Post office operators who helped uncover the Horizon IT scandal will be able to apply to a new compensation scheme, the chancellor has announced.
The IT system installed by the Post Office and supplied by Fujitsu falsely suggested there were cash shortfalls, leading to 736 unsafe convictions for theft, fraud and false accounting in one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in British legal history.
On Tuesday, Rishi Sunak said a compensation scheme would be set up in the coming months targeted at the workers who brought and won the landmark high court case against the Post Office over the failings.
The 2019 ruling paved the way for millions of pounds of future payouts and led to the court of appeal quashing the convictions of workers who were wrongly accused of committing crimes.
Despite winning nearly £43m in compensation in 2019, the group was left financially disadvantaged after having to pay significant legal costs based on a “no win, no fee” agreement with Therium – the company that funded its litigation.
Due to the terms of their legal agreement each operator received a fraction of the settlement, equating to about £20,000 each.
Their action meant they were ineligible to apply to the Historical Shortfall Scheme (HSS) which was set up to by the Post Office after the scandal to compensate workers who had to personally cover shortfalls in their branch’s accounts caused by the Horizon IT.
The new scheme will ensure that those who uncovered the injustice receive the same level of compensation as those who claimed through the HSS, the government said.
Sunak said: “The Horizon IT dispute has had a devastating impact on postmasters and their families, with many losing their livelihoods or being wrongly convicted for crimes they
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