Son, who falsely admitted to stealing £35,000 to save sub-postmaster mum has conviction overturned
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Ravinder Naga said his mother would not have survived a potential prison sentence
The son of a subpostmistress who falsely admitted stealing £35,000 to save his mother from prison has said he shed tears of relief when his conviction was quashed.
Ravinder Naga was ordered to complete 300 hours of community service and pay compensation of £35,000 in 2010 after he confessed to stealing the money from the Post Office where his mother worked in Greenock, Inverclyde.
In 2022 he requested a review of his conviction and sentence, and the Scottish Cases Review Commission referred it to the High Court, saying Mr Naga had “pled guilty in circumstances that were, or could be said to be, clearly prejudicial to him”.
His conviction was quashed by appeal judges on August 22, court officials said.
A post Office spokesperson apologised for their past actions
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He told the BBC: “If I’m being really honest, for a second it brought tears to me, I did break down for a second, and then it was relief. There have been times where it has been hard to carry on with everything else that does go on, but we’re here.”
More than 700 Post Office branch managers around the UK were prosecuted between 1999 and 2015 after faulty Horizon accounting software made it look as though money was missing from their shops, with many convictions subsequently being overturned.
Naga said he believes that if he had not taken the blame his mother would not have survived a potential prison sentence.
He added: "I feel if I hadn’t done what I’d done 15 years ago, I wouldn’t be sitting here now getting my conviction overturned. I’d have been sitting here now getting a letter saying that my dead mum was being exonerated, because that’s the effect it would have had on the family."
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Former Post Office boss Paula Vennells
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Legislation exonerating subpostmasters in Scotland wrongly convicted as part of the Post Office Horizon scandal came into force in June after a law doing so for subpostmasters in England and Wales was introduced earlier this year.
A Post Office spokesperson said: “We are truly sorry for the suffering caused by Post Office’s past actions. We are doing all we can to help victims get answers and to put things right, as far as that can ever be possible."
Hundreds are still awaiting full compensation after the previous government announced in January that they would be eligible for £600,000 payouts.
They can now either accept that settlement as part of the new Horizon Convictions Redress Scheme, or, if they believe their losses exceed that amount, can choose a full claim assessment route.
Announcing the plans back in July, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood said: “Justice must be a reality, not an ideal.
"Today we begin putting this into practice by overturning the convictions of the innocent postmasters affected by this inexplicable and unprecedented miscarriage of justice.”