fraud

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MOJ Slammed for Hiding From Parliament £500m in New Contracts to Companies Probed by SFO for ‘Deliberate Fraud’ Against It

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/05/2024 - 9:48pm in

The Ministry of Justice has been condemned for “egregious behaviour” in hiding from Parliament that it had awarded two new electronic tagging contracts worth more than £500 million to two companies that had been investigated by the Serious Fraud Office, fined £57.7 million, and had to repay £70.5 million to the ministry for fraudulent claims.

A House of Lords report found that the MoJ ommited Serco and G4S’ handling of previous contracts, in which Serco billed it for tagging prisoners on release who had died, and multiple times for the same person. Serco faces a deferred prosecution if this is repeated. Both Serco and G4S overcharged the ministry for the same service.

The disclosure of Serco’s past behaviour came to light when junior Justice Minister, Gareth Bacon, laid regulations to allow the MoJ to award new contracts to the firms.

But the explanatory memorandum did not mention Serco or G4S’ past contracts which were condemned by judge Mr Justice William Davis in 2019. He said Serco “engaged in quite deliberate fraud against the Ministry of Justice in relation to the provision of services vital to the criminal justice system”.

The MoJ said the new contracts were awarded "following a fair and open process and include far greater oversight". Photo: ZUMA Press, Inc/Alamy

Peers pursued this and received supplementary information revealing the past history of Serco Geografix, the subsidiary that was awarded the contract. The MoJ explained that Serco had received the new contract because it agreed to a "self-cleaning process to make it eligible to bid again for public sector contracts”.

“The House may wish to ask the Government what 'self-cleaning' involves in this context, and how it makes a company 'reliable'," the Lords Secondary Legislation Committee report states.

"It appears to us remarkable that a contract can be awarded in circumstances where a company has been investigated by the SFO and is subject to a deferred prosecution agreement.”

The report also questions whether the MoJ is up to the job of monitoring private contracts after a House of Commons’ Public Accounts Committee report in 2022 revealed that the management of electronic tagging contracts had led to avoidable mistakes, was based on outdated technology which was no longer supported by manufacturers, and had wasted £98 million of taxpayer’s money.

It also criticised the MoJ for having “a light touch” to monitoring private contracts. It demanded that HM Prison and Probation service wrote back to the committee when they engaged new private contracts to explain how they would be monitored.

Last October, Amy Rees, chief executive of HM Prison and Probation Service, wrote to the Public Accounts Committee revealing the organisation was about to grant new contracts to both companies and promising new controls.

“The approach to oversight of supplier delivery and performance, the definition of roles and responsibilities, and the engagement both between the two new suppliers and with HMPPS has been informed by previous experience and lessons learned, as well as government best practice,” she wrote.

She added: “This will ensure there is senior level oversight of progress and risks.”

Serco says it has cleaned up the company.

According to Rupert Soames, group chief executive, “those of us who now run the business are mortified, embarrassed and angry that, in a period between six and nine years ago, Serco understated the level of profitability of its electronic monitoring contract in its reports to the Ministry of Justice".

He added: "Serco apologised unreservedly at the time, and we do so again. Nobody who sat on the board of Serco Group, or who was part of the executive management team at the time these offences were committed, works for the Group today.

“Over the last six years, we have worked extremely hard to regain the trust and confidence of government, implementing in its entirety a corporate renewal programme, which was approved by government, and which has helped us to transform our corporate culture, processes and governance.”

A spokesman for the Ministry of Justice said: “These contracts have been awarded following a fair and open process and include far greater oversight than was the case a decade ago. They will allow us to continue delivering our innovative tagging scheme to protect the public and divert offenders away from a life of crime, while ensuring best value for the taxpayer.”

Lord Rowlands, a Labour member of the Lords Secondary Legislation Committee, added: “The Ministry of Justice has granted new public contracts to these companies worth over £500 million but chose not to inform the House of its previous history with these companies.

"We find that omission inexcusable… We wonder why the Ministry of Justice seems so reliant on companies which have been fined for misconduct.”

20 councillors quit Labour in NW over regime’s bullying and attack on free speech

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/04/2024 - 12:45am in

Councillors in Pendle, Brierfield and Nelson – including Borough Council leader – say Labour no longer reflects their views and is bullying and threatening dissenters

“THE LABOUR PARTY LEADERSHIP NO LONGER REFLECTS OUR VIEWS; IT’S TIME FOR A CHANGE.”

That is the statement from twenty Labour councillors who resigned last night citing a draconian shift in the national party, which is targeting local councillors, preventing them from standing for elections and using aggressive bullying tactics to suppress fairness and free speech.

The resignations represent the biggest mass departure from Labour in local government since Keir Starmer became leader. The group, from Pendle Borough Council, Brierfield Town Council, and Nelson Town Council – including borough council leader Asjad Mahmood – has decided against joining any other political party and will form independent groups on their respective councils.

Cllr Asjad Mahmood, who leads the newly formed independent group, said:

I, along with my colleagues, were elected by local residents to represent them in the council chamber. As a Labour Councillor, I have always felt that the party’s policies were aligned with my own beliefs and those of the constituents who have honoured me with their votes. Sadly, over a recent period, senior party officials have attempted to impose their ideas at a local level. I was elected to serve the public, not party officials.

Cllr Yvonne Tennant added:

At a time when 14 years of Tory cuts are affecting local people across Pendle, the Labour Party leadership should be allowing local hard-working councillors the opportunity to challenge the Tories. Instead, colleagues are being hindered from fulfilling their roles.

Cllr Mohammed Iqbal MBE said:

I was suspended from the party for 18 months before it was lifted in December 2023 for advocating on behalf of my constituents. I joined the Labour Party over 30 years ago and have always been encouraged to speak out on issues. However, senior figures within the party are attempting to stifle free speech and threaten dedicated councillors with removal as candidates. I, for one, cannot stand by and allow this to happen. The bullying needs to stop.

Last week, Keir Starmer promised voters to push out power to regions if he gets into Downing Street. He made a similar promise to Labour members during the party leadership campaign, pledging to empower and foster local democracy, especially in candidate selections.

Since getting the job, he was waged war on members, imposing candidates in many areas. In many others, members and incumbents have complained about widespread vote-rigging to ensure selections supportive of Starmer’s red-Toryism, often candidates with serious questions to answer about their own conduct. Police are currently investigating one such incident of apparent voter fraud.

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Met Police launches criminal investigation into Croydon East vote rigging

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 19/03/2024 - 10:30am in

The Labour party in Croydon is formally under criminal investigation by the Metropolitan Police cyber crime unit into allegations of vote-rigging in last autumn’s parliamentary selection for the new Croydon East constituency – a selection cancelled by the party after it could no longer deny the fixing of the result and tampering with local member lists and admitted that one candidate had been given early access to member lists and other candidates eventually received lists strewn with errors.

The data tampering included unauthorised changes of addresses, phone numbers and email addresses of a significant number of members with a vote in the selection.

Labour under Keir Starmer has been accused of frequent rigging to ensure the selection of favoured right-wing candidates and to weed out principled and left-wing hopefuls, including those with strong union backing. London has featured prominently in these allegations, with the blatant rigging against Muslim Poplar and Limehouse MP Apsana Begum among the thoroughly-documented examples.

Such alleged stacking of the process, particularly in postal and online voting, has even been used to favour right-wing candidates facing serious allegations of sexual assault.

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Postmistress announces electoral bid to oust Davey

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 14/01/2024 - 2:55am in

LibDem leader’s refusal to meet victims of Post Office Horizon scandal triggers general election challenge

LibDem leader Ed Davey is facing an election challenge from New Malden’s former Deputy Postmistress, Yvonne Tracey, amid public outrage at his handling of the Post Office Horizon scandal, following the landmark, true-life ITV drama Mr Bates vs the Post Office.

Davey served as minister for postal affairs in the Coalition government, but for months refused to meet campaigning sub-postmaster Alan Bates and his fellow victims about ‘flaws of the Horizon system’ arguing it would not ‘serve any purpose’.

Responding to Davey’s letter, Bates said he found the 121-word response – sweeping away the suggestion of a meeting on the basis it would not serve “any useful purpose” – to be “offensive.”

Ms Tracey, served for more than 30 years, meeting residents over the counter at New Malden Post Office and now serves as an Independent councillor on Kingston Council. She said:

Come the next election, it’s incumbent on those seeking justice for our sub-postmasters to send a strong message to Sir Ed.

Sir Ed is now blaming others for his failure to challenge civil servants and do his job properly. His attitude to the hundreds of sub-postmasters over the years must be challenged.

Here in his own constituency, the sub-postmaster at Tolworth Post Office Sathyan Shiju lost his home, his business and attempted suicide on more than one occasion. He tried three times to get in touch with Sir Ed and every time he was turned away, refused or ignored.

But Ms Tracey indicated she would stand aside if a sub-postmaster or mistress who suffered directly in the scandal was willing to stand against Davey personally:

I’d encourage and wholeheartedly support the candidacy of a former sub-postmaster coming forward to take the challenge to Sir Ed – and indeed the other former postal ministers who are still MPs, who ignored the plight of sub-postmasters for years. But understandably, many of the victims have no confidence in the system and have suffered years of hell at the hands of the Post Office.

So in lieu of a sub-postmaster coming forward, I will take up the mantle. I’m standing as a resident – not a politician – to put honesty and integrity back into this election, and fight tirelessly for justice once and for all for my former colleagues.

You can find out more about her campaign on her website: www.yvonnetracey.org

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Exclusive: how the Poplar and Limehouse trigger ballot was rigged against Apsana Begum

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/01/2024 - 12:05pm in

Allegations of irregularities become concrete example of branch fix that prevented Muslim woman MP being automatically selected to stand again

In 2022, Poplar and Limehouse’s left-wing Muslim woman MP Apsana Begum faced a ‘vicious and misogynistic’ campaign to deselect her that had left campaigners and women’s groups horrified.

The campaign followed a party attempt to remove Begum as the London constituency’s MP by prosecuting her for housing fraud. The stitch-up fell apart when a court threw out the charges brought by allies of her allegedly-abusive ex-husband – forcing Labour party vultures, who had been at the court in anticipation of a guilty verdict to announce a contest to replace her, to slink away disappointed and unable to install a favoured right-winger in the overwhelmingly Labour-voting seat.

After the ‘lawfare’ failed, Begum’s many supporters accused the party of gross abuse of process, of bullying and intimidation, and even of outright rigging in its determination to ‘trigger’ Begum and force her into a selection contest – and Begum was even threatened with ‘serious abuse’ by a relative of her ex.

Now Skwawkbox has received details from local members of one of the selection meetings demonstrating how the trigger vote was rigged – a vote that both exemplifies the stitch-up tactics and would have ensured Begum was selected again automatically had the party reacted and investigated properly. These can now be exposed and they corroborate earlier evidence at the time of the process.

Begum’s trigger ballot process started in May 2022, just after the local council elections – and from the start, locals say it was marred by blatant breaking of party rules.

Only an MP and her supporters are allowed to campaign during the process, and no-one is allowed to campaign as if they were an alternative candidate. Opponents of Begum who supported her being triggered completely ignored these rules. Many complaints were made to the party but were ignored.

The trigger ballot meeting for Lansbury and Poplar – a branch consisting of two wards combined – was the first of the CLP’s votes to be held, on 31st May 2022. A large group of people vocally supporting a vote to trigger Begum gathered outside the hall, telling people to vote for the trigger and giving out slips of paper with marked up dummy ballot papers to guide any unsure of the process, acts completely against party rules. Branch officials told these agitators that what they were doing was completely against the rules, but they refused to stop.

Inside the hall, the meeting was in uproar before it even began, with aggression and abuse by Begum’s opponents, who were even ‘yelling and jumping up and down and waving fists in the faces of branch officers’. Some went as far as openly demanding that Labour’s official protocol for the meeting be abandoned and to go straight to a vote, so they could – in as many words – ‘vote for the trigger and go home!’

At this point, a senior officer of the constituency-wide party (CLP) turned up at the meeting, despite having no official role there – Skwawkbox understands that several CLP officers are close to Begum’s ex-husband and determined to oust her.

As people were being ticked off the eligible voter list to ensure only those entitled to vote took part, several people arrived who were not on the list, fuelling the aggressive and intimidatory atmosphere as they demanded to be let in.

The CLP officer said they would check eligibility through their phone – and insisted that four extra people be allowed into the meeting and given ballot papers. Requests to clarify where this information came from were ignored.

When the vote was taken, the result was 43-43 – meaning that if the four pro-trigger voters were not eligible to vote, the real result would have been a victory for Begum by 43-39. This would have meant Begum won the required ten percent in the CLP section vote – which under Labour’s rules meant she had won the trigger process and would automatically stand again as Labour’s candidate in the next parliamentary election.

Labour ignored a string of complaints about this meeting and dismissed the few it responded to. But when the membership system was finally accessible again (after being out of action because of a hacking attack), branch members were able to confirm that the one extra ‘member’ allowed in by the CLP officer – the only one known personally to other members present – was not eligible to vote, because her membership had been confirmed well before the trigger meeting to have lapsed. There was no way she could have been on the CLP officer’s ‘list’.

The names of the other three names allowed in were written at the time on the master copy of the attendee list – but the CLP observer, also an opponent of Begum – insisted on taking it away with him. But even if they were bona fide members – which they were not because they appeared on no membership list – Begum still won the vote 43-42, and so would have automatically been selected to stand again.

Members have lodged multiple complaints about this abuse of process but have been ignored. Even if the other branch votes were held in perfect propriety – which goes against reports of the way they were conducted – the real result in Lansbury and Poplar was enough to select Begum uncontested.

Labour has been accused repeatedly, up and down the country, of rigging trigger and selection processes, sometimes successfully – for example in nearby Ilford South to remove incumbent Sam Tarry – and occasionally not, as when Liverpool West Derby MP Ian Byrne was able to fight off repeated attempts.

So bad has the party’s conduct been that even journalist Michael Crick – no left-winger – who runs the ‘tomorrowsmps’ Twitter account detailing the latest selection news has publicly voiced his own concerns about Labour’s rigging and abuse of its selection processes. Now the mechanism – or at least one of them – for rigging in Poplar and Limehouse to oust a popular left-wing MP has been laid bare by the evidence and the testimonies of locals.

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Tuesday, 9 February 2016 - 12:06pm

Published by Matthew Davidson on Tue, 09/02/2016 - 12:06pm in

Sigh. I can't even be bothered to make some sarcastic quip. It's all too sad.

In years to come, the Mid North Coast will be an anthropological puzzle, like Easter Island. How did this enclave of morons within an advanced western society come to so fear flouride that they took to drinking exclusively from stagnant ponds? As once-eradicated diseases tore through the population of unvaccinated children, how could their parents be so sure that their symptoms were entirely caused by gluten intolerance? As the last handful of survivors lay dying in agony, their spines buckled by the accumulated weight of crystals and charms, why did they persist in refusing medical assistance, instead demanding magnetic pillows, wheatgrass detox shakes, tarot readings, and ear candles?

UPDATE: Now you can detox with lead!

72-Year-Old Charged With Stealing $150K from Charity

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 07/10/2015 - 2:24pm in

Tags 

Events, fraud