Sun. Dec 22nd, 2024
alert-–-mr-bates-vs-the-post-office-viewers-left-‘raging’-and-‘gobsmacked’-after-a-twist-in-the-devastating-scandal-is-revealed:-‘my-jaw-is-on-the-floor!’Alert – Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers left ‘raging’ and ‘gobsmacked’ after a twist in the devastating scandal is revealed: ‘My jaw is on the floor!’

Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers were left horrofied as they watched the second episode of the ITV drama on Tuesday.  

The series follows the true story of hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly prosecuted for theft by the Post Office due to a faulty IT system.

And in the latest addition it was revealed how computer firm Fujitsu, hired by the Post Office, were unknowingly able to remotely alter the subpostmaster’s inputted financial figures.

With Michael Rudkin (played by Shaun Dooley) who was also wrongly convicted saying: ‘That means they can sneak in behind your backs, change your figures and bugger off and leave without a trace’. 

Viewers were ‘disgusted’ by the revelation and took to X, formerly known as Twitter, in their droves fuming that justice had still not yet been served.

Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers were left horrofied as they watched the second episode of the ITV drama on Tuesday (Toby Jones as Alan Bates and Julie Hesmondhalgh as his partner Suzanne)

Mr Bates vs The Post Office viewers were left horrofied as they watched the second episode of the ITV drama on Tuesday (Toby Jones as Alan Bates and Julie Hesmondhalgh as his partner Suzanne)

The series follows the true story of hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly prosecuted for theft by the Post Office due to a faulty IT system

The series follows the true story of hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly prosecuted for theft by the Post Office due to a faulty IT system 

One wrote: ‘This is making my blood boil. Post Office must’ve known that Fujitsu had full remote access but why would they allow it? All in it together? Smelling too many rats tbh!’.

While a second said: ‘So shocking and really making my blood boil. I didn’t realise the Fujitsu connection’.

Another added: ‘Extraordinary and gobsmacking information about Fujitsy part in The Post Office Scandal. They should be ashamed, prosecuted and sued’. 

And: ‘In each episode the exposure of what Fujitsu and the Post office got up to gets worse and worse… this is a national disgrace and politicians should be working around the clock to readdress these wrongs’. 

A fifth commented: ‘This is gobsmacking’.

With a sixth writing: ‘First part of episode 2 of Mr Bates Vs The Post Office and my jaw is on the floor! Wow… it’s actually unbelievable what went on, shocking what they all went through’. 

In agreement someone else said:  ‘Shame on Fujitsu with their horizon computers and altering what was inputted’.

Toby Jones who leads the cast as the former subpostmaster has revealed that Mr Bates shunned him – because he didn’t think he was worthy of being depicted as a hero.

And in the latest addition it was revealed how computer firm Fujitsu, hired by the Post Office, were unknowingly able to remotely alter the subpostmaster's inputted financial figures

And in the latest addition it was revealed how computer firm Fujitsu, hired by the Post Office, were unknowingly able to remotely alter the subpostmaster’s inputted financial figures

With Michael Rudkin (played by Shaun Dooley) who was also wrongly convicted saying: 'That means they can sneak in behind your backs, change your figures and bugger off and leave without a trace'

With Michael Rudkin (played by Shaun Dooley) who was also wrongly convicted saying: ‘That means they can sneak in behind your backs, change your figures and bugger off and leave without a trace’

Viewers were 'disgusted' by the revelation and took to X, formerly known as Twitter, in their droves fuming that justice had still not yet been served

Viewers were ‘disgusted’ by the revelation and took to X, formerly known as Twitter, in their droves fuming that justice had still not yet been served

 ‘Alan is quite an extraordinary man who presents as one of the most ordinary people you can meet’, the actor, 57, said in an interview with BAFTA.

‘So when you come to play someone like that, I needed to find out who he was, what made him do this extraordinary thing and unite hundreds of, a thousand people, in one place and take on the might of the corporate post office.

‘And that was a great shock because he felt that he himself wasn’t worthy of being heroic because there was nothing unusual about him.

‘He wasn’t a great source of material, he was very friendly and warm, but he said, ‘I’m just not a very emotional guy’.

‘So, I went to chat to other people who knew him, and they said, Alan Bates is one of the smartest and inspirational people they’d ever met.

‘There is a paradox about him.

‘All of my dealings with him have been great. They haven’t helped me play him very much, but they’ve been great.’

Between 2000 and 2014, an average of one Post Office worker a week was prosecuted, for theft, false accounting and other offences, by the Post Office

Between 2000 and 2014, an average of one Post Office worker a week was prosecuted, for theft, false accounting and other offences, by the Post Office

Toby Jones who leads the cast as the former subpostmaster has revealed that Mr Bates shunned him

Toby Jones who leads the cast as the former subpostmaster has revealed that Mr Bates shunned him

Saying he didn't think he was worthy of being depicted as a hero (pictured with partner Suzanne Sercombe)

Saying he didn’t think he was worthy of being depicted as a hero (pictured with partner Suzanne Sercombe)

Mr Bates was one of hundreds of innocent subpostmasters working in the UK who was accused and later charged of theft, fraud and false accounting due to a faulty IT system.

The scandal is considered the most widespread miscarriage of justice in British history, leading to the inquiry into what went wrong, and who was responsible.

Between 2000 and 2014, an average of one Post Office worker a week was prosecuted, for theft, false accounting and other offences, by the Post Office.

From a total of 736, many were jailed, bankrupted and suffered appalling stress and public shame.

For years Royal Mail and its computer partner Horizon – a system developed by the Japanese company Fujitsu – insisted that they were isolated cases.

The four-part series has received a mountain of praise since airing its first episode on New Year’s Day.

Mr Bates vs The Post Office review: A first-class exposé of the human pain behind this scandal, writes CHRISTOPHER STEVENS 

Rating:

Have you ever peeled an unfranked stamp off an envelope and re-used it? If so, the Post Office has a word for you: fraudster.

Royal Mail ¿ which ran the Post Office until 2012 ¿ warns on its website: ‘Any person who knowingly reuses stamps for postage is committing fraud.’ This is a criminal offence, liable to prosecution.

Yet 25 years ago, when the Post Office computer system began malfunctioning so badly that many sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses were driven out of business, Royal Mail ¿ so stringent in castigating the smallest rule-bending by customers ¿ refused to listen or investigate fairly.

Toby Jones, as a defiant sub-postmaster running a shop in Llandudno, North Wales, summed it up in a stinging speech at the start of Mr Bates vs The Post Office: ‘They’re not calling me a thief. They wouldn’t dare. They say money’s somehow gone missing from this branch, which it hasn’t, and I have to pay it back, which I won’t.’

This major, new four-part drama, airing nightly with a documentary to follow on Friday, highlights just three stories of hundreds

This major, new four-part drama, airing nightly with a documentary to follow on Friday, highlights just three stories of hundreds

A browbeaten young copper, caught between the furious Alan Bates and an unsympathetic auditor, asked whether any actual crime had been committed.

‘Well,’ fumed the man behind the counter, ‘Post Office Limited is stealing my livelihood, my shop, my job, my home, my life savings ¿ and my good name.’

He was not alone. Between 2000 and 2014, an average of one sub-postmaster or sub-postmistress a week was prosecuted, for theft, false accounting and other offences, by the Post Office. From a total of 736, some were jailed, many were bankrupted, all suffered appalling stress and public shame.

Yet for years Royal Mail and its computer partner Horizon ¿ a system developed by the Japanese company Fujitsu ¿ insisted that these were isolated cases. In an era before social media, many of those accused had no idea that any other shops were facing the same problems, and assumed the fault must somehow be theirs.

This major, new four-part drama, airing nightly with a documentary to follow on Friday, highlights just three stories of those hundreds. In Hampshire, Jo Hamilton (Monica Dolan) was spending hours on the Horizon helpline, patiently following instructions and watching the imaginary discrepancies mount up.

Phoning to plead that the computer expected her to bank £2,032.67 more than she had taken in the past week, she re-entered the figures as she was told ¿ and saw the shortfall double on screen to more than £4,000.

‘It’ll sort itself out,’ the voice on the helpline told her. But it didn’t, and soon Jo had emptied her savings and maxed out her credit cards, trying to bridge the gap. She didn’t dare tell her husband or her mother until they were faced with remortgaging the house.

In Bridlington, Yorkshire, Lee Castleton (Will Mellor) made the mistake of thinking that if he called in the auditors, they would realise the £25,858.95 he was accused of misappropriating was the result of computer errors. Instead, Royal Mail barred him from his own shop and sued him for the money. His children were bullied at school, and taunted that their father was a common thief.

‘You’ve just got to trust in the British justice system,’ Lee told himself. ‘Tell the truth and everything will be all right.’ It wasn’t, though: he lost the case and was ordered to pay £321,000 in costs.

The Daily Mail waged a long campaign to win justice for the accused, something this serial has not so far acknowledged. What it also fails to mention is that Adam Crozier, chief executive of Royal Mail Group between 2003 and 2010, later became CEO of ITV.

This screenplay by Gwyneth Hughes does, however, convey the overwhelming fear of facing a bureaucratic juggernaut that refuses to acknowledge the possibility it might be wrong about anything. With unlimited legal funds at its disposal to bully almost every individual into silence (with the heroic exception of Mr Bates), Royal Mail was all-powerful, remorseless and heartless.

That inhuman power was symbolised by the convoy of black saloon cars that rolled up outside each rural sub-post office, at the beginning of each audit.

‘When I first got legal advice,’ Mr Bates says, ‘I was warned that if I tried to take them to court, even if I won, the Post office would just keep appealing till I ran out of money.’ That’s chilling, cruel and all too believable. But the drama also captures the decency of Britain’s sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses, the quintessential shopkeepers once at the core of so many communities.

They’re a rare breed now and may soon be extinct, the way Royal Mail is going. If a single one of them had been fiddling the books, it would have seemed shocking and improbable. For 736 to be prosecuted defies all rational belief.

Because the victims were such a familiar, well-liked type, the three in this retelling win our immediate sympathy. After Jo Hamilton is dragged into the dock and harried into pleading guilty to an offence that was not her fault, half the village turns out to cheer her on. The local vicar declares from the witness box: ‘We all love her. People confide in her. We trust her, and we just can’t believe that any of this was on purpose in any way.’

Watching that scene, with lumps in our throats as the judge allows Jo to walk free, every Mail reader must have given a cheer, too.

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