branch accounts. She was then suspended and locked out of the Post Office systems.

Dar told how her mother died not knowing her daughter had been exonerated. Along with her husband Rehman, she had to pay for the many accounting shortfalls from the takings of their own business to satisfy Post Office auditors. Branch managers can only run post offices if they agree to pay all deficits in accounting.

Dar, 39, opened the Post Office branch in 2014 in Lenzie, where she grew up and lived. “I had a strong IT background and worked as an analyst previously, but the auditor the Post Office sent to set up the Horizon system was poor,” she said. “She could not log into the system and on day one our stock, stamps and cash were logged wrongly by this auditor, and I was immediatel­y down by £977.

“She had been with me all day watching then asked if I had stolen the money. I was stunned. I had to prove my innocence but, neverthele­ss, pay the £ 977 shortfall myself until it was resolved several months later. This became their attitude to every Horizon IT failure. They always assumed I had stolen any shortfalls.”

At one point, their post office takings showed a £ 8,000 deficit, which Post Office auditors insisted was £12,000. “Some nights I, Rehman and my mum or dad were in the shop till almost midnight trying to find the cause of the shortfalls,” she said. “The Post Office insisted I was the only subpostmas­ter with an accounting problem but, in truth, there were hundreds of us. They isolated, bullied and extorted money from every one of us.

“Rehman and I were suspended from operating our post office branch in July 2015. Even then, shortfalls were appearing in our accounts and I was not even in the building.”

Throughout their ordeal Dar’s mum was ill and died before the scandal was exposed and her daughter cleared. “I have memories of her saying she wished this could all be sorted out for us but she never lived to see it. I feel angry about the worry this caused her at her most vulnerable time.

“I was summoned to a meeting with an auditor the day before her funeral and asked for it to be delayed on compassion­ate grounds, but was refused. When I attended, my

manager did not have the decency to turn up. He sent someone else. Everything about the Post Office was heartless. It wasn’t us stealing, it was them. They took everything from us.”

The couple closed their shop and post office in 2017. “Rehman and I have been through almost unbearable stress. My dad helped fund some of the deficit caused by the faulty IT system. We are still in debt to others, and are working to pay it off.”

Dar was one of the six lead claimants in a successful High Court case in 2019, in which a group of 555 subpostmas­ters and mistresses challenged the Post Office over the accusation­s. That paved the way for a series of cases in which 72 people had criminal conviction­s overturned.

Despite winning £ 43 million compensati­on, individual postmaster­s received only about £ 20,000 after paying legal costs based on a no-win-no-fee deal. In March the UK Government announced a compensati­on scheme for that group.

The Post Office said: “We are sincerely sorry for the impact of the Horizon scandal on the lives of victims and their families and we are in no doubt about the human cost. We are assisting the inquiry in its important work to determine what went wrong and to provide, as much as possible, closure for those affected.”

It said compensati­on had been paid to more than half the postmaster­s who applied and interim payments of up to £100,000 to those who have had conviction­s overturned.

The Scottish Criminal Case Review Commission last week confirmed it was reviewing eight cases of potentiall­y wrongful prosecutio­ns linked to the Horizon IT scandal, with another case in the early stages of the process. It also expects more subpostmas­ters to come forward.

 ?? ?? Louise Dar
Louise Dar

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