Post Office was âdefinitely trying to outspend usâ in High Court â Alan Bates


Lead campaigner and former subpostmaster Alan Bates has told the Horizon IT inquiry he believed the Post Office was âdefinitely trying to outspend usâ as part of its âaggressiveâ tactics at the High Court.
Giving evidence in front of Post Office chief executive Nick Read on Tuesday, Mr Bates said the organisation âneeds disbandingâ and called it a âdead duckâ that is âbeyond savingâ.
Mr Bates also took aim at the Governmentâs âfundamental flawâ of being unable to deal with issues such as the Horizon scandal âeasily and sensiblyâ.
The campaigner said the mediation scheme set up to address the scandal was part of a âcover-upâ and a âfishing expeditionâ to discover what evidence subpostmasters had about Horizon.
The Post Office has come under fire since the broadcast of ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which put the Horizon IT scandal under the spotlight.
More than 700 subpostmasters were prosecuted by the Government-owned organisation and handed criminal convictions between 1999 and 2015 as Fujitsuâs faulty Horizon system made it appear as though money was missing at their branches.
Mr Bates had his contract terminated by the Post Office in 2003 after refusing to accept liability for shortfalls in the accounts at his branch in Llandudno, North Wales.
Asked whether Mr Read could have done a deal for redress with him, given he attended the hearing, Mr Bates told reporters: âHe could have brought his chequebook couldnât he, so we could have sorted it out there and then.â
The inquiry was shown slides from an undated presentation about Horizon integrity prepared by former Post Office manager Dave Smith, which said Mr Bates was sacked because he was âunmanageableâ.
One slide read:Â âBates had discrepancies but was dismissed because he became unmanageable. Clearly struggled with accounting, and despite copious support, did not follow instructions.â
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The inquiry also heard an internal review of Mr Batesâs dismissal concluded he was âunsuitableâ to be a postmaster, and said: âThe decision to terminate was not only right â it was the only sensible option.â
Former postal minister Sir Ed Davey also came under fire for a âdisappointing and offensiveâ letter in 2010 in which he declined a meeting and told the campaigner the Government had an âarmâs length relationshipâ with the Post Office despite it being the sole shareholder.
Sir Edâs words prompted Mr Bates to respond with another letter which read: âItâs not that you canât get involved or cannot investigate the matter, after all you do own 100% of the shares and normally shareholders are concerned about the morality of the business they own.
âIt is because you have adopted an armâs-length relationship that you have allowed a once great institution to be asset stripped by little more than thugs in suits, and you have enabled them to carry on with impunity regardless of the human misery and suffering they inflict.â
A Liberal Democrat spokesman said Sir Ed was âlied toâ and was âsorry that he didnât see through the Post Officeâs lies, and that it took him five months to meet Mr Batesâ.
Mr Bates said the Government needs to be held âresponsibleâ for its part in the Horizon scandal after âpumping huge amounts of moneyâ into the Post Office.
Edward Henry KC, who represents a number of subpostmasters, asked: âYouâve exposed over many years the Post Officeâs suppression of disclosure covering up the truth over Horizonâs flaws, but you have also exposed, have you not, the Governmentâs reckless indifference to the Post Officeâs misconduct over many years, would you agree?â
Mr Bates replied: âYes, I think that is the case.
âSince this year, I suppose, since the drama, weâve had far more publicity about the issue nationally.
âIâve noticed thereâs a general frustration with many other organisations that have that problem with Government as well.
âIt seems to be a fundamental flaw in the way Government works that it canât deal with these types of things easily and sensibly.â
Counsel to the inquiry Jason Beer KC questioned Mr Bates on what he believed the Post Officeâs litigation strategy was during the case, after the judge at the time warned against âaggressiveâ tactics.
Mr Bates said: âThey were definitely trying to outspend us â we had to raise commercial funding from it, they had a bottomless pocket as such, being a government organisation.
âSo anything they could do to spin it out, anything they could do to recuse the judge or whatever, they did.
âAnything to cost us money and try and get us to stop the case.â
Mr Bates also reiterated his thoughts on the Post Officeâs culture, saying: âItâs an atrocious organisation.
âThey need disbanding. It needs removing. It needs building up again from the ground floor.
âThe whole of the postal service nowadays â itâs a dead duck. Itâs beyond saving.
âIt needs to be sold to someone like Amazon. It needs a real big injection of money and I only think that can happen coming in from the outside.
âOtherwise itâs going to be a bugbear for the Government for the years to come.â
In his witness statement Mr Bates also said the Post Office had been  âattempting to discredit and silence meâ over the course of his 23-year campaign for justice.
He was called to give evidence as part of phases five and six of the inquiry, during which former Post Office chief executive Paula Vennells, who led the organisation at the height of the scandal, will face questions.
Asked what he thought was the first question Ms Vennells should be asked when she gives evidence, Mr Bates laughed and told reporters: âHowâs the villa in France?â
Hundreds of subpostmasters are awaiting compensation despite the Government announcing that those who have had convictions quashed are eligible for £600,000 payouts.