One postal worker a day caught stealing from mail.

Discussion in 'Bulletin Board ARCHIVE' started by *Windy, Oct 14, 2008.

  1. *Windy

    *Windy Banned Idiot

    Joined:
    Aug 12, 2007
    Messages:
    8,416
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Home Page:
    <h1>One postal worker a day is caught stealing from mail</h1>By SEAN POULTER
    Last updated at 15:52 05 May 2008 <div id="ArtContentImgBodyR" style="width: 230px">[​IMG]

    Under pressure: Post Office chief executive Adam Crozier</p></div>

    More than 1,300 Royal Mail employees have been caught stealing from the post in the last four years.</p>

    Postal workers are being prosecuted and sacked at the rate of more than one for every working day.</p>

    However, experts believe the true scale of the problem could be much greater.</p>

    Royal Mail is bombarded with complaints from customers who have not received deliveries they are expecting, from valuable mail order goods to birthday cards containing cash.</p>

    The organisation has repeatedly come under fire for failing to offer full compensation for items which are stolen, lost or damaged.</p>

    Following a Freedom of Information request, the Post Office revealed that 1,321 employees have been caught stealing since 2004.</p>

    Howard Webber, the chief executive of consumer group Postwatch, said: &quot;It is shocking that on average one Royal Mail employee per day is being prosecuted or cautioned for theft.</p>

    &quot;Postwatch has urged Royal Mail to publish these statistics regularly, so that we can all see whether the security of our mail is improving.</p>

    &quot;It is in customers' interest that this is now done.&quot;</p>

    There are concerns that Royal Mail's reliance on temporary contract staff, particularly around Christmas, means the system is more vulnerable to theft.</p>

    The editor of the postal industry website, Hellmail, Steve Lawson, said: &quot;Any cases of internal theft are enormously damaging and it may be that there is some correlation with cost-saving measures such as hiring of temporary staff or the trend towards replacing full-time staff with part-time.</p>

    Scroll down for more...</p><div id="ArtContentImgBodyC" style="width: 470px">[​IMG]</div>

    &quot;These statistics - including how much lost mail is the result of dishonest postal workers - should be more readily available if the 'slimming down' of our postal service is to have any credibility.</p>

    &quot;Clearly delivery offices are stretched as Royal Mail tries to reduce operating costs.</p>

    &quot;But there is a difference between running efficiently and allowing the reliability and integrity of mail delivery to fall apart at the seams.&quot;</p>

    Royal Mail pays out more than &pound;1million a month in compensation to customers over failures in its services, including huge claims for stolen, lost and damaged items.</p>

    In the past, Postwatch has accused Royal Mail of 'cheating' customers by failing to pay proper compensation.</p>

    The organisation received complaints and compensation claims for some 651,582 lost items in the 2006/07 financial year, yet paid out on only 311,005.</p>

    The figures will make worrying reading for the Royal Mail's chief executive, Adam Crozier.</p>

    A spokesman from the company said: &quot;Royal Mail takes the problem of theft extremely seriously and has a zero tolerance approach to dishonesty.</p>

    &quot;This approach is shared by the overwhelming majorityof our people who are honest and hardworking and take great pride in getting mail safely to 27million addresses across the UK every working day.</p>

    &quot;To put these figures in context, Royal Mail Group employs nearly 185,000 people in the UK.&quot;</p>

    He added: &quot;The overwhelming majority of all letters posted arrive safely at the correct destination but we remain vigilant to any risk to the operation - including any threat from criminals outside of Royal Mail who target postmen and women to steal the mail they are carrying.</p>

    &quot;When it comes to the very small fraction of mail that is stolen, the majority is taken by people outside of Royal Mail.</p>

    &quot;It remains the case that the huge majority of our people are scrupulously honest and take huge care over the mail entrusted to them.&quot;</p>

    The number of staff prosecuted or cautioned each year is falling but it is difficult to know whether theft is becoming less common or whether Royal Mail does not have the resources to tackle it.</p>

    Those postmen and women who are caught stealing from the post have often carried out thousands of individual thefts.</p>

    For example, Nicholas Fryer was jailed for two years in 2004 after taking 130,000 letters and parcels over a five-year period and stashing them in his house and shed.</p>

    Prosecutors said the 31-year-old opened the packages he thought contained items of value.</p>

    The following year Lisa Harvey, 31, of Plymouth, was charged with stealing 100,000 pieces of mail.</p>

    The load was so huge it had to be taken away by a seven-ton truck.</p>
     
  2. Sup

    SuperTyke Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Oct 12, 2005
    Messages:
    53,080
    Likes Received:
    26,163
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Style:
    Barnsley (full width)
    wow thats a lot

    1321 POST OFFICE employees have been caught stealing in four years, this is just post office employees and therefore doesnt include the rest of the royal mail group. Even if it did then that means one in less than 145 people employed by royal mail are caught stealing, but we know it doesn't so the figure is even higher, 1 in 100?

    And the Cheif Exec of Royal mail openly admits that these 1321 people are the MINORITY when it comes to who, in the postal system, is stealing from us. Does that mean that there are at least another 1,321 people outside the royal mail group that are stealing our post? Now it is at least TWO people a day are stealing post that is in the postal system according to Adam Crozier.

    And they wonder why people didn't back them in wanting to knock off early when they'd 'delivered' their round.

    I feel sorry for the likes of korky, the honest posties that are let down by their thousands of dishonest colleagues and the quite frankly laughable postal system that gives them the opportunity so easily.
     
  3. *Windy

    *Windy Banned Idiot

    Joined:
    Aug 12, 2007
    Messages:
    8,416
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Home Page:
    And they're just the ones who are caught, likely to be a small fraction. nt

    .
     
  4. kor

    korky Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Jul 23, 2005
    Messages:
    3,604
    Likes Received:
    1,251
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    NoTpMaRb
    Home Page:
    Style:
    Barnsley (full width)
    RE: wow thats a lot

    you get thieving in any walk of life.
    heard a story last year about 2 posties nicking stuff, rotherham i think, RM had been watching them for ages...why? catch em once and nick em!
    dont forget the human error comes into it too, today i had a parcel named "mr so'n'so, 10 xyz road 8 xyz road"
    now if id posted it to num 10 when it was meant for num 8 and they didnt get on and he kept it, the posty would get the blame for it eh?
    there's a huge amount of mail with an incorrect address and no return either, the sender would assume it'd been stolen,

    dont know what the interviews are like now, but i had to have a police check and sign the official secrets act before i got in,
    but that just means the thieves are either good or just aint been caught yet,
    ive been a posty nearly 4 years and dont know of 1 getting nicked for thieving at our office
     
  5. Jay

    Jay Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    Jul 18, 2005
    Messages:
    41,075
    Likes Received:
    27,058
    Trophy Points:
    113
    Location:
    On Sofa
    Style:
    Barnsley
    We're a quality species aren't we
     
  6. Caz

    Cazi New Member

    Joined:
    Jul 16, 2005
    Messages:
    13,133
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Location:
    A completely different planet to everybody else
    Home Page:
    RE: wow thats a lot

    I also had to sign the official secrets act when I was a posty. I think it's only valid for 25 years, so in about 3 years time I can reveal all the human errors that caused items of royal mail to disappear.</p>

    I never heard of staff nicking post, but I do know a colleague had her bag nicked.</p>

    Putting the shoes on the oher feet, I have sent several birthday cards with cash in ( yes, I know it was a tad stupid) to addresses in Aldham Estate and Hoyland that have never reached their destinations. </p>

    </p>
     

Share This Page