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[News] Post Office Scandal -



Talby

Active member
Dec 24, 2023
282
Sussex
I'll intervene here.

There's an X/twitter account posting under the pseudonym "Monsieur Cholet" - https://twitter.com/stugoo17 - who seems to follow the whole scandal closely. In one of their post they have linked a current Albion employee with being a Post Office investigator at the time of the Horizon issues and subsequent fallout.

I doubt any of us have intricate knowledge of if and how anyone was involved, including any Albion staff, but I'll say that the club monitor NSC closely and will work to protect the name and reputations of their staff. so I would strongly discourage people from entering into speculation and insinuation here. I will not hesitate, in order to protect myself (and you) from removing posts and/or restricting posting rights.
Completely understand that. I do know that key supporters for the sub postmasters are looking into each and every case in detail and there is a huge amount of anger about their treatment.
 




PILTDOWN MAN

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Sep 15, 2004
19,595
Hurst Green
A very good friend of mine was a PO auditor until he took early retirement (best decision he has ever taken, according to him). He ran a team of auditors. His role apart from training was simply to audit, if issues were found his team escalated it. This is when the investigation team came in. He said the system (Horizon) just wasn't robust enough and not tested correctly before roll out.
 


Talby

Active member
Dec 24, 2023
282
Sussex
A very good friend of mine was a PO auditor until he took early retirement (best decision he has ever taken, according to him). He ran a team of auditors. His role apart from training was simply to audit, if issues were found his team escalated it. This is when the investigation team came in. He said the system (Horizon) just wasn't robust enough and not tested correctly before roll out.
Someone we know, his dad had a stroke and serious mental health issues during and after the investigation into his post office.
 


lawros left foot

Glory hunting since 1969
NSC Patron
Jun 11, 2011
14,071
Worthing
My Daughter worked as an assistant manager for a busy Post office.

While she was on holiday, £5,000 went missing.

Although it was investigated by the PO, and the culprit was very obvious, the PO did nothing.

My Daughter was told by the Area Manager that the PO didn’t want any adverse publicity after the Horizon scandal.

The thief was asked to resign 2 weeks after the investigation, and no further action was taken.
 


Talby

Active member
Dec 24, 2023
282
Sussex
My Daughter worked as an assistant manager for a busy Post office.

While she was on holiday, £5,000 went missing.

Although it was investigated by the PO, and the culprit was very obvious, the PO did nothing.

My Daughter was told by the Area Manager that the PO didn’t want any adverse publicity after the Horizon scandal.

The thief was asked to resign 2 weeks after the investigation, and no further action was taken.
Well, they’re getting a lot of adverse publicity now!
 




portlock seagull

Well-known member
Jul 28, 2003
17,776
Problem with “they’s” is their personnel are never held personally accountable. Like ratlines to South America, the bastards individually responsible for ruining or even ending lives see out their days in comfort; and regardless of enquiries - which can take decades it’s no wonder the real villains die before any justice can be brought (if any). Look no further than our own club’s history!
 




Easy 10

Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Jul 5, 2003
62,403
Location Location
This 4-parter is excellent viewing, and culminates in a documentary on Friday. I've followed it since the scandal broke, and the blood runs cold at the magnitude of what these poor innocent folk were put through. People were jailed, lost their livelihoods, and in some cases lost their lives.

The corporate-level denials and cover-ups has echoes of Hillsborough. "Nothing to see here", whilst deliberately crushing those with the smallest voices.

Disgusting. Vennells and her fellow executives at the PO should be facing corporate manslaughter charges.
 




clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,876
"Fascinating" culture/procedures at the post office at the time in above blog.

One postmaster spotted that a customer had exploited a loop hole in the system. She had a card that was used to transfer money into her company account.

However the customer found the card could be used to withdraw cash as well.

From her account ? No the Post Office...


On top of that, on withdrawing the cash the Post Office software then credited the company account as per the the purpose of the card.

So a £500 pound withdrawal left the postmaster with a £1000 loss. The customer was eventually prosecuted, but as per the contracts at the time (and the way the law was interpreted) the postmaster was liable for the losses of £10,000.

Unbelievable.
 
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Shropshire Seagull

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2004
8,787
Telford
The PO people who signed off the go live should be in jail, Fujitsu should have been sued and whoever led the QA Testing dismissed at bare minimum.

These things are almost always down to cost and this time it led to innocent people being stitched up.
I know there are many IT'ers on here who have worked in software development and will be all too aware of the constraint triangle. Time, cost & quality.

I was not involved with Horizon but have seen countless government IT systems during my 35 years that delivered sub-optimal solutions due to the constraint triangle.

I could say more but OSA does not permit ....
 






Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,339
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
I know there are many IT'ers on here who have worked in software development and will be all too aware of the constraint triangle. Time, cost & quality.

I was not involved with Horizon but have seen countless government IT systems during my 35 years that delivered sub-optimal solutions due to the constraint triangle.

I could say more but OSA does not permit ....
Would have been the case for Horizon for sure but there are lots of levers that solve this issue in modern development.

Using proof of concept and MVP with iterative sprints and go lives, fixed pricing with penalties, zero 'must' defect policy and using MACH architecture to deploy services and interfaces as and when needed.

I'd imagine government is still stuck in 2001 though.
 


rippleman

Well-known member
Oct 18, 2011
4,988
I know there are many IT'ers on here who have worked in software development and will be all too aware of the constraint triangle. Time, cost & quality.

I was not involved with Horizon but have seen countless government IT systems during my 35 years that delivered sub-optimal solutions due to the constraint triangle.

I could say more but OSA does not permit ....
Oh yes. HMRC has had a succession of IT disasters going back decades.

About ten years ago I had a meeting with senior, head office staff from HMRC. One of the issues we discussed was HMRC's failing IT systems. During the course of the conversation HMRC said "we are beholden to our IT suppliers"! I couldn't believe it so I asked him to repeat it. He did. I said "but you are the customer, how can you be "beholden" to a supplier / contractor?". HMRC just shrugged.
 


HeaviestTed

I’m eating
NSC Patron
Mar 23, 2023
2,124
HMRC do something similar - they lost their case against Kay Adams and kept taking it to tribunal after tribunal with all the assets in the world to pay for all the barristers they like.


Forget about the money but a decade of fighting hmrc is life defining.

Absolutely disgusting.
 




rippleman

Well-known member
Oct 18, 2011
4,988
This 4-parter is excellent viewing, and culminates in a documentary on Friday. I've followed it since the scandal broke, and the blood runs cold at the magnitude of what these poor innocent folk were put through. People were jailed, lost their livelihoods, and in some cases lost their lives.

The corporate-level denials and cover-ups has echoes of Hillsborough. "Nothing to see here", whilst deliberately crushing those with the smallest voices.

Disgusting. Vennells and her fellow executives at the PO should be facing corporate manslaughter charges.
It is excellent tv. The casting and the acting are absolutely superb. So good that at times it is like watching a documentary.

The treatment of the PO staff is truly appalling as is the lengths that the PO went to in an attempt cover it up. Somebody needs to be held to account. Hopefully prosecutions will follow but following the Hillsborough debacle where despite dozens of police officers being involved in a conspiracy not one of them got banged up, I'm not very hopeful.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
HMRC do something similar - they lost their case against Kay Adams and kept taking it to tribunal after tribunal with all the assets in the world to pay for all the barristers they like.


Forget about the money but a decade of fighting hmrc is life defining.

Absolutely disgusting.
Assets being taxpayers money, as did the Post Office. We are all paying for this debacle.
 


Peteinblack

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2004
4,135
Bath, Somerset.
The silence from the Government - which likes to present itself as being on the side of hard-working, honest, decent people - is deafening, but predictable. The Tories never condemn bosses or bad employers, only 'lazy' workers and 'greedy' trade unions.

If only the PO bosses were social security 'scroungers or people in small boats, I'm sure Ministers would be announcing 'robust' retribution against the perpetrators, and a major clamp-down.
 
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Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,863
The silence from the Government - which likes to present itself as being on the side of hard-working, honest, decent people - is deafening, but predictable. The Tories never condemn bosses or bad employers, only 'lazy' workers and 'greedy' trade unions.

If only the PO bosses were social security 'scroungers or people in small boats, I'm sure Ministers would be announcing 'robust' retribution against the perpetrators, and justice for the victims.
Sadly you are 100% spot-on. Also it's sad that when wrong-doing is exposed the Post Office, like the NHS, just wants to cover its arse. These organisations lie, obfuscate, stonewall, delay, deny - anything other than be open. Then when the truth can't be contained any longer, they just say they're 'sorry' and that 'safeguards have been put in place to stop it happening again'. And who was at fault? 'Wrong to blame individuals'.
 






A mex eyecan

Well-known member
Nov 3, 2011
3,872
Sadly you are 100% spot-on. Also it's sad that when wrong-doing is exposed the Post Office, like the NHS, just wants to cover its arse. These organisations lie, obfuscate, stonewall, delay, deny - anything other than be open. Then when the truth can't be contained any longer, they just say they're 'sorry' and that 'safeguards have been put in place to stop it happening again'. And who was at fault? 'Wrong to blame individuals'.
usually followed by some ‘high flyer’ deciding to step back, retire, follow new paths (add whatever other lame excuse you wish) and set off into the sunset with a rather nice pension or golden hand shake which is paid for from the public purse .. and incredibly then walk into some other cosy high position elsewhere.

Lord it makes you sick to your guts.
 


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