Ten Bobsworth wrote:Its quite simple, if McFadden and Davey had been interested in the whole truth, they would have listened to the accounts of the hundreds of wronged SPMs not just the lying toerags that ran the Post Office with massive amounts of taxpayers money. But neither were at all interested in any of that nor, it seems, were their contemporaries, predecessors or successors.
I don't wish to be personal but Sluffy is either deranged, an asshole or a deranged asshole. There are quite a lot of assholes about and, although they are not exclusive to the Civil Service, the NHS and local government, they do seem to congregate in large numbers in those environments. A bit like slugs around Bobsworth's hostas. Something in the water, maybe?
Something wrong with your head more likely.
Ok, McFadden and Davey listens "to the accounts of the hundreds of wrong SPM's".
Let stop there a minute.
There seems to be something like 950 wrongful prosecutions during the period of the 'unsafe' convictions from 1999 to 2015 (16 years) that averages out at to just under 60 cases per year.
There were approximately 11,500 sub-post offices.
So that equates to there being (on the face of it) an issue in 0.52% of the sub-post office branches and the remaining 99.48% of the branches working perfectly.
Viewing this reasonably why would anyone, let alone a Minister or the civil servants suspect there was anything particularly wrong at the Post Office to look into?
Let's say they did have enough of a concern to look deeper, what evidence would they find?
Would it not be the exact evidence that criminal courts heard, would they not be reading the defence and prosecuting summaries presented to the juries and the judges summaries of each case - where nearly ALL of them were ultimately found guilty by a jury of their peers?
If I was the Minister instead of McFadden and Davey what would be there for me to think there was anything to cover-up???
If anyone (but you - because you think you know everything) was sat in McFadden's and Davey's chair, what would they think?
Would it not be, 'we've heard what the SPM's are saying' we've contacted the PO and Fujitsu who refute there is unilateral remote access to Horizon, or there are any bugs that effect it in the system, the issue must therefore be at the branch end.
We've looked at all the prosecution cases and all the defence and prosecutions summaries, we've read all the judges case summing up's - they have all read and relied on the testimony of the expert witness that Horizon is bug free and there is no remote access to the sub-postmasters terminals.
We finally note that in all 0f the 950 cases that were taken to court only TWO were found to be not guilty (2 out of 950).
The juries returned a guilty verdict on 948 of the 950 cases (99.8%)
We can see no issue here to be concerned about'.
What other conclusion would any other reasonable person come to????