‘Joy’ as hundreds of convictions will be quashed

One of the hundreds of sub-postmasters set to have their convictions from the Post Office scandal quashed has spoken of his “absolute joy” at the move.

Lee Williamson, a former sub-postmaster in Northern Ireland, told the BBC that he was “overjoyed and very grateful”.

A law quashing convictions from the Horizon IT scandal was approved by Parliament on Thursday.

It was one of the final bills to pass before MPs break up ahead of the general election in July.

The law applies to England, Wales and Northern Ireland – the Scottish parliament is to pass its own bill to quash convictions.

The case is seen as one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in British legal history.

Between 1999 and 2015, more than 900 sub-postmasters were wrongly prosecuted due to faulty accountancy software called Horizon, which showed errors that did not exist.

Many sub-postmasters went to prison for false accounting and theft, and several were financially ruined.

Lee Williamson, a former sub-postmaster in Northern Ireland who was wrongly convicted, is one of those who will be cleared by the new bill.

He had been convicted in 2014 and given an 18-month sentence suspended for three years.

“Really the overriding emotion is absolute joy,” he told the BBC’s Today programme.

However, Mr Williamson said there were also conflicting emotions.

He said he was “overjoyed and very grateful that this day has arrived… and then the anger bubbles below that it has taken away 12 years of your life”.

The speed with which matters had moved over the past few months “has been surreal”, Mr Williamson said.

“I know this might sound a bit hollow but the compensation is really secondary,” he added.

“The fight over these past number of years was to get our names cleared. To have our names cleared is actually the equivalent to having a million pounds compensation.”

A public inquiry into the Horizon scandal is ongoing and this week has been hearing from former Post Office boss Paula Vennells.

The passing of the Post Office Horizon System Offences Bill means all convictions will be quashed of people convicted of theft, or false accounting between 1996 and 2018 while working in a Post Office using its flawed IT system.

Those who have their convictions overturned will be eligible for compensation payments from the Horizon Convictions Redress Scheme, which will be set up after the legislation is passed.

The unprecedented law has been driven through in the wake of the public outcry brought about by the ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office broadcast.

The law has been controversial with judges because for centuries it has been the job of the courts to address unsafe convictions, not Parliament.

But the government argues the exceptional scale and circumstances of the scandal mean it will not set a precedent.

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