Former Post Office boss apologises for celebrating after Surrey subpostmistress was convicted

Seema Misra ran a Post Office in West Byfleet

Author: Greg DeanPublished 11th Apr 2024
Last updated 11th Apr 2024

A former managing director of the Post Office has said he understands the "anger and upset caused" after appearing to celebrate the conviction of a pregnant Surrey subpostmistress who was eventually jailed.

David Smith told the Horizon IT inquiry he acknowledged the "substantial distress" he had caused after telling the Post Office staff the result of Seema Misra's trial was "brilliant news".

Speaking in the witness box at the inquiry on Thursday, Mr Smith said that "looking through the 2024 lens" he could see his email was "poorly thought through".

Mrs Misra began running a Post Office in West Byfleet, Surrey, in 2005, but was suspended in 2008 after being accused of stealing £74,000.

She was handed a 15-month prison sentence on her son's 10th birthday in November 2010 and was eight weeks' pregnant when jailed.

Mrs Misra's conviction was quashed by the Court of Appeal in 2021.

Following her conviction and sentence, Mr Smith sent an email to managers, including Paula Vennells, asking to "pass on my thanks" to the legal team.

His email read: "Brilliant news. Well done. Please pass on my thanks to the team."

Alan Bates speaks to reporters outside the Horizon Inquiry

In his witness statement to the inquiry, Mr Smith said his comment of "brilliant news" was due to the fact he believed "Horizon had been proved to be robust" following Mrs Misra's trial.

He said: "It was intended to be a congratulatory email to the team, knowing that they had worked hard on the case.

"However, knowing what I do now, it is evident that my email would have caused Seema Misra and her family substantial distress to read, and I would like to apologise for that.

"My comment of 'brilliant news' was in relation to me thinking that it was brilliant news that, in my mind, Horizon had been proved to be robust following the testing of the expert evidence in the trial.

"Even if this had been a correct conviction, I would absolutely never think that it was 'brilliant news' for a pregnant woman to go to prison and I am hugely apologetic that my email can be read as such.

"Regardless of the result, I would have thanked the team for their work on the case.

"However, seeing this email in the light of what I know now, I understand the anger and the upset that it will have caused and sincerely apologise for that."

Asked by counsel to the inquiry Sam Stevens why Mrs Misra's conviction was "brilliant news", Mr Smith said: "First of all, I'd just like to place on record an apology to Seema Misra and family because of the way this has been perceived and portrayed subsequently.

"Looking at it through their eyes rather than mine, you can see that it may have caused substantial upset and I really do apologise for that.

"At the time, what I'm doing here is what I would do generally with lots of things in business - I'm saying to the team 'thank you for all your hard work, it's terrific you've got the result that you've got and I'm really happy that we've progressed'.

"It's nothing more or less than that - and in the context of probably receiving 200-300 emails a day, which would have been typical at that time, I would literally have gone 'brilliant news, well done, thanks very much, send' and that would have been it.

"In the benefit of hindsight and looking through the 2024 lens and not the 2010 lens, at best, from Seema's perspective, you can see this is really poorly thought through and I do apologise again for that."

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