Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Lawyer ‘covered up’ Horizon bug

- PIERS MUCKLEJOHN

A FORMER top Post Office lawyer knew of bugs in the Horizon IT system which resulted in account discrepanc­ies days before legal proceeding­s which saw a pregnant subpostmis­tress jailed began and subsequent­ly lied to “cover up” that fact, an inquiry has heard.

Senior in-house lawyer Jarnail Singh was copied into an email containing a report which identified the glitch but denied knowledge of it for years – despite saving the document and printing it out, the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry heard.

Mr Singh, who denied the claims, was a senior lawyer at the Post Office and became head of criminal law in 2012 after it split with Royal Mail.

The report, sent to Mr Singh just three days before Seema Misra’s case began in October 2010, described a bug “that will result in a receipts payment mismatch” and offered an explanatio­n for apparent cases of theft among subpostmas­ters, counsel to the inquiry Jason Beer KC said.

Ms Misra was eight weeks pregnant when she was handed a 15-month prison sentence on her son’s 10th birthday in November 2010 after being accused of stealing £74,000 from her branch in West

Byfleet, Surrey. Her conviction was quashed by the Court of Appeal in 2021.

Mr Singh said he “wasn’t made aware” of the report, written by Fujitsu engineer Gareth Jenkins and forwarded to lawyers Mr Singh and Juliet Macfarlane by Rob Wilson, then head of criminal law at the Post Office.

But Mr Beer said a file address on the bottom of the document, which included Mr Singh’s name, showed the lawyer had both saved the report to his drive and printed it out only nine minutes later.

He said this proved Mr Singh had lied years later when he denied having advance knowledge of the issues uncovered by a 2013 report carried out by forensic accounting firm Second Sight.

Mr Singh said he also did not know how to save or print documents during his employment at the organisati­on and had to ask others to do it for him. Mr Beer accused Mr Singh of telling “a big fat lie” to the inquiry and of having failed to disclose important informatio­n to the defence or court ahead of Ms Misra’s prosecutio­n, asking: “You’d known about the bug all along hadn’t you, Mr Singh?” The lawyer responded: “No, that’s not true.”

Asked again by Mr Beer if he “sought to cover up” his knowledge of the fault, Mr Singh answered: “There is no way I would ever cover up anything of that magnitude.”

The inquiry saw an email sent by Mr Singh to colleagues in 2015 where he said he knew of the bugs uncovered by Second Sight only “a day or so prior” to its report’s publicatio­n. In it, he warned the organisati­on would be “entering dangerous territory” if it responded to a BBC investigat­ion.

He continued: “Of course, it would be highly embarrassi­ng for POL (Post Office Limited) were it to be suggested that Fujitsu had informed some part of POL and that informatio­n had never reached the security team. Equally, it is embarrassi­ng were it to be suggested POL were kept in the dark by such an important supplier such as Fujitsu.”

Mr Singh told the inquiry “mistakes were made” in the prosecutio­n of Ms Misra. He added: “I’m ever so sorry Ms Misra had suffered and I am ever so embarrasse­d to be here, that we made those mistakes and put somebody’s liberty at stake and the loss she suffered.”

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