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The daughter of a Post Office victim has told Sky News she suffered "dark thoughts of suicide" in the years after her mother was accused of stealing.
Kate Burrows was 14 years old when her mother Elaine Hood was prosecuted and subsequently convicted in 2003. The first public inquiry report on the Post Office - examining redress and the "human impact" of the scandal - is due to be published today.
"I've suffered with panic attacks from about 14, 15 years old, and I still have them to this day," Kate said. "I've been in and out of therapy for what feels like most of my adult life and it absolutely categorically goes back to [what happened]." Kate, along with others, helped set up the charity Lost Chances, supporting the children of Post Office victims.
She hopes the inquiry will recognise their suffering. "It's important that our voices are heard," she said.
"Not only within the report, but in law actually. "And then maybe that would be a deterrent for any future cover-ups, that it's not just the one person it's the whole family [affected]." Her sister, Rebecca Richards, who was 18 when their mother was accused, described how an eating disorder "escalated" after what happened.
"When my mum was going through everything, my only control of that situation was what food I put in my body," she said. She also said that seeing her mother at court when she was convicted, would "stay with me forever".
"The two investigators were sat in front of my dad and I, sniggering and saying 'we've got this one'. "To watch my mum in the docks handcuffed to a guard...
not knowing if she was going to be coming home... that is the most standout memory for me." Elaine Hood's conviction was quashed in September 2023.
Her daughters are hoping the inquiry findings will push Fujitsu into fulfilling a promise they made nearly a year ago - to try and help the children of victims. Last summer, Kate met with the European boss of the company, Paul Patterson, who said he would look at ways they could support Lost Chances.
Despite appearing at the inquiry in November last year and saying he would not "stay silent" on the issue, Kate said there has been little movement in terms of support. "It's very much a line of 'we're going to wait until the end of the inquiry report to decide'," she said.
"But Mr Patterson met us in person, looked us in the eye, and we shared the most deeply personal stories and he said we will do something... they need to make a difference." Fujitsu, who developed the faulty Horizon software, has said it is in discussions with the government regarding a contribution to compensation.
The inquiry will delve in detail into redress schemes, of which four exist, three controlled by the government and one by the Post Office. Victims of the scandal say they are hoping Sir Wyn Williams, chair of the inquiry, will recommend that the government and the Post Office are removed from the redress schemes as thousands still wait for full and fair redress.
A Department for Business and Trade spokesperson said they were "grateful" for the inquiry's work, describing "the immeasurable suffering" victims endured and saying the government has "quadrupled the total amount paid to affected postmasters.