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Post Office Lawyer Accused Of 'Big Fat Lie'
Post Office Horizon IT inquiry
May 4th, 2024 | 01:08 AM | 242 views
WORLD BUSINESS
Former senior Post Office lawyer Jarnail Singh has denied that he knew about bugs in the Horizon system while sub-postmaster prosecutions continued for three years.
However, lead counsel for the Horizon inquiry Jason Beer accused Mr Singh of telling a "big fat lie".
Mr Singh was forwarded an email on the eve of the 2010 trial of Seema Misra, a sub-postmistress who was sent to jail while pregnant.
It identified bugs in the Horizon system that should have been disclosed in Mrs Misra's trial.
Mr Singh denied having read the email, despite being presented with evidence that he saved a copy to his hard drive and printed it off.
The email was sent on 8 October 2010 by Rob Wilson, head of the Post Office's criminal law team at the time. He alerted the Post Office to a series of incidents where money in Horizon had "disappeared at branch level" and incorrect balances were shown.
When asked by Mr Beer whether this email "ought to have rung alarm bells", Mr Singh responded: "Yes."
The following week, Mrs Misra's case began. She was eventually found guilty of false accounting and theft, sentenced to 10 months in prison, and jailed while pregnant on her son's 10th birthday.
The email was not disclosed in her trial.
Prosecution lawyers have a duty to disclose documents that could undermine their case in criminal trials.
'Blind denial'
Mr Beer showed evidence suggesting Mr Singh had saved an attachment about Horizon discrepancies to his hard drive, and printed it off on 8 October 2010.
"I don't recall seeing it, I don't recall printing it," Mr Singh said.
When asked whether it was saved on the hard drive of his computer, Mr Singh said: "I don't even know what you're talking about.
"I don't know how these things worked."
"You don't know how to save a document?" Mr Beer asked.
"I didn't know how to do it," Mr Singh responded, saying he wouldn't have had the technical knowledge either to do that or to understand the document itself.
"I don't remember this document at all, or the email," he added.
Mr Beer said Mr Singh was engaged in "blind denial" because "this is evidence of your own guilty knowledge".
Mr Singh replied: "That is not true, and I don't feel guilty, because I haven't received it, because if I did, I would have dealt with it.
"I don't recaIl receiving it, or reading it, or printing it - that is my evidence on oath."
Source:
courtesy of BBC NEWS
by Tom Espiner
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