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From: The Rt. Hon. James Arbuthnot, MP.
HOUSE OF COMMONS
LONDON SWIA 0AA
22 January 2015
Paula Vennells
CEO
Post Office
148 Old Street
London EC1V 9HQ
Yess PR. a
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tease would you offer me an answer to the questions I posed in my letter to you of 8
December 2014? These are:
1. Will you agree to retaining any and all data held by the Post Office which is relevant
to all cases under consideration?
2. Will you agree not to take any time barred limitation point in resisting legal claims
arising out of the introduction of Horizon and its support arrangements?
3. Will you agree to MPs meeting Second Sight to discuss our concerns and to hear
their take on the matter?
Whilst you may prefer an answer to come from either one of your lawyers or your public
affairs spokesman might you do me the courtesy of responding to this yourself, please?
Website: www. jamesarbuthnot.com
8 December 2014
Paula Vennells
CEO
Post Office
148 Old Street
London EC1V 9HQ
1 Thank you for your letter of 28 November 2014. In it you say that “the
Scheme and its processes are, in fact, operating as they were designed to”. In our
meeting of 17 November you told us that you had done exactly what you said you
would do. I disagree with you on both points.
Scope of the Mediation Scheme
2 The Mediation Scheme was set up in order to address the issues identified by
Second Sight in their interim report which was discussed in the Statement on ot July
2013.
3 As Mike Wood MP then said, “when the Post Office talks about Horizon, it
does not just mean the software in the computer system; it means the wider issues,
including the interface between that system and other systems; training staff how to
use it, and so on”. The Minister accepted this point in her reply, and in discussions
with MPs you too have always accepted it. The terms of reference of the Mediation
Scheme state that the Scheme was established “to help resolve the concerns of
SubPostmasters regarding the Horizon system and other associated issues”. In your
letter you change the emphasis of the terms of reference by your importation of the
word “directly”, 2
1 Overview of the Initial Complaint Review and mediation Scheme, 4 September 2013
2 “you appeared to suggest that the scope of the Scheme should now be broader than issues directly
associated with the Applicants’ complaints and dissatisfaction with the Horizon system and directly
associated issues. However, the Scheme was established with the specific and targeted purpose of
addressing cach of the individual Applicants’ complaints and dissatisfaction with Horizon and directly
associated issues and the fact is that no fault with the system has been identified in any of the now 119
cases that have been comprehensively re-investigated by Post Office or as part of Second Sight's
general work.”
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4 Your assertion that “no fault with the system has been identified in any of the
now 119 cases” incorrectly limits the meaning of the word “system” to the software.
This contradicts your own definition of Horizon. And as the Minister said in the
Statement, “what it has found to be lacking in Horizon is not the software, but the
support and other issues around the software”.
5 Other issues identified by Second Sight in their interim report included “the
Post Office audit and investigations methods [which] have had a profound impact on
the SPMRs involved in almost all of the cases we have examined”,* and the
availability to, and awareness amongst, SPMRs of the contract of over 100 pages.®
6 You agreed that the Mediation Scheme was to be available to all SPMRs
whose cases had been identified by Second Sight as giving rise to concern.
Specifically you agreed that it would be available to SPMRs, such as my own
constituent, Jo Hamilton, who had pleaded guilty to criminal charges. You knew that
I— amongst many other MPs - would not otherwise have agreed to it.
7 You agreed, as you said in your letter of 28" November 2014, that you would
fund the engagement of “professional advisers to support them in all relevant stages
of the process”.
8 The outcome we envisaged was that Second Sight would carry out detailed
inquiries into each individual case. We expected that there might be some cases
where it would seem clear to all that a subpostmaster was trying it on, and that the
result should be that Second Sight would recommend to the Working Group that that
case should not go into the mediation scheme. The Working Group, not Second
Sight, would make the final decision, but such cases of exclusion from mediation
would be the exception.
9 It was the Post Office who had chosen Second Sight to be the forensic
accountants to give independent advice to you and to Members of Parliament about
these issues. As you know, I had some trouble persuading my colleagues in the
House of Commons that a firm of accountants selected and paid for by the Post
Office could be genuinely independent. But to the great credit of Second Sight, they
have been — a point recognised by the Minister in the Statement of July 2013 when
she said, “the continuing involvement of Second Sight, which is independent of the
process, is crucial as part of that working group”.
3 { can advise that the name Horizon relates to the entire application. This encompasses the software,
both bespoke and software packages, the computer hardware and communications equipment installed
jn branch and the central data centres, It includes the software used to control and monitor the systems.
In addition, I can advise you that testing and training systems are also referred to as Horizon’ - Second
Sight Interim report section 1.6, POL’s Information Manager’s definition
4 Second Sight’s Interim Report, paragraph 1.7
5 Second Sight’s Interim Report, paragraph 7.7
Operation of the Working Group
10 The minutes of the Working Group of 30" January 2014 show that, “it was
agreed by the Working Group that it was not the role of the Working Group to offer
an opinion on the merits of a particular case.” Where a particular case is
nonetheless discussed at the Working Group, the Sub Postmaster is not represented
by the professional adviser funded by the Post Office.
i It appears — although I have not been present at a meeting of the Working
Group - that the process is that the Post Office may take anything up to six months
to conduct its own investigations into a given case and that Second Sight may then
take two or three months to investigate and produce their report. In many cases
(including that of my constituent Jo Hamilton) the Post Office states that a case
cannot move from investigation to mediation until the release of the next Second
Sight Report. I gather this may take as long as next April to appear.
12 This drawn out process creates obvious difficulties for those who, for
example, are having their house repossessed. It is possible that the delay caused by
this process will cause the Statute of Limitations to be a bar to some SPMs suing the
Post Office.
Conclusions
13 Despite the points raised in paragraph 5 above about investigations and
contracts, the Post Office response of 22 September 2014 states, among other
things, that contracts and Post Office investigations are outside Second Sight’s remit.
14 Despite your agreement that the Mediation Scheme was to be available to all
SPMRs whose cases had been identified by Second Sight as giving rise to concern
(see paragraph 6 above), in recent months the Post Office has been objecting to
around 90% of cases going forward to mediation. This is contrary to the envisaged
process whereby exclusion from mediation would be the exception (see paragraph 8
above), as well as being contrary to the entire purpose of the Mediation Scheme.
15 Despite your agreement to fund the engagement of professional advisers to
support SPMRs “in all relevant stages of the process” (see paragraph 7), the Post
Office is attempting, in the absence of representation by those professional advisers
of the SPMR under consideration, to have 90% of cases excluded from mediation.
16 Despite your agreement that those who had pleaded guilty would be able to
take advantage of the Mediation Scheme (see paragraph 6 above), the Post Office
has objected to cases going to mediation on the ground that the SPMR had pleaded
guilty.
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17 Despite your knowing that I and other MPs agreed to the Mediation Scheme
only on the basis that it would be available to those who had pleaded guilty (see
paragraph 6 above), you did not tell me, nor so far as I am aware any other MP, that
the Post Office was arguing that a plea of guilty should debar the SPMR from
mediation.
18 Clearly the Post Office is aware of the Limitation Act point set out in
paragraph 13 above — it has enough lawyers. The Post Office could allay any
suspicion that this was a factor in the way that it has been behaving by agreeing that
Post Office Ltd will not take any time barred limitation point in resisting legal claims
arising out of the introduction of Horizon and its support arrangements. Will you
agree to this? And will you agree not to destroy any data relevant to these cases?
19 Will you agree to MPs meeting Second Sight to discuss our concerns and to
hear their take on the matter?
20 I shall not be standing at the next General Election. It is clear that this will
not have been resolved by then, and so the group of MPs who met you have agreed
that Kevan Jones MP should take over my role in the group of MPs. This has been
accepted without demur by the almost 150 other MPs who have constituents in this
plight. In any event I could not continue negotiating with you because I have lost
faith in the Post Office Board’s commitment to a fair resolution of this issue. I shall
be pursuing the need for justice for Sub Postmasters in other ways.
21 In view of your agreement that I may release your letter to the media I shall
do so, along with this reply.
cc Mr Speaker
Alice Perkins, Chairman, Post Office
Alan Bates
Russell Brown MP, Chairman of All Party Post Office Group
Sir Anthony Hooper, Matrix Chambers
Jo Swinson MP, Parliamentary Under Secretary, Department BIS
Second Sight
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All MPs who have expressed a concern
Second Sight