Victims of Post Office scandal want to see more heads roll as chairman ousted

A WRONGLY jailed subpostmistress hopes the sacking of a Post Office boss is the start of a “domino effect” which will see many others who were complicit in the scandal lose their jobs.

Janet Skinner, who was jailed for nine months in 2007 over an alleged shortfall of £59,000 from her Hull post office, said she did not understand the reasons for the sacking of chairman Henry Staunton, who had been in the role for only a year. “It needs to go a little bit deeper than him,” she added.

On Friday Fujitsu’s former UK head Michael Keegan stepped down from his role at the Cabinet Office.

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Ms Skinner, whose conviction was quashed with 38 others by the Court of Appeal in April 2021, said: “I think it is the domino effect, one will fall and they will keep on falling.

Former Bridlington Post Office subpostmaster Lee Castleton, pictured in his home town of Scarborough.
5th January 2004.
Picture Jonathan GawthorpeFormer Bridlington Post Office subpostmaster Lee Castleton, pictured in his home town of Scarborough.
5th January 2004.
Picture Jonathan Gawthorpe
Former Bridlington Post Office subpostmaster Lee Castleton, pictured in his home town of Scarborough. 5th January 2004. Picture Jonathan Gawthorpe

“Either they will do the honourable thing and step down or they will be pushed.”

Lee Castleton, from Scarborough, was was played by Will Mellor in the ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office, said it was the “start of the slicing away of the rot”, adding: “I just hope that blade cuts very deeply.”

Mr Castleton, who was bankrupted after a two-year legal fight, pursued for £321,000 costs by the Post Office, added his voice to growing calls for Lord Arbuthnot to be appointed as chairman of the state-owned business.

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The former MP for North East Hampshire became involved in the campaign for justice for subpostmasters when his constituent, Jo Hamilton, was charged.

He applied for the job of chair of the Post Office when it came up in 2022. However it was Mr Staunton, who had been chairman for nine years of WH Smith, who was appointed to the state-owned company. “I think Lord Arbuthnot would be fantastic. He is the right man, in the right place and time for the job,” said Mr Castleton.

Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch would not be drawn on whether there will be other departures from the board of directors.

She told broadcasters there needed to be a “change of personnel” and it “just wasn’t working” as the company remains under heightened scrutiny over the wrongful prosecution of hundreds of subpostmasters.

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