'You found nothing': Post office inquiry sees tense exchange

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  • čas přidán 22. 01. 2024
  • A postmaster’s concerns about errors in Horizon were dismissed as “unfounded”, the inquiry heard.
    Post Office investigator, Robert Daily, questioned Peter Holmes about a shortage of more than £46,000 which was discovered during an audit.
    Mr Holmes, a sub-postmaster from Newcastle, said he had “absolutely no idea” why there was a shortage but suggested Horizon may be at fault.
    He said: “Unless it’s the Horizon that has let us down, there is no one who has stolen £40,000. I haven’t got it, it’s not in my bank account… I’ve spent too many years in the police force seeing things go wrong to start stealing money, I really do not know.”
    Mr Daily later said checks were made and that the postmaster’s concerns were “unfounded”.
    #postoffice #inquiry #scandal
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Komentáře • 763

  • @ReiklandReaver
    @ReiklandReaver Před 4 měsíci +864

    I cannot believe how evil a lot of these people are to allow totally innocent people to go to prison, and then just carry on with their lives.

    • @GaryRoy-ib9et
      @GaryRoy-ib9et Před 4 měsíci +46

      They were on a bonus !

    • @melkin3549
      @melkin3549 Před 4 měsíci +95

      It was the big house, flash car and fat pension that helped them sleep at night. Their assets should all be sold now and proceeds given to those postmasters.

    • @denisemcdougal6445
      @denisemcdougal6445 Před 4 měsíci +14

      Everyday !!!!!!

    • @vickydimitriou6156
      @vickydimitriou6156 Před 4 měsíci +28

      And now being caught out in denial 😡

    • @susannehunter4017
      @susannehunter4017 Před 4 měsíci +31

      Interesting how so many of these senior corporate types seem to be appearing on the wrong side of the news these days, and how evasive and resentful many of them appear when being held accountable. Seems a lot of them think that fate is only for the little people. I imagine we'll see similar behaviour when certain of Lucy Letby's senior managers have to answer for their performances.

  • @bryanbrookes6366
    @bryanbrookes6366 Před 4 měsíci +332

    Everyone of the investigation team who brought the charges should be arrested and charged with perverting the course of justice

    • @alansharman3644
      @alansharman3644 Před 4 měsíci +38

      Maybe everyone involved should have their belongings appraise to see if they can afford to pay part of the compensation and then have all assets seized to pay the compensation bill, then court with no budget so they get no legal aid to help in their defence and lets see what it is like to be on the on the floor and not even on the bottom rung. Utterly despicable to say i was only doing my job at the end when he blatently only did the half of it coz that way he would get his bonus. They are all scumbags to the last.

    • @charliebrown7904
      @charliebrown7904 Před 4 měsíci +25

      And also charged with perjury - it is a serious criminal offence after all.

    • @JohnnyWaterbucket
      @JohnnyWaterbucket Před 4 měsíci +8

      Something Ive said all along.

    • @johnbarton3252
      @johnbarton3252 Před 4 měsíci +9

      What about the AUDITORS

    • @bryanbrookes6366
      @bryanbrookes6366 Před 4 měsíci +18

      @@johnbarton3252 everybody from the top to the bottom needs to be held to account. Take no prisoners even if they have retired that is no excuse.

  • @Kevin-mx1vi
    @Kevin-mx1vi Před 4 měsíci +618

    They didn't set out to investigate the supposed "disappearance" of money, they simply set out to prosecute people because blaming postmasters would hide their incompetence in accepting hugely faulty software.

    • @HoratioChinn
      @HoratioChinn Před 4 měsíci

      They were not investigators, all they were there for was to get money from the subpostmasters. If they didn't hand over the cash they prosecuted them as a warning to others to frighten them into giving the PO money or the same would happen to them. If they were still alive the Krays would be running the PO as a protection racket.

    • @allanmason3201
      @allanmason3201 Před 4 měsíci +52

      The system of bonuses for convictions which we recently learned about turned these investigators into bounty hunting goons.

    • @johnbarton3252
      @johnbarton3252 Před 4 měsíci +30

      WHY HAVE THE AUDITORS BEEN ALLOWED TO GET AWAY SCOT FREE, THEY WERE THE PEOPLE WHO SAID THE MONEY WAS MISSING

    • @direnova6284
      @direnova6284 Před 4 měsíci +8

      And the cash was nice.

    • @howardosborne8647
      @howardosborne8647 Před 4 měsíci

      @@allanmason3201 'Bounty Hunters' is a brilliant description for these rogues👌

  • @canalboating
    @canalboating Před 4 měsíci +208

    I think Sir Wyn has had enough of these barstewards

    • @philipwardle6820
      @philipwardle6820 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Sir Wyn and team are doing a first rate job, they show great tenacity and patience. It will be very interesting to see the report from the Inquiry, and the actions that follow to finally secure justice for the innocent and prosecutions for the guilty.

    • @michaelhearn3052
      @michaelhearn3052 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@philipwardle6820 True. The inquiry is not finished yet, with modules 5 & 6 to take place and Paula Vinnelles is to be interviewed. Also I noted that the Solicitors Regulatory Authority and Bar Council reps have been in t a parliamentary committee inquiry recently (viewable on CZcams) and they will be looking into the professional conduct of the Barristers and Solicitors, in this whole affair.

    • @paulrichards6894
      @paulrichards6894 Před 2 měsíci

      why did they warn people before they gave evidence but not warn others

    • @berryj.greene7090
      @berryj.greene7090 Před 3 dny

      @@philipwardle6820 Won't it indeed! I don't think that have a lot of power. The police need to pick up with this and join the feeding frenzy that is life today and, as far as I can see, always has been.

  • @jonchilds1637
    @jonchilds1637 Před 4 měsíci +390

    “Admitted to false accounting” - because Post Office ‘sponsored’ prosecutors told him that would be the best option!!

    • @Grz349
      @Grz349 Před 4 měsíci +19

      If he Admitted then where did he say the “stolen” money was?

    • @mikeomolt4485
      @mikeomolt4485 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@Grz349 Not sure if defendant is required to 'reveal' how they 'spent' proceeds of the 'crime', after 'confession'.
      Are there not convictions murder sometimes despite the absence of a body?

    • @deborahscott6005
      @deborahscott6005 Před 4 měsíci +21

      Exactly! It was an easier option for the poor Post Office Managers than the PO promise of prosecuting them for theft and getting a prison sentence if they did not agree to the lesser sentence. How can these 'investigators live with themselves.

    • @Craftbox2
      @Craftbox2 Před 3 měsíci

      @@mikeomolt4485The investigation team would be fully aware of 2 things 1. The defendant should they plead guilty would have a less harsh sentence and therefore would be encouraged by both counsel and the investigation team to please guilty, it would cost the post office less in legal fees and they get a ‘positive’ result
      2. The defendant was almost certainly innocent due to their being no other evidence apart from the faulty horizon system transaction log.
      This is the banality of evil.

    • @SagaciousFrank
      @SagaciousFrank Před 3 měsíci +4

      ​@@deborahscott6005, worse, they bluffed charges of theft without evidence.

  • @sandwormgod4771
    @sandwormgod4771 Před 4 měsíci +298

    There are people who have died before their names could be cleared. Horrendous.

  • @srp01983
    @srp01983 Před 4 měsíci +310

    I’d like to pay tribute to Mrs Holmes, who sat through this hearing listening to all the questions and answers. How she remained dignified and in control of her emotions deserves our admiration.
    The more of these so-called ‘investigators’ at the Inquiry, the more convinced I am that the Post Office had a deliberate policy of employing stupid, ignorant, uncaring, slapdash and vindictive thugs to do their dirty work.

    • @JelMain
      @JelMain Před 4 měsíci +24

      It didn't start there. The Chief Financial Officer is notable by his absence, as are Internal Audit and External Audit.

    • @bennewnham4497
      @bennewnham4497 Před 4 měsíci

      They will escape justice. It will be a cover up like all the other inquires. Consequences for individuals like Gestapo thug Robert Daily will be quietly forgotten. And don't make me laugh at the powerful millionaire Post Office bosses - not a chance of them being arrested because of this vile case.

    • @misterbonzoid5623
      @misterbonzoid5623 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Well put.

    • @a120068020
      @a120068020 Před 3 měsíci +14

      @@JelMainand Gareth Jenkins - how he's able to dodge the enquiry, demanding immunity before he will attend is incredible - can't they summons him?

    • @srp01983
      @srp01983 Před 3 měsíci

      @@a120068020 Yesterday’s witness had a sheriff appear on his doorstep to order him to the enquiry, so it seems they have some sort of compulsion to attend. As for Jenkins, both his appearances have been delayed because the Post Office submitted more documents just hours before the scheduled appearance. Cynics might suggest this was deliberate, and that the PO are still trying to obstruct justice. I’m one of those cynics.
      Jenkins has twice asked the chair of the Inquiry to apply to the AG for immunity, but this has been refused both times. Apparently he has provided a witness statement, but has not answered most of the questions asked.
      Jason Beer KC, Counsel to the Inquiry, along with his colleagues and the Chairman, Sir Wyn Williams, are all as sharp as razors. So are the lawyers and solicitors who are attending and who represent the sub-postmasters. I would not like to be cross-examined by any of them, particularly if I happened to be one of the many who have contributed to this miscarriage of justice.

  • @68marconi
    @68marconi Před 4 měsíci +62

    Sick and tired of seeing the corrupt go unpunished in this country.

  • @bbfeign1
    @bbfeign1 Před 4 měsíci +195

    Its just absolutely shocking the levels of incompetence

    • @NormanSilv
      @NormanSilv Před 4 měsíci +4

      Typical political spoils system

    • @andiidoode
      @andiidoode Před 4 měsíci

      no, this is incompetence, it's corruption, wide spread corruption.

    • @russjohnston3307
      @russjohnston3307 Před 4 měsíci +18

      I don't believe this is incompetence the management knew exactly what they were doing, this is a perfect example of workplace bullying of the highest order.

    • @Rachelebanham
      @Rachelebanham Před 4 měsíci +11

      it's not just incompetence though - it's deliberate, willful ignorance. If it was just incompetence I don't think he would have been as silent. Clearly there was a heavy steer by the PO that they'd paid so much money for Horizon that it was not allowed to be at fault.

    • @allanmason3201
      @allanmason3201 Před 4 měsíci +9

      I started out thinking that it was simple incompetence; the supply of that in the world is endless. But the more I hear, the more I'm convinced it was worse than that. It was executives chasing bonuses, no matter what lies they had to tell, no matter what the long-term cost to the organisation might be. It was crass corporate indifference to the wellbeing of employees. It was everybody covering their backside. It was management covering up their failures and ignorance.

  • @davian68
    @davian68 Před 4 měsíci +199

    These people are lying to Sir Wyn , No one is that stupid to not see the problem with not finding any money , It is time that these people started serving some porridge

    • @memyself717
      @memyself717 Před 4 měsíci +11

      And he knows they're lying to him, because a good lawyer never asks a question they do not already know the answer to.

    • @ExoticDoll
      @ExoticDoll Před 4 měsíci +2

      It's the classic "no comment" tactic.

    • @MetalSamantha
      @MetalSamantha Před 3 měsíci +4

      It’s absolutely obvious that they are lying through their teeth. That’s one thing that convinces me that they ALL knew

    • @sellesportico
      @sellesportico Před měsícem +1

      This guy refused to answer a hugely important question from Sir Wyn. They have been coached in cover-up.

  • @tismeagen684
    @tismeagen684 Před 4 měsíci +298

    Judging by the questions he asked Sir Wyn is obviously wise to the inadequate and inappropriate investigations of the post office officials.

    • @gregabott5583
      @gregabott5583 Před 4 měsíci +30

      A Lawyer never asks a questions that they do not already know the answer to.

    • @Liverpoolboy01
      @Liverpoolboy01 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Except the Post Office ones !

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před 4 měsíci +6

      What? He just made the biggest f00l of himself I've ever seen.
      He should be fired

    • @deanb61
      @deanb61 Před 2 měsíci

      Oh I'm pretty sure he knows :)

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @speed1223
    @speed1223 Před 4 měsíci +91

    This Robert Daily must definitely face a jail sentence.

    • @kevingilhooley2064
      @kevingilhooley2064 Před 4 měsíci +9

      And a long one at that

    • @MetalSamantha
      @MetalSamantha Před 3 měsíci +15

      Along with Paula Vennells and Stephen Bradshaw

    • @garybarnett2756
      @garybarnett2756 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Argree 100%

    • @robertbennett7731
      @robertbennett7731 Před 22 dny

      Give us this day our Daily porridge, and prosecute our sins as we prosecuted those we thought sinned against us.

    • @berryj.greene7090
      @berryj.greene7090 Před 3 dny

      I've said this before. Jail is far too kind and expensive. It won't even change a thing. I would put them on Pot-hole duties for 10 years. Do something useful for *?* sake... !

  • @SoddingaboutSi
    @SoddingaboutSi Před 4 měsíci +72

    If it hadn't been for the ITV drama on this vile miscarriage of justice, nothing would have ever been done.

    • @ryanhardman7903
      @ryanhardman7903 Před 4 měsíci +21

      This inquiry was happening long before the drama more people are just aware of the issue now

    • @221b-Maker-Street
      @221b-Maker-Street Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@ryanhardman7903 It's certainly sped the plough - for which I'm very grateful.
      I hope the SPMs get financial redress _plus_ compensation by the end of this year.

    • @evaflowervines9520
      @evaflowervines9520 Před 4 měsíci

      The TV programme was very good but the MP that got the ball rolling was in fact Andrew Bridgen . He spent years trying to get someone in authority to listen and investigate. The Blair government is also guilty; the MSM was leant on by the Tory government to keep it under the rug. Very reminiscent of a few journalists trying to expose Muslim grooming gangs. Ironically Andrew Bridgen has lost his place in parliament because he is trying to bring to light the number of excess deaths occurring throughout the western world and the reasons for them, a certain commonality perhaps?

    • @paulroper3298
      @paulroper3298 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Public enquiry has been going on for the last two years.

    • @barbra7562
      @barbra7562 Před 4 měsíci +10

      Private eye have been campaigning on this since 2012

  • @jacobcohen9205
    @jacobcohen9205 Před 4 měsíci +114

    All these Post Office guys have been coached by their Lawyers to answer I don't know, I can't recall, etc.

    • @James_Bowie
      @James_Bowie Před 4 měsíci +14

      Yep, and probably the same law firms who helped prosecute the victims.

    • @bobdylan7120
      @bobdylan7120 Před 4 měsíci +13

      Straight from the Nicola Sturgeon book on how to deal with inquiries.
      Her record was 50 I don't know, I don't recall, I can't remember and I was not aware, in a single session.

    • @EWAScotland
      @EWAScotland Před 3 měsíci

      @@bobdylan7120what a silly and childish comment. Talk about not reading the room

    • @bobdylan7120
      @bobdylan7120 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@EWAScotland Apologies, it was not my intent to upset the last remaining SNP voter in Scotland.

    • @Wilkins_Micawber
      @Wilkins_Micawber Před 3 měsíci +4

      Selective amnesia.

  • @user-jj7uy1ns5f
    @user-jj7uy1ns5f Před 4 měsíci +65

    Only jail time will stop this nonsense

    • @paulrichards6894
      @paulrichards6894 Před 2 měsíci +2

      i have watched loads of these and nearly all of them took part in this injustice.....not one came out with any credit

  • @colinireson9339
    @colinireson9339 Před 4 měsíci +107

    The silence from 1.19 to 1.29 says it all really. The 'investigators' had decided that the sub-postmasters were guilty. End of. Shocking, the post office should never be allowed to investigate anything ever again.

    • @paulrichards6894
      @paulrichards6894 Před 3 měsíci +3

      only justice will be to see these people jailed

    • @natalied9022
      @natalied9022 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Of course they did as there were fat bonuses for them if they prosecuted them

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @diane4488
    @diane4488 Před 3 měsíci +10

    This man seems particularly evil to me.
    Even now, he shows zero sign of any empathy, respect, or compassion for the innocent people who he pummeled into the ground, and who's souls he crushed.
    He has no humanity.
    That, my friends, is the sign of a truly evil person.

  • @lesmarsden2058
    @lesmarsden2058 Před 4 měsíci +71

    Seems to me that all the investigators, prosecutors, Fujitsu developers and senior post office staff are the ones guilty of ‘false accounting’ by deliberately failing to consider that losses could be caused by computer failures when the evidence was staring them in the face.

  • @wilson2455
    @wilson2455 Před 4 měsíci +58

    as I follow this (from Australia), the graft, corruption & 'buck-passing' from senior govt. officials, lawyers/judges & Horizon execs is simply mind-blowing..
    One can only imagine the stress & humiliation when 3 or 4 black BMW's pull up to a small local Post Office & they raid the place like it's a terrorist hideout !!

  • @tianimu
    @tianimu Před 4 měsíci +29

    Excellent cross-examination by the Chair here

  • @washburn8049
    @washburn8049 Před 4 měsíci +24

    I have watched most of these meetings and not one person from the post office and Fujitsu have told anything that resembles the truth.

  • @dirtydawg448
    @dirtydawg448 Před 4 měsíci +177

    Did they ever blame whoever was responsible for the recruitment of what they clearly thought were over 900 criminals or did they just think it was an unlucky coincidence? The incompetence is staggering! Someone in the organisation was clearly criminally negligent.

    • @scottanderson3751
      @scottanderson3751 Před 4 měsíci +14

      …and no doubt making a pretty penny or two 😉

    • @AndyCutright
      @AndyCutright Před 4 měsíci +10

      Did they fix the bug at some point in the past? I mean at some point they must have stopped having the problem or they would not have stopped prosecuting sub-postmasters. When did the prosecutions end? Or have they been ongoing up til now?

    • @johngreen6191
      @johngreen6191 Před 4 měsíci +8

      @@AndyCutright No never fixed all of the holes. Too expensive, one of them said that.

    • @dirtydawg448
      @dirtydawg448 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@AndyCutright it’s not on-going - it’s the case for the post masters (victims) that has taken so long and still hasn’t been fully resolved

    • @peterchapman697
      @peterchapman697 Před 4 měsíci +5

      The bug(s) are still present. All that has stopped is the prosecutions but the subpostmasters are still being held liable for the differences.

  • @b.nichols3255
    @b.nichols3255 Před 4 měsíci +52

    And he probably was paid a great deal of money for his incompetence.

    • @lindabirkett8803
      @lindabirkett8803 Před 4 měsíci +8

      He wasn't incompetent, he was malicious .....His job was to prosecute sub-postmasters and recover 'shortfalls'. He didn't look for any other evidence.

    • @stetomlinson3146
      @stetomlinson3146 Před 4 měsíci +6

      They got a percentage of the money recovered as bonus payments. Or to give it its proper name, “bounty hunting”!

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @davearmstrong2296
    @davearmstrong2296 Před 4 měsíci +24

    Yet another person who needs to be in jail for many, many years. So corrupt and useless.

  • @marcusclementson4026
    @marcusclementson4026 Před 4 měsíci +77

    The judge and jury was more than happy to convict people without any evidence

    • @johngreen6191
      @johngreen6191 Před 4 měsíci +1

      What I say too.

    • @stetomlinson3146
      @stetomlinson3146 Před 4 měsíci +20

      There was no jury! These people were forced to admit false accounting or theft. They weren’t given a choice and because they admitted it, there wasn’t a jury trial, just sentencing.

    • @johngreen6191
      @johngreen6191 Před 4 měsíci

      @@stetomlinson3146Sorry mate, google it, "were any of the subpostmaters tried by jury". Final. I cant keep correcting experts in the field.

    • @richardgallagher4880
      @richardgallagher4880 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@stetomlinson3146
      Liar😂😂😂

    • @stetomlinson3146
      @stetomlinson3146 Před 4 měsíci

      @@richardgallagher4880 OK, some had jury trials but many pleaded guilty, so the case was never heard by one.

  • @janineashley7410
    @janineashley7410 Před 4 měsíci +49

    It didn’t occur to me, in the light of absolutely no evidence and nothing to find, that it may actually be a computer glitch - as we'd been told repeatedly by all those we were hounding, (I was too busy conducting a witch hunt). Is the actual answer when asked "Didn't it occur to him....", rather than "Not at the time sir"

  • @geoffwright9570
    @geoffwright9570 Před 4 měsíci +24

    What's even worse. Its said that the post office showed increased profits in their end of year sccounts. But was in fact the payments demanded from the sub postmasters to cover the alleged false shortages.

  • @Steve-uf8pk
    @Steve-uf8pk Před 4 měsíci +75

    Well Robert Daily, Steve Bradshaw and many others right to the top, will have to expect tougher and much more aggressive questioning when the inquiry is complete and criminal proceedings start………

    • @petertaysum8947
      @petertaysum8947 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Wondering about how the timetable for criminal proceedings looks. Can criminal proceedings commence before the Enquiry is finished? Probably a year for the findings to be published? A year or so to formulate the charges, trials would be long and complicated. If anybody is ever sentenced most will be approaching into their eighties, and Judges have form in granting mercy to aged white collar crims. I'm not holding my breath.

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@petertaysum8947 Criminal proceedings could start before the inquiry concludes but the police have already indicated that they will limit themselves to evidence gathering until it does so not to be seen to prejudice the inquiry's findings.

    • @stetomlinson3146
      @stetomlinson3146 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@petertaysum8947You’re right not to hold it! Nothing at all will happen to them.

    • @margolenney6032
      @margolenney6032 Před 3 měsíci

      God I hope so.

    • @renszatrapp9639
      @renszatrapp9639 Před 3 měsíci +2

      In a court of law every witness, for prosecution and defence have to declare on oath, " the truth, the WHOLE truth and nothing but the truth.Knowingly withholding relevant and crucial evidence is both perjury AND perverting the course of justice so EVERY post office appointed investigator who gave evidence in court MUST be charged with one or both of these offences.Those are serious charges , which if convicted must result in prison sentences.

  • @jonlpage
    @jonlpage Před 4 měsíci +94

    Which is worse, that a whole bunch of people would throw their staff under the bus like this, or that they really were that incompetent?
    I'm not sure which answer I like less.

    • @sideshowbob5237
      @sideshowbob5237 Před 4 měsíci

      If this isn't criminal incompetence ---- then criminal incompetence doesn't exist.

    • @TR4zest
      @TR4zest Před 3 měsíci +3

      It was vindictiveness, not incompetence.

  • @colinnewmarch1106
    @colinnewmarch1106 Před 4 měsíci +35

    A theft occurs where someone, dishonesty appropriates,property of another ,with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it. The post office investigators ,seen clueless when challenged but we're in their element when bullying postmasters

  • @bingbong6467
    @bingbong6467 Před 4 měsíci +45

    I think I'll choose to read an awful lot into the questions being asked here .
    Absolutely disgusted by this whole affair. And to realise this has happened in the UK should be a wake up call to us all

    • @davekeith576
      @davekeith576 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The scales were deliberately fixed short measures for all.The judges must discuss this and bring their own case against this band of thieves . Manslaughter is also to be considered.People took their own life.Under the pressures put upon them.

  • @michaeldelsoldato2905
    @michaeldelsoldato2905 Před 4 měsíci +4

    He doesn't say anything because he knows what he did was wrong.

  • @stevegreen3036
    @stevegreen3036 Před 4 měsíci +16

    The phrase 'lying little sh*t' springs to mind.

  • @WORLD8NSH5KNIGHT1
    @WORLD8NSH5KNIGHT1 Před 4 měsíci +34

    He claims he wasn't 'comfortable' in probing his victim's home - but even if he was technically 'doing his job' these investigators are doing themselves no favours. Where is his expression of sympathy for the man's widow? Where is his sense of regret that an innocent man was falsely implicated from his 'investigation'
    They are coming across as mini tyrants only interested in saving their own skin
    I feel there should be grounds for charges in perverting the course of justice

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @ColinDH12345
    @ColinDH12345 Před 4 měsíci +13

    I find those responses absolutely astonishing, disrespectful, incompetent, and a whole string of words I haven't yet thought of. How can he sit there and give evidence like that!!! Unbelievably poor performance.

  • @darrmont
    @darrmont Před 4 měsíci +208

    This whole debacle happened because a big company with loads of taxpayer money decided it was easier to treat small people (postmasters) like criminals than to admit their cronies in Fujitsu were incompetent idiots selling old rope. It only happened however because there were greedy lawyers taking fees when they should have known there was a lot of questions unanswered and a load of judges sitting on their very bottoms getting paid for sleeping through courtcases where innocent people were being sent to jail and none of them had the wit or courage to stand up and say there is something very wrong with this. It won't be the last however, the HMRC, BBC, FCA, and big banks and Royal Mail act in the same way and treat ordinary law abiding citizens like dirt and get away with it because they are all scratching each others backs.

    • @josephjones1093
      @josephjones1093 Před 4 měsíci +20

      Im sure there are also tens of thousands of people that have been forced to pay for Gas/Electric that hasnt been proven to be owed!

    • @user-nr7jm1so5j
      @user-nr7jm1so5j Před 4 měsíci +17

      Evrything that was good has rotted into a offal pile. Grim Britain indeed.

    • @adriandarke5393
      @adriandarke5393 Před 4 měsíci

      Unfortunately that is THE ELITIST ESTABLISHMENT, power, money and corruption.

    • @twolessba1087
      @twolessba1087 Před 4 měsíci +5

      "the BBC" wut?

    • @sylviaroberts8103
      @sylviaroberts8103 Před 4 měsíci +8

      There are ALWAYS greedy lawyers about. And most of them have no conscience when there’s easy money to be had.

  • @GeoffreyMH
    @GeoffreyMH Před 4 měsíci +32

    See Hannah Arendt's concept of the "banality of evil". This emerged during her coverage of the trial of Adolf Eichmann, one of the chief architects of the Holocaust. Arendt argued that Eichmann was not a monster or a psychopath, but rather an ordinary, unremarkable individual who simply followed orders and carried out his duties without questioning their morality. This idea challenged the prevailing notion that evil is always associated with extraordinary malevolence or psychological abnormality. Arendt's theory suggests that evil can manifest in the actions of ordinary people who become caught up in systems of oppression and dehumanization. She argued that the bureaucratic nature of the Holocaust allowed individuals like Eichmann to distance themselves from the consequences of their actions and view them as merely technical tasks. This detachment from moral considerations led to a "banality" of evil, where individuals become complicit in atrocities without fully comprehending the gravity of their actions.

    • @philipwardle6820
      @philipwardle6820 Před 3 měsíci

      Also Susan Neiman's "Learning from the Germans" which gives perspectives on how a country can come to terms with its wrong doings. She looks at resurgent nationalism, ongoing debates around reparations or controversies surrounding historical monuments etc based on personal history and conversation with both Americans and Germans grappling with the evils of their own national histories. I wonder how our political and business institutions, and the wider population, will grapple with the evil of the Post Office once the inquiry reveals the full extent of the scandal.

  • @melbeeswax6087
    @melbeeswax6087 Před 4 měsíci +25

    It's like being the 70's. 'No need for evidence, I got a confession guv!'

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @r8chlletters
    @r8chlletters Před 4 měsíci +47

    This was the first time they actually told someone their testimony didn’t add up…I wondered when they were finally going to start calling people on the carpet…

    • @davefave4351
      @davefave4351 Před 4 měsíci

      I heard an interview with a convicted post mistress who was told by a PO investigator that ;
      'I'm ex CID and I've come across your sort before...'
      Surely this brings into question ALL of his convictions when he was CID?
      I've met his sort before.
      Corrupt ex coppers...

    • @peterchapman697
      @peterchapman697 Před 4 měsíci +2

      It will come out in the report. The judge (technically "chair") Sir Wyn, is absorbing all of the lies deceit and "forgotten" stuff.

    • @bananabrooks3836
      @bananabrooks3836 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes, this questioning does seem too soft at crucial times.

    • @Mawa991
      @Mawa991 Před 4 měsíci

      I don’t think thats true. Look at Mr Singhs hearing. Its a clusterfuck and there is are many moments where the questioner asked: is that what we have come to now? And one moment the chairman points out that Mr. Singhs just clearly gave away that he was lying in his witness statement.

    • @misterbonzoid5623
      @misterbonzoid5623 Před 3 měsíci +1

      There are other lawyers in the room (reps of postmasters for instance) like Edward Henry KC who have been tougher and more accusative. Just Not Beer, Blake and Price, who are where they are because they can stay calm and objective at all times and who have a slightly different agenda.

  • @damianleah6744
    @damianleah6744 Před 4 měsíci +7

    These people need jail time.

  • @brucebayliss
    @brucebayliss Před 4 měsíci +10

    "If any person lawfully sworn as a witness or as an interpreter in a judicial proceeding wilfully makes a statement material in that proceeding, which he knows to be false or does not believe to be true, he shall be guilty of perjury, and shall, on conviction thereof on indictment, be liable to penal servitude for a term not exceeding seven years."

  • @Edward..de..lanndo
    @Edward..de..lanndo Před 4 měsíci +14

    No thought given at all to the victims, fueled by greed of large bonuses.

  • @kalpat5753
    @kalpat5753 Před 4 měsíci +37

    Yes he admitted to false accounting prompted by the investigators who indicated that would make a charge of THEFT go away. On both counts the obvious next question is - On what evidence were either charges of Theft or False Accounting based. I presume the answer is a total lack of evidence for either, but maybe his bonus depended upon someone being charged with an offence !!!!!

    • @Grz349
      @Grz349 Před 4 měsíci +2

      How could they have not found out what happened to the money if he had admitted to false accounting?

    • @lesmarsden2058
      @lesmarsden2058 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Bloody difficult to avoid accusations of false accounting when post office policy insisted that SPM’s signed declarations accepting responsibility for unexplained losses every time they attempted to balance their accounts.

    • @rogernevin7461
      @rogernevin7461 Před 4 měsíci +7

      I said from the start the PO investigators would be on bonus's for how many they could stitch up.Plus anyone with access at Fujitsu to the Horizon hubs of each PO branch with the capability of remotely altering the branch's Cash Balances could be resposible for an astronomical fraud. with the sub-postmasters left to 'carry the can'.

    • @bobdylan7120
      @bobdylan7120 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Some Postmasters made up the bogus 'shortfall' by using their own savings, so admitted to false accounting because technically that's what they'd done.
      They were in a no-win situation against a corrupt organisation that wasn't interested in the truth, only in blame shifting and vengeance.
      Thought - funny how the software glitch always showed the PO was owed money, never that they owed money to the Postmasters!

    • @lottieallen9458
      @lottieallen9458 Před 4 měsíci

      The false accounting came about when the SPMs made the system balance, but the reporting at the backend said money was owed. As they had signed their accounts, it is deemed to be false accounting because they knew the system said there was a deficit. It is that kind of faulty logic that got them to prosecute. Only need two brain cells to know that is rubbish. No postmaster would go from years of manually balancing their accounts to suddenly stealing £20/30/40k!
      There were missing and faulty processes in place. The Horizon system wasn't originally designed for its use as the Post Office accounting system, and I will bet good money that the requirements for the system didn't come from the postmasters or to replicate the manual system. The government and businesses use lots of repurposed systems, which always staggers me, but it is usually because they don't want to pay for development from scratch.

  • @Heathen.Deity.
    @Heathen.Deity. Před 4 měsíci +9

    It’s not just the Post Office as an entity that should be paying significant compensation to the countless victims. People like this guy, who destroyed peoples lives through his narrow-mindedness, vindictiveness and incompetence, should also be stuck with a life-destroying bill, if not jail time to boot. Let’s see how he likes it when the shoe is on the other foot.

  • @averilgordon3493
    @averilgordon3493 Před 4 měsíci +10

    It was too obvious that although Peter Holmes knew there was no actual shortfall , his victim was coerced to falsely admit false accounting to avoid the Post Office from accepting their liability. The criminal blaming and punishing the victim .!And to only now after so many years , being forced to admit by default their known culpability is incredible . All those who knowingly did this should face justice in a criminal court .

  • @gherkamum
    @gherkamum Před 4 měsíci +10

    Someone needs to pay for all the lies.....People have died

  • @johnbellamy1168
    @johnbellamy1168 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Silence is golden. Surely this man needs to be suspended, if still employed, and interviewed by the police. He has all but admitted he failed to adequately investigate a case to the detriment of the accused thus creating a situation whereby the defendant felt obliged to admit to false accounting. Shame on him.

  • @marcusnichols5595
    @marcusnichols5595 Před 4 měsíci +9

    He was due a bonus for all 'theft' that he found. He was incentivised to 'prove' money was stolen. If he discovered that no money was missing and that the Horizon system was faulty, he got no commission.

  • @troutmeplica9272
    @troutmeplica9272 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Corruption knows no bounds..
    Its unbelievable.

  • @fireskycam9889
    @fireskycam9889 Před 17 dny +3

    They bullied people into admitting false accounting to avoid a heavier penalty for theft.
    Totally disgusting

  • @WO2Royalengineersretired
    @WO2Royalengineersretired Před 4 měsíci +13

    For a moment I thought he’d fell asleep!!

  • @neilcrawford8303
    @neilcrawford8303 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Having heard this investigator, and Stephen Bradshaw's comments at the enquiry.
    I wouldn't trust these guys to find a meal deal in Tesco.
    The really sad thing is, neither of them seems to show even the slightest hint of remorse for their part in making the sub-pm's lives a misery.

  • @Nuts-Bolts
    @Nuts-Bolts Před 4 měsíci +16

    And his performance bonus he got should be clawed back.

  • @4GH440
    @4GH440 Před 4 měsíci +9

    I would love to know what qualifications these so called investigators had. Based on my own personal experience, I am flabergasted with the disturbingly poor investigation and it screams that these people had, in reality no proper experience in training or background in proper investigative procedures.

  • @mcsonicteam
    @mcsonicteam Před 4 měsíci +5

    Accepted no responsibly and when asked what he’d say to Mr Holmes if he were alive, NOWHERE did any uttering of sorry or apologise occur.

  • @ncooper8438
    @ncooper8438 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Daily was no investigator, he didn't investigate anything, he just wanted his bonus.

  • @pauljones5959
    @pauljones5959 Před 4 měsíci +6

    He got his job by falsifying his CV... He put his wife's qualification down as his own. He says he only realised when preparing his statement for this latest inquiry... WTF....! And he is a senior Investigator. And he is still employed by the post office.. if he is dishonest enough to lie on his CV he is not trust worthy

  • @SL-sd3sg
    @SL-sd3sg Před 4 měsíci +28

    This, a man who plagiarised his wife’s CV.

  • @tonyashworth1500
    @tonyashworth1500 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I can't believe the stupidity of these Post Office investigators. They're just a bunch of idiotic debt collectors. Except in this case, there were no debts to collect. I live close to the village of Broughton near Preston, Lancashire. There used to be a Post Office there until the sub-postmasters were convicted because of this debacle.The people at the top are ultimately responsible and should be jailed.

  • @user-gk2kd1of2g
    @user-gk2kd1of2g Před 3 měsíci +2

    A total disgrace, jail the investigators

  • @GunnyUKsarge
    @GunnyUKsarge Před 4 měsíci +5

    Investigate? I would be surprised if he could find the exit in that very room. These fools ruined innocent peoples lives because of their failures😡

  • @truckerfromreno
    @truckerfromreno Před 4 měsíci +6

    The media said nothing about this. Look at them now.

  • @steves9250
    @steves9250 Před 4 měsíci +3

    While being metaphorically dangled out the window he “admitted” to false accounting

  • @mikew42906
    @mikew42906 Před 4 měsíci +7

    I say again where did they get these totally unsuitable people from?

  • @suedavis3525
    @suedavis3525 Před 3 měsíci +3

    They pled to false accounting, even though they were not guilty of it, to avoid jail time. What a shocking case.

  • @Vrex622
    @Vrex622 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Again, what a creep.

  • @jessicaandtrains7768
    @jessicaandtrains7768 Před 4 měsíci +6

    Just imagine the duress they put people under to make them confess to crimes they didn't commit.
    Take these lot to court. I'd like to see them get some of their own medicine.

  • @robertharbinson8916
    @robertharbinson8916 Před 4 měsíci +15

    If I can add, I watched the whole of his testament. Judging by his demeanor and lack of responsibility it didn’t surprise me when he revealed he had used his wife’s CV when applying for the post. !!!!!!

    • @philipwardle6820
      @philipwardle6820 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ... compounded by the failure of Post Office's failure to check the validity of the info within, which would surely be the usual due diligence in any organisation's recruitment process?

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      @@philipwardle6820 Complete failure all round by the PO

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      Given that he did that, was he an actual qualified investigator with the proper authority to question people under caution and make accusations of criminal activity. Or was he just a thug standing over people like the Mafia in New York.

  • @kimspence-jones4765
    @kimspence-jones4765 Před 4 měsíci +5

    This man should be in prison.

  • @johnmccann1960
    @johnmccann1960 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Robert Daily, family must be so proud. . . . . .

  • @philoliver8598
    @philoliver8598 Před 4 měsíci +4

    The silence shouts so loud…
    He clearly did bugger all investigation…
    This is at best utter incompetence but more likely negligence.
    What a disgrace…

  • @csnide6702
    @csnide6702 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Paula Vennells needs a LONG prison term over this.

  • @everTriumph
    @everTriumph Před 4 měsíci +16

    It was obvious to the public, as it was first reported, that it was extremely unlikely that so many postmasters would suddenly turn into criminals, coincidently with the introduction of new sales/accounting software. But, as usual, there was a lot about how government related businesses went about their business at that time that stank. It still does. If the software was getting the sums wrong, then to get the books to balance, the management, including ministers in the end analysis, must have conspired to 'cook the books'. It could not be any other way.

  • @ianbarr5110
    @ianbarr5110 Před 12 dny +3

    Pressured into admitting a crime he didn't commit in order to avoid a jail sentence. Bullies. Henchmen.

  • @alfst5546
    @alfst5546 Před 4 měsíci +8

    The post office have acted just like bullies, they didn’t investigate nothing, they should be put on trial in place of those that ran the post offices. That man’s denial shows their arrogance and ignorance, they just wanted someone to blame. Shame on them

  • @johnoconnor2114
    @johnoconnor2114 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Let’s see basically we have thousands of postmasters and postmistresses on average stealing £25000 resulting in at least £25Million missing and not one penny found or have I got it wrong.

  • @MrJaspett
    @MrJaspett Před 4 měsíci +13

    We're lucky we have such a strong drama team at ITV to publicise this and hold people to account so that the Telegraph knows what to focus on.

    • @lufe8773
      @lufe8773 Před 3 měsíci

      But why did it take them so long? Was it because the (former) head of ITV was a former chairman of the Post Office? And why did the BBC show no interest for all those years, (and MSM plus politicians as well). Did the tentacles reach right through the system or was it because they were just little people with no real clout.

    • @MrJaspett
      @MrJaspett Před 3 měsíci +1

      @lufe8773 I think the ITV drama department must be biased in some way and kept the story from coming onto investigative journalists' radar?

  • @alananderson6812
    @alananderson6812 Před 3 měsíci +4

    When he says he interviewed Mr Holmes and he 'admitted to false accounting', I think he really means they brow beat Mr Holmes into 'admitting to false accounting'.

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @fusionfan6883
    @fusionfan6883 Před 3 měsíci +10

    What boggles my mind with all these aggressive investigators is that they seemed to have no accounting skills or undertake any form of forensic accounting to match paper records with those of the computer in an effort to identify the cause of each shortfall! Instead, they presumed guilt and then used illegitimate legal threats to pressure innocent people into admitting to crimes they didn't commit. It's hard to think of a greater failure to discharge one's duties, let alone the sheer moral bankruptcy of the whole investigatory operation.

    • @guyemmott4009
      @guyemmott4009 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Correctly and eruditely put Sir. 👏👏

    • @rickbear7249
      @rickbear7249 Před 3 měsíci

      Because, clearly, they were bully-boy "enforcers" and did no investigation whatsoever.

    • @paulbrindley7640
      @paulbrindley7640 Před 3 měsíci +2

      What's missing from the enquiry is the questioning over the 'missing entry'. If money had been stolen, that would have come from cash paid in, say by people using the post office as a bank, from money received from the government for paying out to the public, or from the sale of stocks, etc. Money doesn't just appear out of fresh air. No investigator ever looked at the other side of the transaction. They were not investigators, an investigator would have done that.

    • @rickbear7249
      @rickbear7249 Před 3 měsíci

      @paulbrindley7640 absolutely correct. These people would best be described as mob "enforcers" whose job was to intimidate the sub-postmasters to extract payment. They had no interest (nor ability) to conduct forensic financial analysis, just hired muscle.

  • @brucemitchell4895
    @brucemitchell4895 Před 4 měsíci +9

    Absolutely shameless individual, sounds familiar in history: “ I was only following orders”, somehow these characters need to be held to account!!!!

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @Grz349
    @Grz349 Před 4 měsíci +6

    So he “Admitted to false accounting”, okay so where did the money end up? If he admitted stealing the money why didn’t the money get found? 🧐

  • @daffyddduck2419
    @daffyddduck2419 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Post Office are now not a national treasure , but a national disgrace

  • @MrEtonmess
    @MrEtonmess Před 4 měsíci +5

    File under Total incompetence

  • @IreneEvans-uj9le
    @IreneEvans-uj9le Před 9 dny +3

    He should face jail time and see how those poor innocent sub-masters felt. He is not innocent!

  • @patricklockerby4308
    @patricklockerby4308 Před 4 měsíci +4

    It does my old heart good to see investigators investigated for failure to investigate.

  • @sirmalus5153
    @sirmalus5153 Před 4 měsíci +18

    There's no evidence that the post masters were guilty, but the computer said they are. So that's ok then is it? Sounds about right as far as the competence (or lack there of) of the post office managers as they cover their collective rears.
    Their not all down the pub celebrating their 'finders fee' bonus's now are they.

  • @allanmilton4125
    @allanmilton4125 Před 4 měsíci +9

    After all of this time, I cannot believe anybody from the Post Office or Fujitsu hasn’t found the cause of these errors. From viewing the documentary and the TV show what were Fujitsu staff adjusting when using remote access? Surely there is an audit trail in the system that had to be signed off on a regular basis. I hope that one recommendation out of this inquiry is to remove the Post Office being a law unto themselves. All prosecutions should be though the legal system supported by evidence.

  • @georgecullen9516
    @georgecullen9516 Před 4 měsíci +11

    At....1.20 seconds ....the silence already says a lot........like everyone else involved ....never seen selected memory loss like it .....

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      That wasn't memory loss, that was a realisation that he'd sent innocent people to prison and ruined people's lives for his own greed.
      Don't worry though, I'm not sticking up for him.
      He's still a total piece of trash in my eyes.

  • @brianquinn6014
    @brianquinn6014 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Another horrible bar steward from the post office,lying through his teeth.

  • @user-hh8tf4tb9q
    @user-hh8tf4tb9q Před 11 dny +2

    Innocent people sent to prison, so those guilty from the Post Office should have the same fate. What a bunch of ?????

  • @martinmcdonald4207
    @martinmcdonald4207 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I cannot wait for the sequel to the great TV drama that exposed this nightmare.

  • @DJLSWFC
    @DJLSWFC Před 4 měsíci +3

    Prison for all those involved in disgraceful act, would be as good as compensation.

  • @elfboy29
    @elfboy29 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I don't know how to answer that, sir, I mean......(without appearing guilty).

  • @anthonyporter3147
    @anthonyporter3147 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I’ve only paused that long, when the wife asked me if I had been too the casino 👍

  • @sargentstephens45
    @sargentstephens45 Před 10 dny +2

    That long drawn out silence after Sir Wyn's question speaks volumes.

  • @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794
    @zerotoleranceforsataniceli4794 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Simple question :
    Where is the trail of missing monies ?
    If no trail of money either to subpostmaster and family and friends , then there is no evidence.
    No evidence
    No case
    Corrupt Judiciary.

    • @fireskycam9889
      @fireskycam9889 Před dnem

      They stood over people, with no real legal reason to do so and demand they pay money they didn't owe with the threat of charging them with something they didn't do.
      This happened in New York years ago.
      They were called The Mafia.

  • @niknoks7638
    @niknoks7638 Před 3 měsíci +3

    These investigators were predominantly ‘long serving’ Postal employees ....and there lies the problem within government quangos ....long serving government employees become ‘institutionalised’ in a set way of thinking and doing business because they believe they are untouchable due to ‘plausible deniability’ 😔

  • @dingopisscreek
    @dingopisscreek Před 4 měsíci +2

    So all these previously honest people, some with many years of service suddenly start to be dishonest. AND just after a new computer system has been installed. It just shows how uninterested and arrogant those at the top were and how little they cared about their employees. As with most big businesses it's ALL ABOUT THE MONEY. As long as the profits come in they are fine, as soon as something goes wrong - BLAME THE LITTLE PEOPLE. Can't be the system can it? And why on Earth would someone steal when they know that any shortfall will have to be paid back? A few £s here and there, but £1000s?? Just shows what a cover up was going on at the Post Office - and Fujitsu were complicit. SHAMEFULL!!!!

  • @MetalSamantha
    @MetalSamantha Před 3 měsíci +1

    EVERY senior staff member at the Post Office since the late 90s needs to be charged with perjury, theft with menaces, perverting the course of justice and enforcing illegal contracts
    Every single one

  • @brucelamberton8819
    @brucelamberton8819 Před 4 měsíci +3

    That Robert Daily needs to be sacked and given he fraudulently used his wife's credentials to obtain his position needs to have his pension withheld.