Post Office Security Managers DISAGREE on Strategy as Jason Beer KC highlights the tensions in working relationship between himself and Tony Marsh, who had previously done his job as Head of Security at the Post Office and asks John Scott to comment on it.
He says that they did have a good working relationship up until the point they disagreed on a strategy of prevention versus investigation and prosecution of subpostmasters.
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Did Post Office Try to HIDE Information from subpostmasters and their legal teams using Legal Privilege?
Advice from a principle lawyer within the legal team at the Post Office says that communications with the primary purpose of gathering information related to litigation should be marked 'legally privileged and confidential'.
Angela van den Bogerd is shown a summary that she created based on the email where all communication relating to the subpostmasters cases should be marked legally privileged and confidential.
Did this subtle change of language suggest that the Post Office were trying to hide information from subpostmasters and their legal teams as concerns about the Fujitsu Horizon system continued to be raised?
Why Did the Post Office Want to Control The Narrative About Bugs? Angela van den Bogerd tells Jason Beer at the Post Office Inquiry that she would default to using the word 'bugs' despite using the word 'anomalies' in parts of her witness statement.
Angela van den Bogerd describes how the Post Office wanted to Control The Narrative Around bugs, errors and defects in the Horizon system and Paula Vennells wanted to find a word that was 'less emotive'.
Post Office Executive Angela van den Bogerd said she Did Nothing Knowingly Wrong and regrets that she didn't get the the Post Office Scandal answers sooner as she testifies at the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry.
As Jason Beer KC summarises her witness statement she explains that she was kept out of the loop by Fujitsu in relation to things such as the Known Error Logs relating to the Horizon system.