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    Home - UK News - At least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives, public inquiry into Post Office scandal finds
    UK News Updated:July 8, 2025

    At least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives, public inquiry into Post Office scandal finds

    By WTX News Editor5 Mins Read
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    At least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives, public inquiry into Post Office scandal finds

    Cliff Notes

    • The public inquiry has revealed that at least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives due to wrongful accusations linked to the Horizon IT system, which the Post Office and Fujitsu knew could produce false data.
    • The personal toll of these allegations included mental health disorders, family breakdown, and financial hardship, affecting not only the postmasters but also their families and communities.
    • Chair Sir Wyn Williams has called for urgent government action to ensure full compensation for victims, highlighting the need for restorative justice and better management practices within the Post Office and Fujitsu.

    At least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives, public inquiry into Post Office scandal finds

    At least 13 postmasters may have taken their own lives after being accused of wrongdoing based on evidence from the Horizon IT system that the Post Office and developers Fujitsu knew could be false, the public inquiry has found.

    A further 59 people told the inquiry they considered ending their lives, 10 of whom tried on at least one occasion, while other postmasters and family members recount suffering from alcoholism and mental health disorders including anorexia and depression, family breakup, divorce, bankruptcy and personal abuse.

    Writing in the first volume of the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry report, chairman Sir Wyn Williams concludes that this enormous personal toll came despite senior employees at the Post Office knowing the Horizon IT system could produce accounts “which were illusory rather than real” even before it was rolled out to branches.

    Sir Wyn said: “I am satisfied from the evidence that I have heard that a number of senior, and not so senior, employees of the Post Office knew or, at the very least, should have known that Legacy Horizon was capable of error… Yet, for all practical purposes, throughout the lifetime of Legacy Horizon, the Post Office maintained the fiction that its data was always accurate.”

    Referring to the updated version of Horizon, known as Horizon Online, which also had “bugs errors and defects” that could create illusory accounts, he said: “I am satisfied that a number of employees of Fujitsu and the Post Office knew that this was so.”

    The first volume of the report focuses on what Sir Wyn calls the “disastrous” impact of false accusations made against at least 1,000 postmasters, and the various redress schemes the Post Office and government has established since miscarriages of justice were identified and proven.

    Recommendations regarding the conduct of senior management of the Post Office, Fujitsu and ministers will come in a subsequent report, but Sir Wyn is clear that unjust and flawed prosecutions were knowingly pursued.

    “All of these people are properly to be regarded as victims of wholly unacceptable behaviour perpetrated by a number of individuals employed by and/or associated with the Post Office and Fujitsu from time to time and by the Post Office and Fujitsu as institutions,” he says.

    Calling for urgent action from government and the Post Office to ensure “full and fair compensation” he makes 19 recommendations including:

    • Government and the Post Office to agree a definition of “full and fair” compensation to be used when agreeing payouts
    • Ending “unnecessarily adversarial attitude” to initial offers that have depressed the value of payouts, ⁠and ensuring consistency across all four compensation schemes
    • The creation of a standing body to administer financial redress to people wronged by public bodies
    • Compensation to be extended to close family members of those affected who have suffered “serious negative consequences”
    • The Post Office, Fujitsu and government agreeing a program for “restorative justice”, a process that brings together those that have suffered harm with those that have caused it

    Regarding the human impact of the Post Office’s pursuit of postmasters, including its use of unique powers of prosecution, Sir Wyn writes: “I do not think it is easy to exaggerate the trauma which persons are likely to suffer when they are the subject of criminal investigation, prosecution, conviction and sentence.”

    He says that even the process of being interviewed under caution by Post Office investigators “will have been troubling at best and harrowing at worst”.

    The report finds that those wrongfully convicted were “subject to hostile and abusive behaviour” in their local communities, felt shame and embarrassment, with some feeling forced to move.

    Detailing the impact on close family members of those prosecuted, Sir Wyn writes: “Wives, husbands, children and parents endured very significant suffering in the form of distress, worry and disruption to home life, in employment and education.

    “In a number of cases relationships with spouses broke down and ended in divorce or separation.

    “In the most egregious cases, family members themselves suffered psychiatric illnesses or psychological problems and very significant financial losses… their suffering has been acute.”

    The report includes 17 case studies of those affected by the scandal including some who have never spoken publicly before. They include Millie Castleton, daughter of Lee Castleton, one of the first postmasters prosecuted.

    She told the inquiry how her family being “branded thieves and liars” affected her mental health, and contributed to a diagnosis of anorexia that forced her to drop out of university.

    Her account concludes: “Even now as I go into my career I still find it so incredibly hard to trust anyone, even subconsciously. I sabotage myself by not asking for help with anything.

    “I’m trying hard to break this cycle but I’m 26 and am very conscious that I may never be able to fully commit to natural trust. But my family is still fighting. I’m still fighting, as are many hundreds involved in the Post Office trial.”

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