Jas Dosanjh

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Jas Dosanjh

Jas Dosanjh

@JSD237

Katılım Ocak 2024
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 We have seen during the P'inquiry the Board & Management are unable to manage anything without advice from layers... Same here... Why not put these people in charge - cut out the middle man... 😒🤨
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Monsieur Cholet
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17·
#PostOfficeScandal #PR The Post Office has awarded a £2.4m contract to a crisis PR company as it fights legal claims by victims of the scandal. So easy to spend Taxpayers money ‼️ Simon Goldberg of SMB who represent and Janet Skinner amongst other SPMs with complex claims against Post Office said: "For all the money it spends on crisis PR, the public has not seen any improvement whatsoever in the reputation of the organisation, and speaking from the coalface, the sub-postmaster cohort resents the largesse with which public funds are spent, except on the only deserving cause which could help to right past wrongs – namely, the victims and their families." @CastletonLee @Janetsk20073533 @PostOffice @NAOorguk @Rebecca_SPaul @CommonsPAC @CommonsBTC news.sky.com/story/post-off…
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 Disgusting ! Put's his pitiful pretence of anguish at the SPM's plight in perspective doesn't it... 🤨
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 @mac_mccaskill My HSS Claim (now moved to HSSA) will be 6 years in July. My SRR is approaching 3 years. All of the Offers I've received have failed the Full & Fair Standard DBT & PO issued. They do not even follow their own Rules and Guidelines.
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@nickwallis Another Scheme to frustrate, dither, delay & disappoint hundreds of claimants... Why not appoint postmasters to organise it ? Clearly PO/Royal Mail folk couldn't organize a p*** up in a brewery... :(
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Nick Wallis
Nick Wallis@nickwallis·
The government has just announced a new redress scheme for family members of Post Office victims. It will be open for business this summer. It looks like there's some consensus behind the scheme. Lord Arbuthnot has endorsed it, saying...
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
How have other folk resolved this problem ?
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 hi hope this is a private msg I need help, DBT offer is not recognizing my loss from divorce, caused by Horizon problems, saying we're only Sharing our OWN assets !😠 But it's caused by their system, any idea how others have resolved this ?
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Monsieur Cholet
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17·
#PostOfficeScandal Desperately sad news 😔 Parmod was such a lovely man in every way imaginable - RIP. Yet another SubPostmaster passes away without seeing the full just he fought for for so hard and with such dignity. Condolences to all his family 🙏
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Varchasanraj V Patel
Varchasanraj V Patel@VarchasPatel·
Everyday Fujitsu strays from the ‘moral obligation’ it claims to uphold is another day a victim’s life is lost to injustice - another day of hardship, another day of suffering, and another day a Subpostmaster’s child grows up under the shadow of wrongdoing left unacknowledged.
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17

#PostOfficeScandal #FUJITSU #MiscarriageofJustice #Accountability #OveraBarrell Last Wednesday Chair of the Business and Trade Select Committee @liambyrnemp and fellow Committee Member @justinmadders, rose to ask Ministers why no demand had yet been made on Fujitsu to contribute to the hitherto Taxpayer funded Compensation bill. This has allowed Fujitsu's Auditors to allow the Company to dodge having to make any provison in their Accounts to date. QUITE EXTRAORDINARY ‼️ 🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️ @Fujitsu_Global @fujitsu_uk @premnsikka @DavidDavisMP @CastletonLee @Janetsk20073533 @LostChances2024 @BBCEmmaSimpson @rbrooks45 @nickwallis @VarchasPatel @HouseofCommons @UKHouseofLords @BBCBusiness @marksweney

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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 @liambyrnemp @justinmadders Why is @liambyrnemp being obtuse about his 'confusion' ? SPM's KNOW Govt Minister's or Govt Board Member's KNEW about Horizon's shortcomings... and had chosen to turn a blind eye to it... So Fujitsu can push back... and say what are you talking about, you were aware all along...
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Monsieur Cholet
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17·
#PostOfficeScandal #FUJITSU #MiscarriageofJustice #Accountability #OveraBarrell Last Wednesday Chair of the Business and Trade Select Committee @liambyrnemp and fellow Committee Member @justinmadders, rose to ask Ministers why no demand had yet been made on Fujitsu to contribute to the hitherto Taxpayer funded Compensation bill. This has allowed Fujitsu's Auditors to allow the Company to dodge having to make any provison in their Accounts to date. QUITE EXTRAORDINARY ‼️ 🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️🎌🇬🇧⚖️ @Fujitsu_Global @fujitsu_uk @premnsikka @DavidDavisMP @CastletonLee @Janetsk20073533 @LostChances2024 @BBCEmmaSimpson @rbrooks45 @nickwallis @VarchasPatel @HouseofCommons @UKHouseofLords @BBCBusiness @marksweney
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@william30726399 @SorrowNoMore1 @MaaleeshHabibi We want to put people back to where they would have been, but for... How is that even possible? Years lost, forced frugality, relationships damaged... how do you put that right ??? 😠🤔😠
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william burrows
william burrows@william30726399·
In combination with Nick Wallis' book, this account by Richard Brooks goes a whole lot further into the terrible scandal and unlawful actions of the Government sponsored Post Office and Fujitsu which supplied the defective computer software. It's readable and shocking. If you have any interest in the Horizon scandal, this is a must read account.
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william burrows
william burrows@william30726399·
At 3.10pm this man Patterson repeated his sickening mantra with no sense of remorse or feeling of any kind, even when presented with the fact that there would have been no inquiry, no £1.8bn taxpayer loss, not one of 1000's of people with lives ruined, if Fujitsu had not produced a devastatingly defective computer programme from the very beginning.
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 'At least 70' people in Post Office and Royal Mail knew of Horizon IT flaws, Fujitsu lawyer tells inquiry | Money News | Sky News Name the 70 people... 25 years... omg ! But who in Govt ok'd fighting the 555 Legal costs who ? Who in Govt tried to bury it ?
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Monsieur Cholet
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17·
#PostOfficeScandal #Fujitsu One year ago 📩🎌📩🎌📩 Since then...........❓❓❓
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17

#PostOfficeScandal #Fujitsu #Goodwill #PostOfficeInquiry 'Why is the UK Govt rewarding a Company that was complicit in causing harm to people?' The arrogant, belligerent and dispassionate attitude of CEO Paul Patterson at the Inquiry seems to have been glossed over. @fujitsu_uk @Fujitsu_Global @JapanGov @japantimes

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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 @SorrowNoMore1 Olympos won't go far enough... there were people in Govt who ok'd the money to prosecute, the money to fight the 555, the money to defend PO throughout the Enquiry... these people need to be outed ! Will they ? Unlikely 🧐😔
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Christopher Head OBE
Christopher Head OBE@chrish9070·
#PostOfficeScandal In the @DailyMirror by @soph_husk Police consider corporate manslaughter charges in Post Office scandal probe Police are considering corporate manslaughter charges as part of their probe into the Post Office Horizon scandal, it emerged today. Around 13 people are believed to have taken their own lives in relation to the scandal, a harrowing report from the Post Office inquiry said in July. Thousands more postmasters lost their livelihoods and savings after they were wrongly accused of stealing money from the Post Office where they worked. One subpostmaster said it is an "important step towards justice” for those responsible to be held to account. The National Police Chiefs' Council (@PoliceChiefs ) said its investigation into the scandal is considering corporate and gross negligent manslaughter charges. It said they will continue to focus on potential charges of perjury and perverting the course of justice. The offence of corporate manslaughter ensures companies and other organisations can be held properly accountable for very serious failings resulting in death. Christopher Head, who became Britain’s youngest subpostmaster at just 18 in 2006, said: “It is an important step towards justice that those responsible for causing the harm to thousands of victims, their families and those who are sadly no longer with us are held to account. “Whether those charges are for perjury, perverting the course of justice or corporate manslaughter the Met police investigation must go wherever the evidence takes them, even if that is right to the top of the organisation, including the various internal and external legal advisors.” Mr Head, who earlier this year received an OBE for his campaigning, was suspended by the Post Office in 2015 after Fujitsu's faulty IT system incorrectly showed an £88,000 shortfall at his West Bolden branch, near Sunderland. The Post Office then spent years trying to pursue him through the courts. Labour peer @RtHonKevanJones , a years-long campaigner for justice for postmasters, welcomed the consideration of corporate manslaughter charges. “It’s a welcome development but individuals still need to be held accountable for their part in ruining the lives of hundreds of decent hard working people,” he said. “This should now be a way of those individuals including senior figures at the Post Office and Fujitsu answering for their part in this scandal.” An NPCC spokesman said: “The primary and sole focus remains the offences of Perverting the Course of Justice and Perjury and this has not changed. However, as was done with fraud offences previously, advice is being sought from the CPS around the offences of Corporate and Gross Negligent manslaughter.” It is unclear what the NPCC is considering in relation to corporate manslaughter. Read the full piece here👇 mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@KirstieMAllsopp you are trying TOO hard to be relevant, why ? Anything for a Like ? seems a bit sad...
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Kirstie Allsopp
Kirstie Allsopp@KirstieMAllsopp·
It looks like Rachel Reeves lied to us and as a result home sellers lost their buyers, shops lost their customers, people didn’t take on new staff. Yes, the Tories lied about loads of stuff, problem is Labour promised they would be different.
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@stugoo17 I wouldn't or couldn't watch the Evidences given during the early part of the Horizon Enquiry, I couldn't bear it. I did in the end, dredging memories back. Our marriage was destroyed, I contemplated ending it... but you have to fight on 🙏
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Monsieur Cholet
Monsieur Cholet@stugoo17·
#PostOfficeScandal #PostOfficeInquiry #HumanRightsViolations #Accountability The Enforcer Who Drove a Man to his Death Sub-Postmaster Michael Mann wrote his suicide note after Stephen Bradshaw interrogated him. "After the bullying the Post Office has done I have no choice." Bradshaw remained on the payroll for a further 12 Years. October 22, 2013. Phil Edwards came home from his shift as a pub chef. The lights were on. He found his partner Michael Mann hanging. Three letters lay on the table. One to Edwards. One to Mann's family. One to the Post Office. "I love you Phil, but cannot go on and meet the accusations of 'fraud' to the end," Mann wrote. "They will 'fit me up'... Don't let the Post Office get to you either, let the media know if you like!" Two months earlier, Stephen Bradshaw and Helen Rose had arrived at Mann's workplace. Five Post Office investigators. Police waiting. Mann shouted he hadn't done anything wrong. They arrested him anyway. Accused of stealing £15,000 from a Post Office in Lytham St Annes. The Post Office investigated Mann's death. Interviewed Bradshaw. Interviewed Rose. Conclusion: "All Post Office personnel behaved professionally." Professional conduct. A man dead. The Investigator still employed. Facts: The Death Squad Thirteen suicides. That's the official count. Michael Mann. Martin Griffiths. Peter Huxham. Ten others some of whose names we don't know. Fifty-nine contemplated ending their lives. Ten attempted it. Multiple times. Stephen Bradshaw joined the Post Office in 1978. By 2013, he'd perfected his craft. Intimidation. Isolation. Destruction. August 16, 2013. Bradshaw and Rose arrived at Turnstone Road Post Office in Stockport. Mann became "more agitated and anxious" when he saw them, the internal report noted. He knew what was coming. They took him to Cheadle Heath Police station. Searched his home. Found Edwards' holiday euros. Called it evidence. Mann was suspended. Then fired for "gross misconduct." Never convicted. Never tried. Just destroyed. October 23, 2013. Mann was due back at the Police station. He never made it. The Sunday Times found that after more than 46 years at the Post Office, Bradshaw left the organisation "earlier this year." After the Inquiry. After the exposure. After everything. But not after Michael Mann. The Metropolitan Police has spent £7.2 million to date investigating. Operation Olympos. Forty-five suspects. Seven "main suspects." Just four interviewed in five years. Mann's family still fights for justice. His niece Amy named her baby Jude Michael. After the uncle who never got to meet him. Lies: The Isolation Torture "You have told me a pack of lies." That's how Bradshaw spoke to Jacqueline McDonald. She'd run a Post Office for years. The computer showed £50,000 missing. It never existed. McDonald served 18 months in prison. Lost her home. Paid back nearly £100,000 in phantom debt. She called them "Mafia gangsters looking to collect their bounty." Bradshaw's technique was surgical. Tell each victim they're alone. You're the only one. Nobody else has these problems. Must be you. Lisa Brennan heard it. Janet Skinner heard it. Michael Mann heard it. Mann wrote in his final letter: "As many people have reported them on websites." He'd discovered the lie. Too late. The Witness Statements were worse. Bradshaw signed documents he didn't write. "The Post Office continues to have absolute confidence in the robustness and integrity of its Horizon system." He admitted it to the Inquiry. "I was given that statement by Cartwright King and told to put that statement through." Marketing copy became sworn evidence. PR statements sent people to prison. Or worse. Unaccountability: The Cover-Up After Michael Mann died, the Post Office had a problem. Colin Stretch investigated. He interviewed Bradshaw and Rose. He talked to the five Investigators who'd attended Turnstone Road. His conclusion? "There are no grounds to support the allegations made by Mann. I do not believe that Bradshaw and Rose acted inappropriately." Mann was dead. His accusations died with him. The report was authorised by none other than Angela van den Bogerd, the Executive who oversaw prosecutions. She'd later be portrayed in the ITV drama as Paula Vennells' enforcer. January 2024. Bradshaw takes the stand at the inquiry. He's still employed. Forty-six years with the Post Office. Why wasn't he fired after Mann's suicide? Simple. Fire him, and you admit wrongdoing. Admit wrongdoing, and you admit the Post Office ordered it. Keep him inside. Control him. Pay him. Protect him. The Victims got criminal records. Bradshaw got a pension. Corruption: Blood Bonuses "How well you do your job." That's how Bradshaw described bonuses. The job was breaking people. In 2011—two years before Mann—Bradshaw boasted about convincing a Barrister to pursue theft charges. "Wide impact on the business," he wrote. Did protecting the business earn bonuses? "It may do." Every conviction was revenue. Every guilty plea saved money. Every suicide closed a file. Martin Griffiths killed himself eleven days before Mann. Different town. Same thugs in cheap suits. Same fatally flawed system. The Post Office paid Martin Griffiths' widow £140,000. Drip-fed. Conditional. Sign an NDA. Don't talk about how we killed your husband. This was organised crime with IT support. A protection racket with computer screens. The Post Office created phantom debts. Demanded payment. Destroyed those who questioned. Paid bonuses to the destroyers. Michael Mann saw it clearly. "They will fit me up," he wrote. He was right. Kickbacks: The Confession Factory Bradshaw signed statements about systems he didn't understand. About technology he couldn't evaluate. About innocence he wouldn't consider. "Not technically minded," he told the Inquiry. But he swore absolute confidence in Horizon. Under oath. In court. Sending people to prison. Or to their deaths. Michael Mann had worked for the Post Office for years. Managed branches in Preston, Blackpool, Stockport. Well-liked by customers. Trusted by employers. Until Horizon showed a discrepancy. Until Bradshaw arrived. Mann's partner Edwards remembers the aftermath. "He was very quiet, because he did suffer from depression anyway." The Arrest. The Suspension. The Termination for gross misconduct. Each step calculated. Each step closer to the end. October 22, 2013. Mann bought Edwards Doctor Who DVDs for his birthday. Bought envelopes for job applications, he said. He used them instead for suicide notes instead. The Reckoning That Never Comes February 2014. Manchester South Coroner's Court. The Inquest into Michael Mann's death lasts just 19 minutes. No press attended. The Coroner said Mann took his own life due to "worry, the upset of all that had been going on." No further investigation. No consequences for Bradshaw. The Metropolitan Police continues Operation Olympos. Glacial progress. Bradshaw finally left the Post Office earlier this year. Full pension probable. Freedom guaranteed? Michael Mann's family still fights. They want his name cleared. They want acknowledgment he was innocent. The Post Office offers "heartfelt apology." Offers to meet privately. Offers everything except what matters. Justice. Accountability. Prison for the perpetrators. The Machine Grinds On Phil Edwards lives with the image. Coming home. Finding Mann hanging. Reading the letters. "It was really devastating," he says. Twelve years later. Patricia Yeoman, Mann's sister, keeps his memory alive. Her daughter Amy named her son after him. Jude Michael. Life after death. They didn't know about the investigation until they read Mann's suicide note. "He was very quiet, Mike... very deep," Patricia says. The note was clear. The Post Office bullied him to death. He knew they'd fit him up. He'd read about other victims online. He chose death over their justice. Stephen Bradshaw continued working for eleven more years after Mann died. He interrogated more victims. Signed more false statements. Collected more pay cheques. The Post Office knew. They'd investigated. They'd cleared him. Professional conduct maintained. Is this British justice? The enforcer walks free. The innocent lie in graves. Questions Without Answers Why did it take twelve years to remove Bradshaw after Michael Mann's death? Why was "professional conduct" the verdict when a man was dead? Why does the system protect perpetrators while victims kill themselves? Mann wrote: "Don't let the Post Office get to you either." But they got to him. They got to Martin Griffiths. They got to Peter Huxham. They got to thirteen souls who chose death over dishonour. The Post Office expresses regret. Says lessons are learned. Says it's all in the past. Stephen Bradshaw left with his pension intact. Michael Mann left in a coffin. The next scandal is already brewing. The next enforcer is being trained. The next victim is being chosen. The next suicide might already be writing their note. Somewhere, an executive is calculating bonuses. Somewhere, a lawyer is drafting denials. Somewhere, an investigator is destroying a life. The machine that killed Michael Mann still runs. Stephen Bradshaw is gone but not punished. Michael Mann is dead but not forgotten. His family still waits for the Post Office to admit what everyone knows. They killed him. They investigated themselves. They called it professional. Twelve years later, they call it regrettable. The dead don't get to hear apologies. The living don't get justice. Welcome to Britain. Where corporate killers retire with pensions. Where their victims get graves. @PostOffice @PostOffInquiry @voiceofthePM @NigelRailton @kevinhollinrake @peterkyle @liambyrnemp @Janetsk20073533 @CastletonLee @mariaspears @DeirdreC65
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Jas Dosanjh
Jas Dosanjh@JSD237·
@BruceUnfiltered be grateful we're not in the States... it would have been a gun there... and more than 9 people hurt 🤕🙏
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BruceUnfiltered
BruceUnfiltered@BruceUnfiltered·
So apparently two men stabbing nine people on a packed train, sending passengers running for their lives, isn’t being treated as a terror attack. Unbelievable. Counter-terrorism officers are involved, a whole town was locked down, and the Defence Secretary called it part of a “new era of threat” — but we’re told it’s not terrorism, just another “isolated incident.” If that’s the bar now, what exactly does count as terrorism? Because from where the public’s standing, it looks and feels like the same fear, the same chaos, and the same denial we get every time. #Cambridgeshire #TrainAttack #BruceUnfiltered #UKNews #PublicSafety #UKPolitics #TerrorThreat #IndependentMedia #Peterborough #BreakingNews
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