@DefiantLs 70% Porsche, 30% BMW. Porsche closes at high speed and receives no indication from BMW that he's been seen. BMW should have been more aware but arguably an amateur driver not mirror checking every second.
Hi @DrOsitaMba long time no speak
I have some interesting information for you and a few questions
Remember the Hoey case and how many wondered if it was a stitch up because the significant fact the scheme had UK presence had failed to be mentioned throughout the case?
@ColeFusionHQ A few from back home
Blister - only turned up when the hard work was done
Topper - tried to kill (top) himself
Toastie - had a sunbed tan all year round
Dai Poop - got caught short down a mine
@DarrenPlymouth It went wrong when Leah Betts drank herself to death (with water) and the @TheSun plastered her picture on the front page and framed it as an ecstasy death
@stats_feed That every single modern human female's mitrochondria decends from a single 'Mitrochondrial Eve' is one of the most mind blowing facts of human evolution
Will the Post Office and Fujitsu Go to War Again Against Lee Castleton?
In 2006, Lee Castleton,was not simply defeated in court—he was destroyed.
The Post Office and its technology supplier Fujitsu conspired to obliterate him financially, professionally, and reputationally.
His only “crime” was refusing to accept the fictional accounting shortfalls generated by the Horizon IT system—software the two companies already knew was dangerously unreliable.
When Lee questioned the integrity of his branch accounts, the Post Office demanded he repay £25,000 he did not owe. He refused to admit to something that wasn’t his fault.
Instead of investigating the system, the Post Office, armed with false “expert” evidence from Fujitsu employees, took him to the High Court.
He lost—because the Court was never told the truth. He was ordered to pay £321,000 in costs, forced into bankruptcy, and his family’s life was shattered.
The truth, finally exposed through the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry, shows that Lee was right all along. Fujitsu’s own engineers had remote access to branch accounts and could alter them without the Postmasters’ knowledge.
The Post Office’s legal team—working closely with senior managers—presented evidence they should have known was unsafe. Internal documents prove the leadership knew Horizon was generating phantom losses, yet they continued to prosecute.
Which brings us to the present moment.
Lee Castleton’s name is now in the public arena as one of the earliest victims of this state-corporate machine. The Inquiry is unearthing proof that senior figures in both organisations acted in bad faith. And yet… neither the Post Office nor Fujitsu has clearly stated they will make Castleton whole without a fight.
That silence is ominous.
The Legal Stakes
Lee’s case is legally toxic for both companies.
In civil law, there is malicious prosecution and misfeasance in public office—both of which carry the potential for punitive damages. There is also the matter of Perjury and conspiracy to Pervert the Course of Justice, which in criminal law can mean prison sentences for individuals.
The High Court judgment against him was built on tainted evidence—evidence now proven to be unreliable.
Ordinarily, you would expect an institution to rush to reverse such an injustice.
But this is the Post Office—an organisation whose historic litigation strategy has been to outspend, outlast, and out-intimidate its opponents.
Fujitsu, meanwhile, has a global brand to protect and a powerful interest in keeping certain technical details buried. Both have deep legal war chests.
The Human Stakes
This is not just about financial compensation. It is about whether the UK corporate-state machine is capable of admitting wrongdoing without first re-traumatising its victims.
For Lee, another round of legal combat could mean reliving the most destructive years of his life. For his family, it risks reopening old wounds—wounds caused not by accident, but by deliberate institutional aggression.
The Question We Must Ask
Will the Post Office and Fujitsu act honourably now, or will they do what they have always done—fight, delay, and deny❓
If they choose war again, it will not just be against Castleton. It will be a declaration that no matter how damning the evidence, no matter how public the scandal, these institutions will protect themselves before they will put things right.
And that should terrify every Whistleblower, every truth-teller, and every citizen who believes that the courts are there to protect the innocent.
Lee’s ordeal was supposed to serve as a warning.
The question is: a warning to whom❓
To corporations and public bodies that truth will out—or to ordinary people that speaking up will cost you everything, even if you are vindicated decades later❓
The Country, the courts, and history itself will be watching what the Post Office and Fujitsu do next.
@CastletonLee@lisa_castleton@BBCEmmaSimpson@TracyF882@TjX50@SeemaMisra_OBE@chiarasimon@fujitsu_uk@Fujitsu_Global@23essexstreet@SkyNewsAdele@liambyrnemp@ShabanaMahmood@DavidDavisMP@VarchasPatel@kevinhollinrake@nickwallis@forensicgod@WarmingtonRjw@ElCShaikh@TimBushLondon@CommonsBTC@Jusmasel2015@Keir_Starmer@StephenBouvierX@biztradegovuk@mariaspears@gareththomasMP@NigelRailton@PostOffice@PostOffInquiry@PostOfficeNews@chrish9070@theoracle99@tonydowney67@nickwallis@rbrooks45@HouseofCommons@premnsikka@AmbJapanUK@japantimes
@HMRCgovuk Habitual windup from HMRC. Let's try it another way shall we?
Everyone can learn to spot the signs of soiling our shorts.
Don't get caught out, click below for more toilet paper.
Loan Charge and settlement terms offered to large companies and individuals - Early Day Motions - UK Parliament @EstherMcVey1 https://t.co/r23zXPSRUl