Former Fujitsu staff under police investigation to face Post Office IT scandal inquiry | Computer Weekly

Two former Fujitsu workers, who are currently under police investigation for possible perjury, will give evidence and face questions in the statutory inquiry into the Post Office IT scandal.

According to the latest inquiry timetable, Anne Chambers and Gareth Jenkins will appear in front of inquiry chair Wyn Williams in the first week of May.

The pair were used as expert witnesses in trials of subpostmasters blamed for accounting shortfalls and prosecuted for theft and fraud based on computer evidence and are being investigated by the Metropolitan Police for potentially committing perjury.

A multimillion-pound High Court case in 2019 proved that bugs in the Post Office’s computer system, which was supplied by Fujitsu, were to blame for unexplained accounting shortfalls.

Evidence emerged that Fujitsu and Post Office staff knew of computer errors but failed to reveal them during trials of subpostmasters.

In December 2019, before handing down a judgment in the High Court, judge Peter Fraser said he was referring information to the DPP because he had concerns over the accuracy of evidence given in court by Fujitsu in previous trials of subpostmasters.

“Based on the knowledge that I have gained both from conducting the trial and writing the Horizon issues judgment, I have very grave concerns regarding the veracity of evidence given by Fujitsu employees to other courts in previous proceedings about the known existence of bugs, errors and defects in the Horizon system,” Fraser said at the time.

A total of 736 subpostmasters and branch staff were prosecuted based on evidence from the Post Office’s Horizon accounting system used in branches between 2000 and 2015, many of whom were given prison sentences.

Over 80 people who were prosecuted have so far had their criminal convictions overturned, with many more expected.

In January 2020, the director of public prosecutions referred concerns passed to him by judge Fraser, to the Metropolitan Police. By November 2020, the Met had opened a criminal investigation into the two former Fujitsu workers.

Police working on the case have interviewed the former Fujitsu staff several times in the two years since the investigation was launched. It has also interviewed at least one former subpostmaster who was a victim of the scandal.

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