Today is the turn of Patrick Bourke the Government Affairs and Policy Director at Post Office Ltd and the day the official inquiry into the scandal heard that Mr Bourke also
wrote a briefing for ministers that said it was impossible to tinker with sub-postmasters’ branch accounts remotely - when he’d received evidence that the opposite was the case.
Patrick Bourke wrote and edited the briefing on 13 January 2015 which said
there was "no functionality" which allowed the Post Office or Fujitsu to edit or remove transaction data."There is no functionality in Horizon for either a branch, Post Office or Fujitsu to edit, manipulate or remove transaction data once it has been recorded in a branch’s accounts," he wrote in the briefing.
It said it was possible to do "transaction corrections" but said they would always be "fully visible" to sub-postmasters.
What else did Bourke say?
Patrick Bourke wrote in a briefing for Post Office boss Paula Vennells that the issue of the safety of sub-postmasters’ convictions "pales into insignificance" compared to the organisation's "social purpose".
Referring to Alan Bates and the Justice for Sub-Postmasters’ Alliance group, he wrote in the September 2014 briefing: "We cannot accommodate the self-indulgence of a number of malcontents."
Mr Bourke said he now regretted a "poor choice of language".
Did he know he was telling lies to the government?
Yes he did!
But Mr Bourke accepted before the inquiry that he was aware it was possible for Fujitsu to insert "balancing transactions" without sub-postmasters’ approval or knowledge.
He accepted he had seen reports detailing one such transaction since 2010, and was aware that the Post Office had not explored how many times they might have been used before then.
He said he was aware of the Deloitte briefing but told the inquiry he had not read its contents.
Mr Bourke, who in 2015 was government affairs and policy director at the Post Office, also left out any mention in the briefing for ministers of issues raised by "tainted" expert witness Gareth Jenkins.
The inquiry saw evidence that just five days before the briefing was completed, he received an email from Post Office criminal lawyer Jarnail Singh that Mr Jenkins was aware of bugs in Horizon which he had not mentioned when sub-postmasters were prosecuted.
On 8 January 2015, Mr Singh wrote: "The difficulty here is made worse by the fact that Gareth Jenkins, an employee of Fujitsu, has been making statements for use in criminal proceedings which made no references to the very bugs which it is understood he told Second Sight about.
"People were prosecuted and pleaded guilty following the receipt of his statement which implied no bugs had been found."
Yet in his briefing for ministers five days later, Mr Bourke wrote:
"No evidence has been identified by Post Office...to suggest that the conviction of any applicant to the scheme is unsafe."Mr Bourke accepted that with the benefit of hindsight, he ought to have included the information about balancing transactions, software bugs and a discredited witness in his briefing for ministers.
"In retrospect, that was not the right call. And if I had my time again, I would have included it in this briefing," Mr Bourke said.
Still believe the government knew all about the scandal from day 1 and did a cover-up job lasting nearly TWENTY YEARS, Bob?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cp0g0vq9m95oTo be fair to you Bob, Bourke also said this -
However, asked whether Richard Callard, the government representative on the Post Office board, would have been aware of the issues about Mr Jenkins, Mr Bourke said that given how well known it was that they could not proceed with prosecutions due to problems with the expert witness, he couldn’t imagine that he would not have been informed.
But surely Callard would simply point out that Bourne had advised him that there was the was " "No evidence has been identified by Post Office...to suggest that the conviction of any applicant to the scheme is unsafe." as per what he had wrote in his briefing note to Ministers.