Fwd: Advisory board goal for Post Office scandal victims to be returned to rightful financial position

2024-12-05 Thread Gunnar Larson
-- Forwarded message -
From: Gunnar Larson 
Date: Mon, Jan 23, 2023, 3:34 AM
Subject: Advisory board goal for Post Office scandal victims to be returned
to rightful financial position
To: cypherpunks 


https://www.computerweekly.com/news/252529287/Advisory-board-goal-for-Post-Office-scandal-victims-to-be-returned-to-rightful-financial-position


The board set up to monitor the compensation scheme for Post Office scandal
victims agrees goal of returning them to the financial position they would
be in had the scandal never happened

Karl Flinders, Chief reporter and senior editor EMEA
Published: 18 Jan 2023 12:15

The advisory board set up to oversee compensation awards to 555 victims of
the Post Office Horizon scandal has agreed a goal of returning them to the
financial position they would have been in had the scandal not happened.

Thousands of former subpostmasters were blamed for accounting shortfalls
caused by errors in the Post Office accounting software. They were forced
to repay huge sums, and were often bankrupted as a result. Many were
prosecuted and sent to prison.

The scandal destroyed the lives and livelihoods of the former
subpostmasters and their families for decades, with many suffering
stress-related illness. Suicides have been linked with the scandal.

In its first meeting, the GLO Compensation Scheme Advisory Board met
representatives of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy (BEIS).

The board agreed: “As with the general law, the goal should be to restore
the claimants to the position that they would have been in if the scandal
had not happened.”

The 555 former subpostmasters and Post Office branch workers were part of a
Group Litigation Order (GLO), which in 2019 proved that the software used
by Post Office branches, known as Horizon, was causing the unexplained
shortfalls they were blamed for.

They proved the software, from Fujitsu, was to blame, and forced the Post
Office to admit this was the case after nearly 20 years of denying it.

The Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance
The victory for the 555 subpostmasters in the High Court, all part of the
Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance (JFSA), were awarded £58m in damages,
but after their legal costs – provided by a litigation funder that requires
repayment with interest – were taken out, they were left with just £11m to
share. This left people that had lost homes, businesses and huge sums of
money with an average of a few thousand pounds each.

The judgements in the High Court case, which was paid for by the victims,
also triggered the unravelling of one of the biggest miscarriages of
justice in British history. So far, more than 80 former subpostmasters have
had wrongful convictions for theft and fraud overturned.

The court ruling also forced the Post Office to set up a compensation
scheme for any subpostmaster affected by the Horizon errors.

But the Post Office and its government backer did not allow any of the 555
that took part in the court action to apply, citing that the compensation
that was already paid was “full and final”.

Alan Bates, the former subpostmaster who set up the JFSA in 2009 and has
chaired it since, wrote to the government after the court victory,
demanding it paid the legal costs to leave JFSA members with fairer
compensation, but the government refused.

But Bates and JFSA members kept pushing the government for justice, and
through generating public pressure and instigating a judicial review forced
the government to set up a statutory public inquiry into the Horizon
scandal, which is ongoing.

Although compensation was initially left out of the terms of reference of
the public inquiry, the JFSA and its supporters forced the government to
include an examination of compensation.

Fair compensation
The JFSA kept fighting for fair compensation, just as they had fought for
justice for over a decade, and in June, the government was forced to agree
to pay it.

The GLO Compensation Scheme Advisory Board, set up to oversee the JFSA
compensation scheme, is made up of University of Oxford professor
Christopher Hodges, who is chair, peer James Arbuthnot and MP Kevan Jones,
who have supported and campaigned for justice for victims of the Horizon
scandal for two decades.

Arbuthnot said he was encouraged by the first meeting of the board with
BIES representatives. “Two key principles – the need for the goal to be to
restore the claimants to the position that they would have been in if the
scandal had not happened, and the imperative of speed of compensation –
were agreed,” he said. “Now we need to ensure that both are carried out.”

Jones said: “Good progress was made during the first meeting of the GLO
Compensation Scheme Advisory Board, including the parameters of the scheme.
The next meeting will be in February, where we will discuss setting up the
scheme as soon as possible.”

JFSA chair Bates said: “An oversight board was something very much missing
in previous schemes and it 

Fwd: Advisory board goal for Post Office scandal victims to be returned to rightful financial position

2024-08-22 Thread Gunnar Larson
-- Forwarded message -
From: Gunnar Larson 
Date: Tue, Jan 24, 2023, 7:20 AM
Subject: Advisory board goal for Post Office scandal victims to be returned
to rightful financial position
To: cypherpunks 


“Two key principles – the need for the goal to be to restore the claimants
to the position that they would have been in if the scandal had not
happened, and the imperative of speed of compensation – were agreed,” he
said. “Now we need to ensure that both are carried out.”

-- Forwarded message -
From: Gunnar Larson 
Date: Mon, Jan 23, 2023, 3:34 AM
Subject: Advisory board goal for Post Office scandal victims to be returned
to rightful financial position
To: cypherpunks 


https://www.computerweekly.com/news/252529287/Advisory-board-goal-for-Post-Office-scandal-victims-to-be-returned-to-rightful-financial-position


The board set up to monitor the compensation scheme for Post Office scandal
victims agrees goal of returning them to the financial position they would
be in had the scandal never happened

Karl Flinders, Chief reporter and senior editor EMEA
Published: 18 Jan 2023 12:15

The advisory board set up to oversee compensation awards to 555 victims of
the Post Office Horizon scandal has agreed a goal of returning them to the
financial position they would have been in had the scandal not happened.

Thousands of former subpostmasters were blamed for accounting shortfalls
caused by errors in the Post Office accounting software. They were forced
to repay huge sums, and were often bankrupted as a result. Many were
prosecuted and sent to prison.

The scandal destroyed the lives and livelihoods of the former
subpostmasters and their families for decades, with many suffering
stress-related illness. Suicides have been linked with the scandal.

In its first meeting, the GLO Compensation Scheme Advisory Board met
representatives of the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy (BEIS).

The board agreed: “As with the general law, the goal should be to restore
the claimants to the position that they would have been in if the scandal
had not happened.”

The 555 former subpostmasters and Post Office branch workers were part of a
Group Litigation Order (GLO), which in 2019 proved that the software used
by Post Office branches, known as Horizon, was causing the unexplained
shortfalls they were blamed for.

They proved the software, from Fujitsu, was to blame, and forced the Post
Office to admit this was the case after nearly 20 years of denying it.

The Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance
The victory for the 555 subpostmasters in the High Court, all part of the
Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance (JFSA), were awarded £58m in damages,
but after their legal costs – provided by a litigation funder that requires
repayment with interest – were taken out, they were left with just £11m to
share. This left people that had lost homes, businesses and huge sums of
money with an average of a few thousand pounds each.

The judgements in the High Court case, which was paid for by the victims,
also triggered the unravelling of one of the biggest miscarriages of
justice in British history. So far, more than 80 former subpostmasters have
had wrongful convictions for theft and fraud overturned.

The court ruling also forced the Post Office to set up a compensation
scheme for any subpostmaster affected by the Horizon errors.

But the Post Office and its government backer did not allow any of the 555
that took part in the court action to apply, citing that the compensation
that was already paid was “full and final”.

Alan Bates, the former subpostmaster who set up the JFSA in 2009 and has
chaired it since, wrote to the government after the court victory,
demanding it paid the legal costs to leave JFSA members with fairer
compensation, but the government refused.

But Bates and JFSA members kept pushing the government for justice, and
through generating public pressure and instigating a judicial review forced
the government to set up a statutory public inquiry into the Horizon
scandal, which is ongoing.

Although compensation was initially left out of the terms of reference of
the public inquiry, the JFSA and its supporters forced the government to
include an examination of compensation.

Fair compensation
The JFSA kept fighting for fair compensation, just as they had fought for
justice for over a decade, and in June, the government was forced to agree
to pay it.

The GLO Compensation Scheme Advisory Board, set up to oversee the JFSA
compensation scheme, is made up of University of Oxford professor
Christopher Hodges, who is chair, peer James Arbuthnot and MP Kevan Jones,
who have supported and campaigned for justice for victims of the Horizon
scandal for two decades.

Arbuthnot said he was encouraged by the first meeting of the board with
BIES representatives. “Two key principles – the need for the goal to be to
restore the claimants to the position that they would have been in if the
scandal h