Why didn't it take him long?
Could it be that he was a top drawer SPECIALIST who investigates FRAUD WORLDWIDE. with a background with the Criminal Cases Review Commission, perhaps???
Mr Beer: In terms of your prior career before Second Sight, you were Manager of the Investigations Division at Lloyd’s of London, with responsibility for investigating fraud worldwide; is that correct?
Ian Henderson: Correct.
Mr Beer: You were subsequently Head of Investigations at what was then the country’s largest financial services regulator?
Ian Henderson: That’s correct as well.
Mr Beer: You worked on a part-time basis for the Criminal Cases Review Commission, the CCRC, for four years; is that right?
Ian Henderson: Yes.
Mr Beer: You subsequently joined Second Sight Support Services Limited and Second Sight Investigations Limited; is that right?
Ian Henderson: Yes, it is.
Mr Beer: In broad terms, in the year 2020, what did those – sorry, 2012 – what did those companies do?
Ian Henderson: A variety of professional services. My appointment was as a contractor, consultant, and I was assisting Ron Warmington in the – in various, sort of, projects that the company was involved with.
Mr Beer: Was one of those projects the Horizon project for the Post Office?
Ian Henderson: Yes, it was.
Mr Beer: I think in 2012, you were a member of the International Society of Forensic Computer Examiners –
Ian Henderson: That’s correct as well.
Mr Beer: – and a certified computer examiner?
Ian Henderson: Correct.
Mr Beer: As you tell us in your witness statement, they’re all listed in your witness statement, you have provided written and oral evidence in a large number of civil and criminal cases and regulatory cases as an expert witness?
Ian Henderson: Correct.
And not only that he was sat in the same room where the case file of Jo Hamilton and Seema Misra just happened to be available to him to peruse because the Post Office 'leaders' Vennells and Perkins wanted to show that nothing dodgy was going on???
Clearly when ANYBODY with half a brain reviewed Hamilton's case file and found the investigators statement it jumps out a mile that something was very wrong in even prosecuting someone when nothing is found to have been stolen...
Mr Beer: – and every page is marked in that way? So this is the original Security Department, Security Team report, with the purposes of the proposed prosecution of Ms Hamilton.
Can we look, please, at page 4, and the second paragraph from the bottom. This is in a part of the report that the Investigator, Mr Brander, is setting out the investigations that he conducted and the results of them. Can you see the second paragraph from the bottom, the second part of it:
“Having analysed the Horizon printouts and accounting documentation I was unable to find any evidence of theft or that the cash figures had been deliberately inflated.”
Now, you tell us had this was, in your statement, this was an important statement from the Investigator, agreed?
Ian Henderson: Correct
Mr Beer: Was it important to you because you knew that Ms Hamilton was, in fact, charged with theft?
Ian Henderson: Yes. I found it quite an astonishing statement in the context of what she was charged with.
Mr Beer: This was something that I think you spotted at the time?
Ian Henderson: Yes.
Mr Beer: Now, if we look at the top and the bottom of each page, and go back to page 1, and look at the front page and look at the foot of the front page, thank you, we can see that document, the report, is not marked as “Legally Privileged” or “Subject to legal professional privilege” or otherwise referred as to being a privileged document, correct?
Ian Henderson: That’s correct.
Mr Beer: We know that you subsequently referred to the contents of this report in your Case Review Report for Ms Hamilton?
Ian Henderson: Yes.
Mr Beer: Did you know that the purpose of these reports was to seek legal advice from the Criminal Law Team?
Ian Henderson: It’s a difficult question to answer. I mean, these were reports prepared by an experienced Post Office Investigator. In many cases, no further action was taken; in other cases, prosecutions were considered. So, in this particular case, I was not aware that this report was addressed – was prepared on the instructions of a lawyer or intended to be passed on to a lawyer.
Mr Beer: Did you feel inhibited in any way, in the circumstances it was given to you and in the light of any markings on it, in referring to the contents of it in your Case Review Report?
Ian Henderson: No, I didn’t.
Mr Beer: Can we see what you did with this important information, then, please. POL00063517. Is this a copy of your Case Review Report in the case of M035, Josephine Hamilton?
Ian Henderson: Yes, it is.
Mr Beer: We can see it’s dated 24 March 2015. If we just scroll through the first couple of pages, we can see there’s an introduction setting out the terms of reference. Scroll on, please. The documents you have been provided with – just stop there.
At the top of the page, one of the documents that you had been provided with was the Post Office Investigation Report. That’s what we’ve just looked at, correct?
Ian Henderson: Yes.
Mr Beer: If we can scroll forwards to page 6, please, and read paragraph 4.10.
“The documents submitted by the Post Office include a Post Office Investigator’s report, dated 17 May 2006 …”
That’s the Brander report we’ve just read, you’ve got the correct date.
Ian Henderson: Yes.
Mr Beer: “… (see Post Office Document 012) …”
That’s the right number because that’s the suffix of the document we’ve just looked at:
“… that includes the following statements:
“‘Having analysed the Horizon printouts and accounting documentation I was unable to find any evidence of theft or that cash figures had been deliberately inflated’.”
If we skip over two paragraphs, thank you, you say:
“In our opinion, the fact that the Post Office’s own Investigator had found no evidence of theft as well as the endemic User ID and password sharing in the branch … would have been relevant to the applicant’s defence. No more detailed investigation was carried out by Post Office until it was preparing its [Post Office Investigation Report].”
Then in 4.11:
“As described … below, we have not been provided with the complete legal files, which would enable us to investigate this matter in more detail. However, on the basis of the limited documents made available to us, we consider it to be possible (though it is clear to us that Post Office does not) that.
“a) the Prosecution realised that there may have been insufficient evidence to support a charge of Theft, but proceeded with it nonetheless;
“b) the offer by the prosecution to remove the charge of Theft may have been used to put pressure on the applicant to plead guilty to the False Accounting charges, even though the prosecution may have realised that a charge of Theft was likely to fail unless further evidence was … discovered to support that charge;
“c) the threat of proceeding with the charge of Theft may have been used to put pressure on the applicant to agree to repay the losses and to avoid the custodial sentence normally associated with a conviction for Theft;
“d) the purpose of proceeding with a charge of Theft may have been intended primarily to assist in the recovery of losses, rather than in the interests of Justice; and
“e) part of the agreement to remove the Theft charge included a demand that no mention would be made in court of alleged problems with the Horizon computer system.”
Now, there’s a wide range of conclusions reached there but are they founded, in part, on the inclusion in the Brander report of a recognition by him that there was no evidence to support a charge of theft?
Ian Henderson: Yes, they are.
Mr Beer: Was that very significant information for you, therefore?
Ian Henderson: Yes, it struck me that it was exculpatory evidence that had not been disclosed to Mrs Hamilton or her Legal Team.
Mr Beer: You were pointing it out to the Post Office in clear terms in this, your Case Review Report?
Ian Henderson: Yes
In simple terms the Post Office lawyers had been stitching up the sub-postmasters aided and abetted by Fujitsu staff who falsely testified to the courts - and the likes of Vennells and Perkins had no clue that this was happening why they continued defending the PO's position, namely that they knew of NOTHING wrong with Horizon (indeed they relied on Henderson's Second Sight report that there were NO SYSTEMIC ERRORS!!!) and there was no remote access to the sub-post offices.
It's worth following Henderson's testimony which goes on to say how Rodric Williams went on to attempt to cover up the above too!!!
As I've kept telling you Bob, the scandal is how the PO EXECTIVES went on to cover-up all knowledge of the shit they got themselves into once the Clarke advice (2013) hit the fan!!!