Former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells was told directly about problems with the flawed Horizon IT system and was warned it would be ‘dangerous’ to cover it up, a new bombshell secret recording revealed last night.
During a taped meeting with independent investigators from Second Sight on July 2 2013, Ms Vennells was informed of the allegations that sub-postmaster branch accounts could be accessed remotely.
That’s despite the former Post Office chief – who had her CBE formally stripped from her by the King last month – telling MPs in 2015 she was not aware of any miscarriage of justice.
More than 900 sub-postmasters were convicted of theft, fraud and false accounting between 1999 and 2015 due to faults in Fujitsu’s Horizon system. For more than two decades, sub-postmasters complained the system was faulty.
The shocking injustice was thrown back into the spotlight in the ITV drama Mr Bates vs The Post Office, based on campaigner Alan Bates’s bid for justice.
Ms Vennells ran the Post Office at the height of the scandal while it routinely denied there was a problem with its Horizon IT system.
The Post Office continued to deny remote access was possible until 2019 – six years after the meeting. It later emerged Fujitsu staff could access the accounts from their Bracknell HQ.
Former Post Office CEO Paula Vennells (pictured) was told directly about problems with the flawed Horizon IT system and was warned it would be ‘dangerous’ to cover it up, a new bombshell secret recording revealed last night
Ms Vennells was informed of the allegations that sub-postmaster branch accounts could be accessed remotely
Two years after the meeting, Ms Vennells – who had had her CBE formally stripped from her by the King last month – told MPs in 2015 she was not aware of any miscarriage of justice
39 postmasters accused of theft by Post Office celebrate outside the High Court In London after they had their convictions overturned in 2019
In a recording obtained and aired by ITV News, Ms Vennells and several other Post Office executives were briefed by forensic accountants Ron Warmington and Ian Henderson from Second Sight, who were probing issues with Horizon.
The pair said: ‘When you say they didn’t have access to the Horizon system, but actually they were passing entries to live data…that is really dangerous ground.
‘The last thing you want is a spot review response that says, categorically there was no access to live data from Bracknell.
‘If in a week’s time some bloody whistleblower pipes up to say, well, actually I was working on the second floor and we routinely did ‘X’.
The pair raised concerns that the Post Office was not being transparent about possible remote access. They said: ‘That sort of what might be interpreted in the press as weasel wording, um, is extremely dangerous.
‘We’re not just asking whether people in that basement had access to live systems, even if your answer is, they did have access to what they called the live system, but it wasn’t live, which itself, you know, we’re having to kind of word carefully to make it sound other than stupid…
‘When you say they didn’t have access to the Horizon system, but actually they were passing entries to live data. Um, but you didn’t ask that, that that is really dangerous ground.’
The latest development comes after a senior MP called for police to investigate a series of covert recordings from 2013 which include Post Office executives discussing the Horizon IT scandal.
Former Post Office boss Paula Vennells (pictured) intends to hand back her CBE with immediate effect amid the fallout of the Horizon IT scandal, which led to the wrongful prosecution of hundreds of sub-postmasters
Pressure was mounting on the Post Office to face criminal action last night after secret recordings on Wednesday and Thursday proved its bosses covered up the Horizon IT scandal
The recordings revealed that the company and Fujitsu knew their faulty computer system could alter sub-postmasters’ accounts more than ten years ago, despite denying this for years
Liam Byrne, chairman of the Commons Business and Trade Committee, said the recordings were ‘the first evidence that people knew there was a problem’.
The recordings, uncovered on Wednesday by Channel 4 News, contained conversations between Post Office executives and two forensic accountants on May 22 2013.
The first involved a call with IT specialist Simon Baker, in which it is admitted there is a possibility that sub-postmasters’ accounts could be altered without their knowledge.
Mr Baker said: ‘If somebody in Bracknell had a brainstorm and wanted to do something, they could just do it.’ Fujitsu’s head office is based in Bracknell, west London.
In another jaw-dropping moment, Mr Baker describes how he had informed Post Office executives Alwen Lyons and Susan Crichton that Fujitsu had admitted they could access sub-postmasters’ accounts secretly.
In previous revelations, it is understood that chief Horizon architect Gareth Jenkins told investigators as early as 2012 that the IT system could be accessed remotely by Fujitsu at its HQ. However, the Post Office did not admit this until 2019.
In the second recording, the Second Sight accountants present their evidence to Post Office company secretary Ms Lyons and chief lawyer Ms Crichton – one day before then CEO Paula Vennells met with victims campaigner Lord Arbuthnot.
Labour MP Liam Byrne, (pictured) chairman of the business and trade committee, said he felt ‘pure rage’ as he responded to what he says is the ‘first evidence from 2013 that people knew there was a problem’
The accountants can be heard strongly recommending that Ms Vennells is briefed on the failings of the system. They were later fired.
Mr Byrne, chairman of the business and trade committee, said he felt ‘pure rage’ as he responded to what he says is the ‘first evidence from 2013 that people knew there was a problem’.
He said: ‘Not only did they mislead Parliament, they were sending people to prison as late as 2015. So two years after these recordings had been made.
‘This is potentially perjury, this is contempt of Parliament, it’s a miscarriage of justice. I mean, there’s a whole host of sins here.
‘It does now beg the question as to whether the police have now got sufficient evidence to act.’
Lord Arbuthnot broke down in tears when shown the evidence. He said: ‘I’ve been doing this for 14, 15 years now and to think that a British institution could behave like this, owned by us, is just terrible.’
Fujitsu, the Post Office and Mr Jenkins declined to comment to the Channel 4 tape.
The Post Office also forced at least 4,000 branch managers to pay back cash based on the flawed data.
Former postmaster Alan Bates, who is portrayed by Toby Jones (pictured) in the drama, led and won the initial legal battle after himself falling victim to the faults
The scandal is seen as one of the UK’s biggest miscarriages of justice and has gained recent national attention over recent days thanks to Mr Bates Vs The Post Office airing on ITV
Some victims were sent to prison or financially ruined, others were shunned by their communities while some took their own lives.
An inquiry into the Post Office and the Horizon IT scandal will continue next month.
Last month Post Office boss Nick Read was accused of giving ‘misleading’ evidence to MPs as they called for the firm to be stripped of its role in delivering compensation to victims of the Horizon IT scandal.
A report by the Commons business committee suggested Mr Read, who is under internal investigation over his conduct, misled MPs on ‘at least two counts’.
These included the use of gagging orders and whether the Post Office had hired PR specialists to help deal with the crisis engulfing the firm.
The report branded the Post Office ‘not fit for purpose’ to administer payouts to postmasters.
It called on the Government to immediately step in and remove the Post Office from ‘any involvement in delivering redress’ amid reports of a ‘toxic’ culture.
It branded the beleaguered firm’s leadership as being in ‘utter disarray’ amid claim and counter-claim about alleged bullying and sexism.
The Post Office runs two compensation schemes and plays a key role in administering a third.
In one particularly damning passage, the report said: ‘The Post Office is not fit for purpose to administer any of the schemes of redress required to make amends for one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in British history.’
Post Office boss Nick Read was last month accused of giving ‘misleading’ evidence to MPs
Hundreds of sub-postmasters were wrongfully prosecuted after they were blamed for non-existent shortfalls in their accounts produced by faulty Fujitsu software, called Horizon.
But just a fifth of the budget set aside for compensation has been paid out, the report said.
It added: ‘The Government must immediately remove the Post Office from any involvement in delivering redress for sub-postmasters and the Government should set out to the Committee how it proposes to deliver swift and effective redress for sub-postmasters, and in what legally binding time frames.’
In February, the committee was told that some postmasters were receiving ‘insultingly low’ compensation offers.
Regarding evidence given in recent months by Mr Read, it added: ‘Mr Read concurred that reform of the Post Office’s culture is still a ‘work in progress,’ not ‘job done.’
‘In that context, we note that Mr Read has supplied misleading evidence on at least two counts, relating to the Post Office’s use of, first, non-disclosure agreements and, secondly, PR firms.’
In February, it emerged that the Post Office had hired PR firm TB Cardew on a £15,000 a month contract to help it deal with the fallout from the scandal.
But, in January, Mr Read denied that the Post Office had hired PR advisers in the wake of the ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office.
Mr Read was also forced to clarify to the committee in a letter last month whether the Post Office used confidentiality agreements in reaching settlements with wronged postmasters.
He had originally said ‘no’ when asked by MPs if it continued using confidentiality agreements.
But his letter said: ‘On occasion Post Office enters into settlement agreements with postmasters, for example, to resolve disputes that may arise between Post Office and postmasters in the ordinary course of business.
‘Such settlement agreements include confidentiality provisions, as is the case in most organisations.’
It comes as furious sub-postmasters wrongly convicted in Horizon scandal said they were ‘glad’ Ms Vennells is handing back CBE.
Ms Vennells said in January that she is ‘truly sorry’ for the ‘devastation’ the scandal had caused to staff falsely accused of fraud when her organisation routinely denied there were problems with its systems.
Jo Hamilton, 66, was falsely accused of stealing £36,000 from a village shop in South Warnborough, Hampshire, and eventually pleaded guilty to false accounting in fear of going to jail
Her nightmare started when the Horizon system started showing shortfalls in her accounts in 2003 – at one stage showing the amount double before her eyes
Former sub-postmistress Jo Hamilton said she was ‘glad’ the ex-Post Office had handed her CBE back, adding: ‘It’s a shame it took just a million people to cripple her conscience.’
Meanwhile, the Communication Workers Union reportedly said Ms Vennells should also hand back her millions in bonuses.
It said: ‘Since she received these bonuses while overseeing the most widespread miscarriage of justice in British history, it would only be right to return this money.’
Ms Hamilton, who was wrongfully convicted in 2008 of stealing thousands of pounds from the village shop in South Warnborough, Hampshire, said: ‘It shows the people have spoken – about everything really.
‘It’s not just about her CBE, it’s about how disgusting the whole thing is.
‘We’re all sick and tired of people taking money, being paid exorbitant amounts of money, and politicians taking absolutely no notice of you whatsoever… I think the people are just sick of it.’
Varchas Patel, whose father Vipin who was wrongfully convicted of fraud in 2011 after being accused of stealing £75,000 from his Post Office branch in Oxford, said: ‘My initial reaction is good, I’m glad. She doesn’t deserve that CBE, she never did deserve that CBE.
‘Now the big question for me is, who gave her that CBE?
‘When she was given that CBE… there were two other things that happened – one, she was given a CBE, two, she was given a seat at the Cabinet Office and three, she was given a job as the chair of the Imperial College (Healthcare NHS Trust).
‘They gave her three golden handshakes for fighting Mr Bates in court.’
Mr Patel added: ‘It’s not just Paula Vennells, there are others.
‘There are in-house Post Office lawyers, and especially the in-house investigators – the investigators who investigated the likes of my father and others.’
Ms Vennells had also seen Prime Minister Rishi Sunak weigh in behind efforts to strip her of her CBE.
The shamed ex-Post Office chief said: ‘I have listened and I confirm that I return my CBE with immediate effect.
‘I am truly sorry for the devastation caused to the sub-postmasters and their families, whose lives were torn apart by being wrongly accused and wrongly prosecuted as a result of the Horizon system’.
Her decision to hand back her honour came after more than a million people signed an online petition to take it off her.
It also followed Downing Street saying Mr Sunak would ‘strongly support’ an investigation by the Honours Forfeiture Committee into whether Ms Vennells should lose the award, which was given for her ‘services to the Post Office and to charity’.
Post Office minister Kevin Hollinrake also said she should consider voluntarily giving up the honour.
A Post Office spokesperson said: ‘The statutory Public Inquiry, chaired by a judge with the power to question witnesses under oath, is the best forum to examine the issues raised by this evidence. We continue to remain fully focused on supporting the Inquiry get to the truth of what happened and accountability for that.’