Former Post Office boss cornered over knowledge of Horizon software defects in Inquiry

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  • Опубликовано: 19 апр 2024
  • Former Managing Director of Post Office Network David Miller was in front of the Post Office Inquiry earlier this week, where he was grilled over his knowledge of defects in the Horizon software system.
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Комментарии • 416

  • @benwilson6145
    @benwilson6145 26 дней назад +345

    The Post Office Alzheimer's cluster expands.

    • @0xDEAFF00D
      @0xDEAFF00D 26 дней назад +21

      Amazing how little was known by so many people over such a long time period. Extraordinary how localized the reduction in mental faculties was, really. Should be studied by medical researchers.

    • @laurieharper1526
      @laurieharper1526 26 дней назад +8

      Ernest Saunders, anyone?

    • @suzilouden5964
      @suzilouden5964 26 дней назад

      Pathetic! These managers relied on SPM for their obscene salaries and the only thanks the SPMs got, was to be shafted over & over by the @ssh○le$ at the top....🤬🤬🤬

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 25 дней назад

      This lawyers is a boring robt and is not very effective

    • @diannepenny407
      @diannepenny407 25 дней назад +12

      @@michaelmcginley7930 Which lawyer? If you mean Emma Price, she's bloody brilliant. Her job isn't to entertain you, but to get to the truth.

  • @k8t305
    @k8t305 26 дней назад +144

    They justify their high salaries by saying they are accountable and the buck stops with them. But when faced with that they lie and say they didn’t know. Disgusting

    • @22Phantasm
      @22Phantasm 26 дней назад +15

      You hit the disgusting nail on the head. It's pure classism. Impunity personified.

  • @GarrySMumford
    @GarrySMumford 26 дней назад +246

    I’m so sorry that the highly paid executives of PO couldn’t remember any accounts or instances of concern about the failings of the Horizon system. It was, after all, many years ago. They were, at least, highly paid. Bless them. In the meantime the hundreds if not thousands of PO victims and families were ravaged by protracted and unremitting injustice were left to rot. WTF!!!

    • @matthewn1805
      @matthewn1805 26 дней назад +16

      The way he's speaking, avoiding saying anything except where directly asked questions says to me he is being very economical with the truth.

    • @karlmylnere5712
      @karlmylnere5712 26 дней назад +9

      Blame the Lawyers , their brief to the PO management ,Just tell them you do not remember and keep repeating it , tell barefaced lies but don't worry the government and the PO will protect you .

    • @0xDEAFF00D
      @0xDEAFF00D 26 дней назад +13

      But they went to all the right schools, you see. And received such large salaries and bonuses. I bet they even took Friday afternoon off down at the wine bar! I mean, it just stands to reason that all those grubby "sub" postmasters had their hands in the till, doesn't it? Didn't seem worth the trouble back then, really. Some of the sub postmasters dressed quite poorly, and were from (how shall we put it) less desirable neighbourhoods. All rather unfortunate, but what can you do? Nothing for it, really. Best to just let it lie.

    • @matthewn1805
      @matthewn1805 26 дней назад

      @@karlmylnere5712 Last week testimony showed that Tory ministers were colluding with the PO to cover things up, yet in public they say they're fixing things and the issues are all someone else's fault!

  • @dismalfist
    @dismalfist 26 дней назад +210

    DON'T DROP THIS ISSUE JOE! We NEED this in the spotlight. Absolutely no way we can let these crooks get away with the evil they've done.

    • @markcarlon8558
      @markcarlon8558 26 дней назад +8

      I agree with you, we all need to support these post office workers, if not I cannot see justice being served.

    • @jaynemacklyne1462
      @jaynemacklyne1462 26 дней назад +4

      I'm not sure what justice can look like if so many are involved at so many levels

    • @mikestory6023
      @mikestory6023 26 дней назад

      These post office management witnesses are universally rotten to the core.

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 26 дней назад +3

      They will get away with it.its only the tea lady and beloved that get punished

    • @michaelmcginley7930
      @michaelmcginley7930 26 дней назад +1

      In other country such as francer there would be raits innthe street.sorry but this woman lawyers is rubbish

  • @2tgbbsot
    @2tgbbsot 26 дней назад +76

    They remember things in their defence, but forgets things in their guilt!!!

  • @Dude-etiquette
    @Dude-etiquette 26 дней назад +120

    He should be in jail

    • @dagehar
      @dagehar 26 дней назад +3

      "I 'm afraid this is correct sir. Lock me up"

    • @PickleThePig
      @PickleThePig 23 дня назад

      Stoned.

    • @itsjudystube
      @itsjudystube 11 дней назад

      It’s a long time ago. Many of these individuals are older. Memory is imperfect. Memory fades almost completely when confronted twenty years later.
      Hate on me if you like.
      Many of these people being interviewed are not the people who caused this miscarriage of justice. They were pawns being told what to think and being manipulated. They were under huge pressure to comply with the senior management line.
      At the times they are discussing here many organisations had a very poisonous culture where people were not allowed to ask questions. Pressure was put on constantly to comply with the expectations of the organisation. Jobs were threatened. Pay was threatened. Too much was deliberately loaded on to people so it was impossible to think through a situation.
      Go to the top to find out the truth. Managers lower down did not cause this but they can help to uncover where the responsibility lay for the deliberate deception. They were caught up in a tangle of lies from further up their line, so much so that they could no longer see or act clearly. They were silenced deliberately by a malicious and poisonous organisational culture.

  • @BanjoLuke1
    @BanjoLuke1 26 дней назад +153

    Extraordinary.
    It goes way beyond Vennels.
    She is an easy target partly because of her bizarre delusion that she was a "good" person and a fit subject for ordination in the Anglican Church. Too, too bizarre. Too, too delusional.
    But it goes far beyond her.
    I am sickened by the corporate "bullshit bingo" language being trotted out by one after another of the senior executives in this inquiry.
    It is nauseating.

    • @turnitback
      @turnitback 26 дней назад +17

      Agreed, and it's not just her own bizarre delusion. It's cultural. We British, collectively, assume that status brings virtue, or at least are afraid openly to suggest otherwise when we see those with power over us doing wrong. That fear is justified, because we know that saying anything has serious consequences.

    • @yorkshirehousewife784
      @yorkshirehousewife784 26 дней назад +6

      Agreed!

    • @yorkshirehousewife784
      @yorkshirehousewife784 26 дней назад +11

      @@turnitbackwe need to always say what we think. For 2 reasons:
      1, if we don’t say what we think, who’s going to know how we feel?
      2, if we’re silenced, those power hungry amongst us. Use their influence to create oppression and succeed!

    • @destyler2444
      @destyler2444 26 дней назад +3

      ​@@yorkshirehousewife784correct

    • @podthesod
      @podthesod 26 дней назад

      So often people that rush to religious bullshit are the real nasty pieces of work … Vennels? she looks like what she is!

  • @Shood33
    @Shood33 26 дней назад +93

    Look how slow he is at answering these question.. he’s trying to make sure he doesn’t slip up. That’s what people do when they know they’ve done wrong and don’t want to be blamed.

  • @fredsmith1970
    @fredsmith1970 26 дней назад +66

    So many of these Post Office managers know nothing, remember nothing, never asked any questions, never understood what they were doing or what they were responsible for. And yet, for some reason, they see nothing wrong with having drawn huge salaries for this utter level of collective incompetence.

    • @alwhyte6533
      @alwhyte6533 24 дня назад +3

      If anyone else were that incompitent, they'd be sacked. Why do these entitled buffoons think it's their right to be employed regardless of their utter ineptitude?

    • @margaretfitzgerald1489
      @margaretfitzgerald1489 4 дня назад

      Disgusting they are

  • @IanMcNeillclimb8
    @IanMcNeillclimb8 26 дней назад +131

    Complicit in the cover up. Get him locked up

  • @johngraham6181
    @johngraham6181 26 дней назад +88

    Another one who crosses his arms when he is faced with uncomfortable details

    • @user-jy8iv3ux2e
      @user-jy8iv3ux2e 26 дней назад +9

      People do that to protect themselves, psychology 😊

    • @stevenclarke5606
      @stevenclarke5606 26 дней назад

      @@user-jy8iv3ux2eit’s a defensive action

    • @mash5702
      @mash5702 26 дней назад +10

      interestingly he didn't like being interrogated by a young female barrister. He couldn't keep the 'tells' hidden.

  • @EmptyGlass99
    @EmptyGlass99 26 дней назад +54

    "I don't recall."
    We should take this to mean an admission of guilt.

    • @tightcamper
      @tightcamper 26 дней назад +3

      I believe you are correct.

  • @jasoncookuk
    @jasoncookuk 26 дней назад +34

    A reminder that David Miller wasn't just a Managing Director of Post Office - he was a core part of the Horizon project leadership team (a deputy director in 1995 and programme director in 1998 according to his recent testimony at the inquiry). He was describing Horizon as "robust and fit for purpose" (the phrase that comes back to haunt everyone) while it was being rolled out in 1999, despite Ernst and Young highlighting serious issues *to him* with data integrity in their auditing.
    When it comes to who covered it up - I expect a lot of fingers will be pointing in his direction.

  • @georgep4465
    @georgep4465 26 дней назад +124

    This person signed a cheque for some £180k on the basis that he was asked to - but did not ask any questions and did not read any of underlying documents. Huh! Isn't that what negligence looks like? It is not as if £180k was petty cash. On any view it was a material sum. It was probably as much or nearly as much as his annual salary. Yet he just signed without further enquiry. We are to believe that? Sorry! Not credible.

    • @matthewn1805
      @matthewn1805 26 дней назад +17

      There seems to be a rule at the PO, no-one at the top knows anything about the running of the business, apparently junior management are doing all that, in which case they may as well have been unemployed so should return their massive salaries as they clearly did not earn them.

    • @dingopisscreek
      @dingopisscreek 26 дней назад +6

      If I knew he signed cheques so easily I would have asked him to make one out to me.

    • @russ9921
      @russ9921 16 дней назад +2

      And it was all public money too.

  • @shaunyweaver1144
    @shaunyweaver1144 26 дней назад +43

    Obviously been instructed all of them, to follow the Amnesia path, get them in front of the criminal courts ..

  • @CatholicSatan
    @CatholicSatan 26 дней назад +47

    Appalling bunch of people - and not just at executive level - but both at POL and at Fujitsu, in legal and investigative departments, at the "Help" desk... _and_ in government and the civil service! Watching the inquiry and knowing of this for _years_ having read _Computer Weekly_ and _Private Eye,_ I am increasingly astounded at how the religious mantra of "Horizon Good, postmasters Bad!" was *_so_* pervasive. I am also astounded at just how incurious these people were. According to POL, there was a huge number of criminals operating post offices, criminals who had invested their own monies, linked the PO to their own businesses (both via contracts and via Horizon terminals), lived over the shop - yet they all had their fingers in the till! But no one thought to ask how this anomaly came about. They all just repeated the mantra.

  • @miraforeman7567
    @miraforeman7567 26 дней назад +45

    Amnesia is most prevalent attribute to all PO bosses

    • @imagmahd7307
      @imagmahd7307 26 дней назад +4

      Sooooo selective. Bet they remember the exact names of all of the shitty brands and accessories they spend our tax money on. American Psycho gone Brit.

  • @DerekNewtonKeswick
    @DerekNewtonKeswick 26 дней назад +55

    This is why businesses should be more strictly regulated - not less.

    • @showlett33
      @showlett33 26 дней назад +7

      it also shows the danger of a solely digital economy

    • @bottleneck4593
      @bottleneck4593 26 дней назад

      Nonsense. This a taxpayer owned and funded business, not a private business, ultimately controlled by government ministers. And you want to give these morons more involvement in our lives. Your thinking is confused.

    • @TheeCuteness
      @TheeCuteness 26 дней назад

      🌟 *THIS COMMENT!!*
      Right on point! Deregulation in large industry has NEVER once benefited the everyday worker and usually ends in travesties like this!!

  • @JohnH108
    @JohnH108 26 дней назад +74

    How do these “captains of industry” and politicians for that matter ( Rishi Sunak I’m looking at you) get so far with such poor memories?

    • @dismalfist
      @dismalfist 26 дней назад +13

      It MIGHT JUST BE THE CASE that they're a bit selective in the old amnesia...

    • @leemoldon
      @leemoldon 26 дней назад +6

      And boris

    • @juliegwilliam8503
      @juliegwilliam8503 26 дней назад +4

      Not forgetting wee Nicky krankee! 😂

    • @stevenclarke5606
      @stevenclarke5606 26 дней назад +8

      Sunak couldn’t run a Bath !

    • @philippedley5073
      @philippedley5073 26 дней назад +13

      People like him in charge of businesses is the reason our economy hasn't grown in years.

  • @hilarydewhurst
    @hilarydewhurst 26 дней назад +24

    So he had an emergency meeting about doubts over an "expert" witness which resulted in him signing off £180,000 without thinking may be he should ask further questions or a the very least read the supporting documentatio. Unbelievable

  • @hugolindum7728
    @hugolindum7728 26 дней назад +31

    I have been on the board of two PLCs - I have never seen people who show so little interest in details of such serious matters.
    It’s extraordinary that he didn’t read the advice from lawyers - it’s just inconceivable.

    • @stevecarmo548
      @stevecarmo548 26 дней назад +6

      Unless he was running late for a round of golf.

    • @apedanticpeasant1447
      @apedanticpeasant1447 22 дня назад +3

      Fact. No one would authorise something like this unless they knew all of the angles. Lying like a cheap watch.

  • @gtowngtown1601
    @gtowngtown1601 26 дней назад +27

    When I installed the ovens at Auschwitz I had no idea what they were going to be used for. Not me guv.

  • @kennethwalsh8804
    @kennethwalsh8804 26 дней назад +15

    So, the Postmasters, were prosecuted, and some sent to prison, for not doing their " job" properly.
    Yet, although these Executives and Managers, couldn't or didn't do their " job" properly, they still got highly paid.
    It beggers belief.

  • @stevenclarke5606
    @stevenclarke5606 26 дней назад +29

    The Post Office management don’t seem to be able to remember anything, apart from the Bonuses they received!

    • @susanbrown1090
      @susanbrown1090 26 дней назад +8

      I think that poor memory must have been a requirement for getting a management job at the Post Office 🤬

  • @elrevesyelderecho
    @elrevesyelderecho 26 дней назад +70

    4:05 I was just following orders. Since Nuremberg trials it's not an allowed defense argument

    • @susankeating8678
      @susankeating8678 18 дней назад

      And look what happened to those guilty Nazis thanks to Albert Pierrepoint.

  • @tinaunderhill5412
    @tinaunderhill5412 26 дней назад +19

    What the hell did these senior managers do all day?

  • @anthonywilson8998
    @anthonywilson8998 26 дней назад +32

    There seems to be a whole procession of old men who didn’t know anything and were negligent in their duties.

    • @johnlowe-tq6ey
      @johnlowe-tq6ey 22 дня назад

      Or did know something and are covering up.

    • @angussmith6825
      @angussmith6825 21 день назад

      Why we letting the woman off the hook?

    • @MeatyWhack
      @MeatyWhack 3 дня назад

      Women too! Equal rights incompetence

  • @DeeDee-mf3jt
    @DeeDee-mf3jt 26 дней назад +65

    No morals what so ever 🤬🤬

  • @stevecarmo548
    @stevecarmo548 26 дней назад +14

    Can't wait until the public inquiry is over so that we can move on to criminal hearings. I've no doubt that the public submissions will be formulated with that prospect in mind.

  • @JonDingle
    @JonDingle 26 дней назад +15

    "I'm sorry sir, I won't be able to help you", these people are disgusting.

  • @terrysmith9362
    @terrysmith9362 26 дней назад +13

    The judge is brilliant

  • @cupguin
    @cupguin 26 дней назад +17

    I do have to admit I think this rush to ascribe malice to everyone involved rather than incompetency is a worrying. Countless people suffered due to decisions made by the Post Office and I think it's easier to reflexively think people need to have committed crimes or are covering up for their actions now.
    While i could be wrong a lot of this just seems to be corporate culture gone mad. Which I think is more terrifying. In this case yes maybe he's lying but also, more terrifying, maybe he was just terrible at his job. Like maybe this happened and it didn't even register because he didn't understand the implications. He might have been in a position to help people, prevent unjust convictions, and he might just have been too thick.
    There are these disparate groups working against each other in this story. The actual people working in post offices who actually understand the system but are the lowest level in this set-up. From day one of the Horizon system testing their concerns have been ignored. Except the story goes the head office appointed someone without any tech background to supervise the test. He was warned Horizon wasn't fit for purpose, told people were struggling, but how was he to understand those implications? He didn't understand what could go wrong with a computer program, didn't understand the legal implications and didn't know what questions to ask if Fujitsu. One nerd in that role, or lawyer or expert in the field and this might have been prevented. But he went back to HQ and said looks great. No one there noticed he was incompetent and shouldn't have had the job because no one there knew anything about software either. The people they were liaising with at Fujitsu weren't programmers, why would you talk to the workers when you're management? They would have been in sales or execs who's job it was to over promise and sell their company. Two more layers of people who never tried to use the software as intended to see if it worked. No one who went to an actual post office to see how it functioned because that's not their job. Their job was selling a product or modernizing the Post Office. Also the government had already sunk a bunch of cost into buying the thing, almost like they made a fallacious decision to get something for that money. If only there was a term for that.
    At every level some group of people was doing exactly what their job was and ignoring what it meant to real people. No one asked anything outside their remit and never questioned their aims. Modernization, reducing fraud, keeping the post office open, cutting costs, personally recovering money.
    Why didn't someone like this see the disaster they were creating? They were a bit thick and it wasn't their job. They just read reports and did their job as an incompetent cog.
    Which is more terrifying than incompetent. The system itself doesn't work. People get hired and promoted off of results not due to competency or skills. The people with skills are left doing their job and not being shown the larger picture.
    So snobbery and the British class system at work. People trusting that people like them are good at running things ergo things are going well. No need to question if the plebs are stealing or, those sort always do. Reminds me of Rishi decided to cut benefits because people can't possibly need them and all the right sort agree they're good at being in power so their ideas must work.

    • @ajward137
      @ajward137 26 дней назад +5

      That's all depressingly plausible as an explanation, yet still the patterns of behaviour represent failure to adequately perform. Breathtaking incompetence is still worthy of some kind of sensure - lawyers and accountants have codes of practice and boards of conduct - shouldn't C-suite execs as well? There comes a point where ignorance is no excuse - you should have known; you should have asked; you should have satisfied yourself that minimum standards of conduct were being followed. I think that's the lesson to learn here.

  • @Ken-er9cq
    @Ken-er9cq 26 дней назад +18

    Wyn does a wonderful job of summarising things. I assume that he doesn’t need the money, this is something that he was asked to and he decided he wanted to do it.

  • @terencerowberry2444
    @terencerowberry2444 26 дней назад +9

    It seems to me as if these executives day at at work was to go to there office put their feet, up snooze till lunch time then have an executive lunch for a couple of hours, then stagger back to their office, get their secretary in and tell her/him that they were at an outside meeting and to call their wife and tell them they will be late home due to work, then off to the golf club . This is how it must have been for them all to be so absent minded.

  • @paulfletcher3454
    @paulfletcher3454 26 дней назад +10

    Selective amnesia- when evidence allows them to point the finger at someone else their recall is remarkably better than when they are being directly accused of wrong doing themselves.

  • @user-bu9nb8wr6e
    @user-bu9nb8wr6e 26 дней назад +19

    Going to be a bus coming along shortly and someone will be getting thrown under it, in court.

    • @WorkerDroid
      @WorkerDroid 26 дней назад

      Gareth Jenkins I would suspect….seems that everyone is pointing at him for every single problem. A weak, narcissistic fool who was courted by POL to be their ace in the hole for every legal action. Groomed, preened, and soon to be plucked by the same people

  • @keithbuckley3220
    @keithbuckley3220 26 дней назад +10

    Whole management should be taken to court and jailed. They all seem to be suffering from corporate amnesia or are lying.

  • @mash5702
    @mash5702 26 дней назад +7

    Having listened to this interview of senior leadership and others many times, it strikes me as remarkable that they can remember great details of little consequence but nothing of the red flags that threatened the very existance of the business and their position. This is 101 basic business acumen. The suggestions from all is that these 'slips' were common place. This is an afront to anyone with a modicum of sense. This is not a case of economy of truth but utter faslehoods. To sit there on your fat pensions while harder working honest people were throne into Dante's hell is beyond belief. I suggest as with others that psychopaths float to the top of large corporations hence the lack of compassion and human decency.
    I truly hope these individuals are held accountable and spend the rest of thier unproductive existence rotting away in some dark place.

  • @ChrisM541
    @ChrisM541 26 дней назад +8

    Question: We ALL know by now that everyone at the top and very many right down to the bottom of the PO knew exactly the gravity of the affect of those Horizon's bugs on convicting, and ruining the lives, of all those sub postmasters and their families. We all know the internal and external legal system/advice knew this too, as well, of course, as Fujitsu. The 'pattern'(!!!) of what was happening for all those years was so painfully obvious.
    --> WHO in the government sanctioned/approved the PO's 'Horizon hush policy'? !!!
    --> WHO in the government sanctioned/approved the legal system's 'Horizon hush policy'? !!!
    We'll soon find out if that same controlling force will have a similar affect on this enquiry once it concludes. It is clear, by now, that criminal investigations must follow on, and subsequent jail time - for many - is obvious.

  • @raybede
    @raybede 26 дней назад +7

    Makes one feel that one would like to apply a more pressurising questioning technique.
    The female Barrister is brilliantly calm and controlled and relentless however.
    What did Miller do for his huge salary? They all were in cahoots and determined not to
    drop each other in the mire, thus the poor Sub postmasters were tortured beyond belief.
    They all need to be sent to prison for a long stretch.

  • @raymondbonington9355
    @raymondbonington9355 26 дней назад +20

    Bet these people still sleep ,the arrogance is how dare you

    • @mash5702
      @mash5702 26 дней назад

      psychopophy

  • @KoffieMoffie
    @KoffieMoffie 26 дней назад +9

    Breathtaking dereliction of duty, a total lack of interest in ensuring matters are dealt with comprehensively and competently and an apparent indolence that is criminal. Asleep at the wheel doesn't begin to encompass the rank incompetence exhibited by this person. It is a pity that being subjected to being shackled in The Stocks are no longer a firm of punishment.

  • @alanbowles1985
    @alanbowles1985 26 дней назад +12

    Looks like the PO was run on the Grace brothers model.

    • @usernamename2978
      @usernamename2978 9 дней назад

      Unfortunately, the analogy is not far out. The Post Office over many decades (centuries?) created its own "reality", which no-one (like the cowed employees of Grace Brothers) had the resources to challenge and so which became ever more detached from the truth of a crooked and corrupt organisation which none dared to challenge...until one day...

  • @user-dh7gp9hu4w
    @user-dh7gp9hu4w 26 дней назад +9

    I can't understand how these people didn't know about the Horizon problems for so long because I have known about them since Private Eye started writing about it and I am an old lady.

    • @PJMcInerney
      @PJMcInerney 26 дней назад +5

      Oh they knew long before PE got hold of the story

    • @pipcalman3412
      @pipcalman3412 9 дней назад

      Yes me too

  • @DonalLynchyou
    @DonalLynchyou 26 дней назад +5

    "Sorry Sir, I'm not going to be able to help you"

  • @LimeyRedneck
    @LimeyRedneck 26 дней назад +4

    'I don't remember' giving real 'The dog ate my homework' vibes!

  • @NotThatOneThisOne
    @NotThatOneThisOne 25 дней назад +2

    This inquiry consistantly demonstrates how many 'directors' at companies, obviously here demonstrated solely by the PO, aren't capable enough to hold such positions. Too many are there because of connections from past jobs and friendly interviews, rather than any true demonstrations of critical questioning, leadership, and thorough understanding.

  • @andym.6141
    @andym.6141 26 дней назад +6

    It’s most appropriate for the lady asking the questions to be dressed in black as if at a funeral because there are reputations and careers dying all over the place in that room 😂.

  • @Normanskie
    @Normanskie 26 дней назад +5

    Crossing your arms is a position of security and defensiveness, what does he need to fear if he is telling the truth and claiming he was, like ALL the others, innocent.

  • @dmgk3707
    @dmgk3707 26 дней назад +7

    I've tried to keep an open mind, but Jesus wept!!!! it gets worse and worse...

  • @kmooney1954
    @kmooney1954 26 дней назад +2

    Got to love this lady and her pauses before dropping the next bomb (question) that must put the interviewee on an "Oh my God, what's next?" alert!

  • @patrikfloding7985
    @patrikfloding7985 25 дней назад +1

    Stunning negligence.

  • @Jon-xw9om
    @Jon-xw9om 26 дней назад +14

    General Question:
    Is anyone else having difficulty finding Independent Sites covering the enquiry? YT ALWAYS give me a very limited choice from MSM only - no matter how I phrase the question. This can't be right, surely? There MUST be smaller/independent people covering this. Where are they?

    • @Ken-er9cq
      @Ken-er9cq 26 дней назад +8

      DPS Computing is. He is rather annoyed that he has disappeared from searches. I think that is a function of the way RUclips does the search. It tends to favour videos with a high number of views, which are the major news outlets.

    • @tommurray5156
      @tommurray5156 26 дней назад +3

      Agree on DPS. He has very good analysis.

    • @Mightypi
      @Mightypi 26 дней назад +3

      Dps computing is top shelf stuff

    • @mash5702
      @mash5702 26 дней назад +4

      The live broadcasts are the best to appreciate the totality as the filtering is zero.

  • @fireskycam9889
    @fireskycam9889 26 дней назад +4

    It seems like they all knew about the problem but they all expected someone else to do something

  • @johnclarke-vs9qe
    @johnclarke-vs9qe 26 дней назад +4

    Mr Miller basically said I did not do what I was paid for! My judgement was misguided and my trust misplaced.
    Would he consider paying back some of his salary and bonuses?

  • @jasonga
    @jasonga 26 дней назад +4

    If all this money was missing…… where is it?? There MUST be an account somewhere with it all sitting in! Someone knows!!

  • @peterflynn3657
    @peterflynn3657 26 дней назад +4

    Criminal charges should follow.

  • @MWSRD
    @MWSRD 24 дня назад

    Love the angles of the questions .....WOW!

  • @kathykay9920
    @kathykay9920 10 дней назад +1

    This person deserves to stand in front of a jury and have a fair for the seeming crimes they have committed .
    If the police don't act we need to follow Alan Bates and crowdfund such a process. We cannot let these people get away without a trial.
    My cheque book is ready if no action is taken.
    Let's have some proper justice for teflon executives for a change and get faith back in justice.
    Please join me if we need to
    Crowd fund for postmaster justi

  • @hollytalbot6695
    @hollytalbot6695 26 дней назад +11

    Selective memory syndrome..

  • @Rob-zx8lm
    @Rob-zx8lm 26 дней назад +3

    Their answers and excuses are nearly as worthless as their apologies.

  • @mrtom3297
    @mrtom3297 26 дней назад +4

    Strange that he says he didn't read the info before signing off a claim. Someone needs to look at their manual of authorities. It would appears that either his recollections are wrong or he acted negligently. If only we has a functioning legal system.

  • @markellis796
    @markellis796 26 дней назад +11

    It appears that not one person is going to be charged let alone convicted of anything so far as a result of this enquiry, the only winners are the solicitors who are on a win win.
    I can't remember, I don't recall, I should have done this, I should have done that is no excuse, they must be charged for their wrong doings.
    Justice must be done, but more importantly justice must be seen to be done.

    • @joyjones2376
      @joyjones2376 10 дней назад +1

      It's an inquiry I don't think it has any judicial power as such , but will leave the way open for either the police to charge for negligence or any private prosecutions by the sub- postmasters.
      Like you ,I'm hoping they don't all swim off back to the swamp they've crawled out of ...

  • @fionagregory9147
    @fionagregory9147 26 дней назад +4

    Fujitsu needs taking to court.

    • @philthrelfall5294
      @philthrelfall5294 26 дней назад +2

      Sadly not going to happen. They are so deep into many government programmes, that they have effective immunity. The best we can hope for is that the government are sufficiently embarrassed, that Fujistu never get any new contracts.

  • @knicol46
    @knicol46 26 дней назад +3

    Selective amnesia in full play.

  • @user-mi9mw5wm5w
    @user-mi9mw5wm5w 19 дней назад +1

    The managerial interviews for post office executives:
    'If asked can you recall anything that might be of use to us executives?
    'Yes'
    If asked can you recall anything that may be of use to our workers and the public?
    'No'
    'Congratualtions, Can you start Monday?'
    'Yes'

  • @haydenharris3059
    @haydenharris3059 26 дней назад +3

    What's the point of this expensive hearing if they can easily reject any responsibility 😮

  • @jamesbowskill362
    @jamesbowskill362 26 дней назад +2

    This po pensioner ON AROUND THE £400K PER ANNUM, was asked if he was INCOMPETENT OR A LIAR ! He chose not to be a LIAR !!!!! therefore, by his own admission HE IS INCOMPETENT................................
    Very nice little earner for someone not aware of whats happening around them !!!!!!!!!!!
    Happy Days.

  • @tightcamper
    @tightcamper 26 дней назад +2

    There are 2 phrase these POL people use most often. " I regret" and "I don't remember"

  • @AM2K2
    @AM2K2 26 дней назад +4

    He just got RINSED!

  • @hans-heinerkleinmanns1955
    @hans-heinerkleinmanns1955 18 дней назад +1

    Probably the young woman, who is questioning David Miller is a hope for Great- Sorry, for Britain. I wish her a great Career!

  • @christopherbriscoe8665
    @christopherbriscoe8665 20 дней назад +1

    The new motto of, "Post Office" should be, "NOT ME, GOV!"

  • @RippySharp
    @RippySharp 26 дней назад +2

    I can’t remember, I didn’t read the document and I was on holiday at the time🤣🤣🤣

  • @integralevideo
    @integralevideo 26 дней назад +2

    Sitting there with your 10K watch on.

  • @thebeesnuts777
    @thebeesnuts777 23 дня назад +1

    My brother works in a warehouse as a forklift truck driver on minimum wage he got a written warning for putting a role of carpet in the wrong aisle
    This guy is on 5x more salary a manager and he doesn't get any admonishing whatsoever ever

  • @tomblack8211
    @tomblack8211 18 дней назад +1

    The exchange between Sir Wyn Williams and David Miller, from 7.00 to 8.20, amounts to Sir Wyn extracting from Mr. Miller the admission that he had allowed a cover-up to take place.

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin
    @GodmanchesterGoblin 26 дней назад +1

    I can remember ridiculous levels of detail from work and meetings that I dealt with going back into the 80s and earlier. It beggars belief that these people really have so little knowledge or recollection of the work and people that they were involved with much more recently.

  • @davidmansfield9167
    @davidmansfield9167 24 дня назад +1

    The long term damage this does to trust in UK branded businesses is incalculable.

  • @charleswillcock3235
    @charleswillcock3235 25 дней назад

    It's perfectly obvious this chap has been very carefully coached to give the very shortest answers possible to each question.

  • @gherkamum
    @gherkamum 26 дней назад +3

    He knew it was wrong and did nothing, still no empathy or shame.....They all look guilty..

  • @warrenhessey7137
    @warrenhessey7137 26 дней назад +1

    Not only are the post office managers culpable and should face criminal sanctions to stop these high powered executives just walking away, but really really we need to have a serious look at our legal system!!!
    What scrutiny did the defence Barristers give their cases! I know that they always try to get a plea to avoid court time but all this must instigate a review of the way our legal system operates. These Barristers cannot have done their jobs properly. They must have been incompetent

  • @Mrs-NWA
    @Mrs-NWA 24 дня назад

    Strange isn't it that they can't recall reading documents of importance or meetings of relevant importance that might incriminate themselves or make them look bad but can recall some specifics that make them look good.
    I sometimes wonder if Judge Judy was running this inquiry it would be concluded quite quickly with many of these 'defendants' being taken down.
    Astonishing how such incompetence is rewarded with such high renumeration.

  • @bob23301
    @bob23301 26 дней назад +1

    All of them knew about it right up into government, and they all decided that money instead of honesty was the way to go.

  • @philthrelfall5294
    @philthrelfall5294 26 дней назад +3

    Wyn rinses him!!

  • @kquat7899
    @kquat7899 5 дней назад

    "Should've"? He knew exactly what was going on.

  • @ashleyvmoore
    @ashleyvmoore 15 дней назад +1

    They all remember that they are innocent of anything but don't remember details,no one appears to remember reading anything regarding the documents .

  • @martinpower2439
    @martinpower2439 26 дней назад +1

    Put them on trial and let’s make sure there are some ordinary citizens can remember more than these criminals

  • @RobertJonesWightpaint
    @RobertJonesWightpaint 26 дней назад +3

    Lawks alive .... none of these executives, nor those lower down the chain, would have had any idea they'd be ripped to bits, however gently, in public like this. I doubt that Sir Wyn Williams' final report is going to be gentle at all; whenever he's asked a question, it's like a skewer pushed through a succulent joint of meat. What was that old cop show? No Hiding Place?

  • @louisdisbury9759
    @louisdisbury9759 20 дней назад +2

    Ask yourself this, What kind of people sit Idily by while innocent people are sitting in Jail cells to protect their reputation, as far as post office managements criminal behaviour goes I think the government will do nothing but I am confident Mr Bates will be Launching a class action and no win no fee lawyers will be queing up for the business.

  • @chrisfell5073
    @chrisfell5073 23 дня назад

    This is the man in 1999 who originally said that Horizon was 'robust' when there were known faults. Every (every!!) machine had 30 minute down time every month. It was known to be defective from the start. He then covered up the Coyne report again in 2003. It was a Titanic disaster except he saw the iceberg.

  • @Steve14ps
    @Steve14ps 25 дней назад

    "I cannot remember", "I now regret", "I was not aware" are common answers to questions asked as well as a stony silence for more than several seconds when a very awkward question is asked

  • @sleepinglioness5754
    @sleepinglioness5754 22 дня назад

    This was going for 20 years and no one stopped it.

  • @kpc5
    @kpc5 19 дней назад +1

    It is time for the Government to start building New Prisons to hold all people involved in this Scandal responsible for there actions and all MP's as well??

  • @Andrew-dm8mk
    @Andrew-dm8mk 24 дня назад

    This is Very Serious in deed. All those responsible should be charged with the indictable offence of conspiracy, aiding and abetting under section 4-5 of criminal law act 1967. All those involved should be charged with perverting the corse of justice which is a common law offence.

  • @Klemheist-vf1hx
    @Klemheist-vf1hx 19 дней назад +1

    His memory lapse will come back to him after 6 months in Solitary.

  • @mathew8581
    @mathew8581 26 дней назад +4

    Selective memory from those on ££££££££££££

  • @robertwilson123
    @robertwilson123 23 дня назад +1

    Paying off a single postmaster whose own expert witness finds a Horizon fault...to keep it quiet....and seeking no further investigation or asking no further questions.

  • @ashleyvmoore
    @ashleyvmoore 15 дней назад +1

    They have all been coached to forget they new anything by the lawyers that they are employing to defend themselves.

  • @apedanticpeasant1447
    @apedanticpeasant1447 22 дня назад

    Absolutely no one, ever, that I know of in a position like this would authorise a payment of that magnitude without all of the details. This guy is about as credible as Alina Habba.

  • @stetomlinson3146
    @stetomlinson3146 21 день назад

    Here’s an exert from a senior POL managers interview panel.
    Questioner. So, can we just ask, have you ever heard of the phrase, “Corporate Dementia”?
    Interviewee. “ Er.. I might have I can’t remember.”
    Q. When did you hear about it?
    I. “ We’ll I can’t answer specifically, but I do know I would have done.”
    Q. “Would have or should have?”
    “ Sorry I can’t remember specifics.”
    Q. “Was it from a colleague?”
    I. “ I can’t remember.”
    Q. “Congratulations you’ve got the job!”
    😡😡