Monday, December 23, 2024

Post Office: Late sub-postmistress ‘wanted to see justice done’

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BBC David Blakey stands against a white wallBBC

David Blakey said his wife would urge the Post Office to “do the right thing” and compensate people “before more people pass”

The only regret of a former sub-postmistress was that she couldn’t live to see “real justice done”, her husband has said.

Gill Blakey, who passed away last week, would urge the Post Office to “put an end to all this delay over compensating people properly”, David Blakey said in a statement.

Campaigners have repeatedly criticised how long it has taken for sub-postmasters to get full redress for wrongful Post Office prosecutions.

Current Post Office chief executive Nick Read began three days of questions from chairman of the inquiry Sir Wyn Williams who announced Mrs Blakey’s death at Wednesday’s hearing.

In a statement issued through his lawyers, Mr Blakey said his wife “followed every day of the inquiry and her only real regret was that she couldn’t live until the end and to see real justice done”.

He said she was “overwhelmed with anger at the total incompetence and disregard shown by most of the witnesses” at the inquiry.

Mr Blakey added: “I settled my case because of my bad heart and I felt that by doing so, we would at least have some money in the bank to enjoy. How life changes.

“I know Gill would urge the Post Office to get rid of all these schemes and put an end to all this delay over compensating people properly. She would urge them to do the right thing before more people pass.”

Mrs Blakey, who was the sub-postmistress of the site in Grimsby they ran together, lost her job.

Mr Blakey, from Cleethorpes, who looked after the books, was convicted of theft and false accounting in 2004, and lost his job, his home and his pension as a result. He formally had his name cleared in 2021.

‘Part paralysis’

On his first day of evidence, the outgoing Post Office boss Mr Read said he was told “not to dig into” details of the Horizon scandal when he joined the business in 2019.

Mr Read was brought into the business to try to turn it around following findings that the IT system was behind the wrongful prosecution of hundreds of sub-postmasters.

During previous hearings, some executives have claimed Mr Read was “obsessed” with increasing his salary. He has also been investigated – and cleared – of bullying.

On Wednesday, Mr Read said when he joined the Post Office, its leadership were “part in denial, part in paralysis” about issues with the Horizon system.

Bosses were instead focussed on the company’s financial performance, adding he was not made aware of the “scale and enormity” of the scandal.

Mr Read said in a witness statement that private prosecutions of sub-postmasters “were presented to me as a historic issue that had ceased before 2015 and that I did not need to dig into the details of what had happened at Post Office in the past as this conduct had ended”.

He confirmed to Horizon inquiry lead counsel Jason Beer that the Post Office’s general counsel Ben Foat had told him that. Mr Foat is currently on a leave of absence.

Mr Read also said that dealing with the Horizon scandal was not flagged to him as an issue when he joined the organisation in September 2019.

He was brought in to replace Paula Vennells at a time when the loss-making organisation was facing a crisis of faith as the scale of the Horizon scandal came to light.

Mr Read told the inquiry that when a High Court judgement was handed down late in 2019 that found serious bugs, errors and defects in the Horizon system, there were “no urgent calls or panicked discussions” among senior leadership and the board, he said.

He agreed with a lawyer’s suggestion that bosses were “living in something of a dream world”.

He said it would be “impossible not to conclude that”, when asked by the inquiry’s lead counsel Jason Beer KC.

Between 1999 and 2015, hundreds of sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted when faulty Horizon accounting software made it look as though money was missing from branches.

But in 2017, some 555 sub-postmasters took legal action against the Post Office. In 2019, it agreed to pay them £58m in compensation, but much of the money went on legal fees.

One High Court judgement found the Horizon IT software contained a large number of software defects and was not “remotely robust”. A second – the Horizon Issues Judgement – found serious bugs in the system.

Mr Read told the inquiry that after the High Court judgement was handed down, he started working with Post Office lawyers so there was “more of a realisation from my perspective” as to the scale of the issue compared with the other members of the leadership team.

Mr Read, who will step down from his role next year, stepped back from front-line duties last year to give his “entire attention” to the final stage of the inquiry, which first started in 2022 and has heard evidence from scores of victims and executives.

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