Post Office Horizon scandal: Mass exoneration of sub-postmasters 'proper factor to do' regardless of considerations over judicial independence, minister says

The UK's postal companies minister says the federal government is to push forward with laws to mass exonerate individuals wrongly convicted within the Post Office Horizon scandal, regardless of considerations it is going to intervene with judicial independence.

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It comes after Rishi Sunak introduced plans on Wednesday for an act of parliament, which will likely be launched inside weeks, to overturn lots of of Post Office convictions.

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One lawyer stated the laws risked "riding roughshod" over the judiciary's independence from the federal government.

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Postal companies minister Kevin Hollinrake, talking to Sky News' Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge, stated the federal government did "not want to interfere with the court and the judicial process".

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However, he stated the Post Office scandal was an "exceptional case" and introducing laws was the proper factor to do.

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"We have looked at all the alternatives and they would require a very much longer term, much more in-depth process, case by case, exactly what we're going through now, which has been so slow," he stated.

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"So either we choose that option and it goes on for years, or we do this option, and we can resolve this within a few weeks or months.

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"And that is what we wish to do. That's the scenario we wish to come to.

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"These individuals have been by means of a lot, not simply when it comes to monetary loss, however repute loss, harm to relationships and well being.

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"We want to sweep it all aside, so people can get compensated and be exonerated."

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More than 700 sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses have been prosecuted for accounting errors counting on knowledge from the defective Horizon software program.

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Once they're exonerated, the federal government has confirmed victims will likely be eligible for not less than Β£600,000 compensation, relying on their circumstances.

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Terry Wilcox, of Hudgell Solicitors, a agency which represented 74 individuals who have already had their convictions quashed, welcomed the announcement, however stated these impacted have been nonetheless "very cynical".

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"Obviously we welcome the announcement, but we are very cynical and our clients are very cynical - 20 years of history has led them to be very cynical," he informed Sky News.

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"The inquiry has been running for three years and the government has known about this issue for three years yet it's only now the drama airs, the public have become alarmed and have become aware that the politicians start to act."

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Mr Wilcox criticised the federal government for not appearing till the general public outcry following the airing of ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office final week.

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Mr Wilcox stated the publicity has seen his agency obtain 150 enquiries and decide up three new circumstances of convicted sub-postmasters, one in all whom has died.

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Read extra:Former Post Office boss handy again her CBEWho are the important thing figures in Post Office IT scandal?

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He stated a blanket quashing of the convictions could not present his purchasers with the identical diploma of vindication as in the event that they have been to be investigated by the Criminal Cases Review Commission.

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He stated: "It's a welcome announcement but obviously the devil is going to be in the detail. What does it mean?

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"We have discovered a few of our purchasers want to undergo the overview exactly as a result of that backs of their view that they're utterly harmless."

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Noel Thomas, 77, from Anglesey, a former sub-postmaster who was wrongfully convicted of false accounting in 2006 had his conviction overturned by the Court of Appeal in 2021.

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"We've had these assurances earlier than to be trustworthy, they usually've fallen by means of," he told Sky News.

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"At the tip of the day, it is this drama that has hit the nail. It's taken a drama to make individuals perceive what's been happening."

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While Mr Wilcox stated the announcement would give some individuals the "strength and courage" to return ahead, he raised considerations over the first laws which "in theory would be unconstitutional".

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He stated the regulation would should be extraordinarily nicely outlined and will threat "riding roughshod" over the independence of the judiciary.

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"If there's another pressing case, which is politically sensitive, it might be used for the wrong reasons," he stated.

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"That's the danger - it should just be for postmasters… but once a precedent is set it becomes difficult to put the genie back in the bottle."

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Content Source: information.sky.com

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