MPs listening were not convinced. Darren Jones, Labour MP for Bristol North West, asked: "We welcome the statement today. However, if I've understood it correctly, the terms of reference are still being decided by ministers, and not by the independent chair, Sir Wyn Williams. Why?"
The minister said Williams had asked for extra powers, though his inquiry "wouldn't explore matters of substantive criminal law."
As the Post Office is wholly owned by government, many inside and outside Parliament have asked what the government did to rein in the hundreds of false prosecutions carried out by internal Post Office investigators aided and abetted by Japan-headquartered IT contractor Fujitsu. A civil claim for damages was settled by the Post Office in December 2019, with most of the money going to lawyers.
Scully prevaricated, murmuring: "He raises a pertinent point about Fujitsu. It's for the Post Office… to work out the terms of compensation and to build an issue around that. But I'm sure that [the subpostmasters] will hear what he said and absolutely raise that incredibly prevalent point, as they – as they seek redress."
However, the minister appeared to concede later that anyone from the Post Office or Fujitsu who was found guilty of crimes over the scandal could be punished by being made to pay compensation directly to their victims: "But we'll continue to look at what we can do to get full and fair settlement of compensation for postmasters in the different branches, of the stages of – of the civil cases and indeed the criminal cases."
Just put Sky News on, live from the Commons with an announcement that everyone convicted will get £100k compensation.
Sadly, the post office have said they can't afford to pay the compensation though, so the compensation will be being paid for by the taxpayer.
Post Office scandal: Government to foot bill for postmasters' compensation
A minister says wronged postmasters should be compensated "fairly and swiftly".www.bbc.com
Privatise the profits, socialise the losses...
Not surprising, as it's still government owned.
In May 2021 the British Computer Society (the official body for IT professionals in the UK) called for reconsideration of courts' default presumption that computer data is correct.
Not surprising at all, but there still seems to be no appetite for silver platters holding craniums on this, especially the brass snakes like Vennells who pushed on with prosecutions despite knowing the data was wrong.
From the wiki page:
This would be one of the more advantageous changes to come out of this whole shitshow. It's certainly been a bugbear of mine that questions about the integrity of records aren't usually considered a reasonable doubt.
The company who supplied the software were binned by HMRC as the software didn't work properly.
TBF loads of companies have fucked up NHS IT projects at one time or another.Fujitsu UK have something of a reputation for this already (if you remember the disastrous NHS IT project of the early 2000s, aka NHSPfIT, you'll be aware of their failure there too, and they later sued the NHS for £700m), but they still keep being awarded contracts.
When The Register started reporting on the Horizon debacle, it was always within the context of "Here's some of Fujitsu UK's previous howlers so here's why we think the postmasters probably aren't criminals".
TBF loads of companies have fucked up NHS IT projects at one time or another.
... a government department staffed by competent people...
Oh I agree but the money thing would be a problem -- as you say, people can earn way more in the private sector and I suspect a lot of people would be outraged if the public sector started matching private sector IT salaries. And a lot of people in IT (rightly or wrongly) want to work somewhere that's seen as a bit cool and sexy. Which isn't really Government/the Civil Service.I think that we need to establish a national computer department, a government department staffed by competent people, pay them what they could earn in the private sector.
We might then have a chance of creating large projects that actually work.
Oh I agree but the money thing would be a problem -- as you say, people can earn way more in the private sector and I suspect a lot of people would be outraged if the public sector started matching private sector IT salaries. And a lot of people in IT (rightly or wrongly) want to work somewhere that's seen as a bit cool and sexy. Which isn't really Government/the Civil Service.
Of course most companies fuck up big IT projects, it's just the public sector ones tend to be bigger and a lot, lot more visible.
Privatising the profits, nationalising the risk...Billion in potential compensation.
UK taxpayers to pay former Post Office workers up to £1bn compensation
Post Office says it can’t afford bill owed to those wrongly convicted of theft due to defective Horizon IT systemwww.theguardian.com
Holy shit
Surprised government apparently not suing Fujitsu whose faulty software played such a part in the scandal.Privatising the profits, nationalising the risk...
That might risk revealing backhanders...Surprised government apparently not suing Fujitsu whose faulty software played such a part in the scandal.
Ah but 2000-2010 labour in power. And labour in power for three years prior. So would expect procurement took place under labour.That might risk revealing backhanders...
That might risk revealing backhanders...
Billion in potential compensation.
UK taxpayers to pay former Post Office workers up to £1bn compensation
Post Office says it can’t afford bill owed to those wrongly convicted of theft due to defective Horizon IT systemwww.theguardian.com
Holy shit
If anyone fancies a read about the unendingly hideous fiasco that is government software procurement and implementation, this book (a few years old, but still relevant) makes for an eye-opening read:
The Blunders of Our Governments | Anthony King,Ivor Crewe | 9781780744056
The Blunders of Our Governments by Anthony King,Ivor Crewe | 9781780744056, Buy new & second-hand (used) books online with Free UK Delivery at AwesomeBooks.comwww.awesomebooks.com
Not that PLCs are often much better or anything, but it's particularly relevant for how the Post Office fucked up.
The former chief executive of the Post Office has quit her roles on the boards of Morrisons and Dunelm following the IT scandal which led to the wrongful convictions of former postmasters.
Morrisons announced Paula Vennells would leave after serving as a non-executive director since 2016.
She is relinquishing her non-executive position at home furnishing retailer Dunelm with immediate effect.
She is also stopping her duties as an ordained Church of England minister.
Post office scandal: Ex-boss quits director jobs after scandal
Paula Vennells steps down from Dunelm and Morrisons after an IT scandal which saw workers wrongfully convicted.www.bbc.co.uk
Vennells (CBE) earnt nearly £750k per annum...
Got a £388k bonus...
Had just £36k deducted as a result of the scandal.