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Apr 22, 2021 19 tweets 6 min read Read on X
📣And we're off! The urgent hearing in our PPE cases with @EveryDoctorUK over the direct awards of contracts to Ayanda, Pestfix and Clandeboye has begun.

Follow here for live updates from the Court... crowdjustice.com/case/108millio…
Our barrister Jason Coppel QC taking the Court through our skeleton argument: when engaged in Judicial Review, the duty of candour requires that government must lay “all its cards face upwards on the table”. Its duty “applies to all information relevant to issues in the case”.
"It is remarkable that a government department would point blank refuse to explain how it has gone about conducting its disclosure exercise." - Jason Coppel QC

Government's own guidance states redaction is not the norm. Read our skele in full: glplive.org/2104-c-skele
Government disclosure is notable for what is not said and what is missing. "We've not had a single text message or Whatsapp message from the multiple witnesses who have given witness statements" - Jason Coppel QC
"All we are left with is a gap in how the defendent has got to a point where it hasn't disclosed a single electronic communication of that nature." - Jason Coppel QC
This is not an academic concern. The disclosure does not include contemporaneous evidence we would expect to see. No file notes, submissions to Ministers, text messages or Whatsapp messages - our barrister Jason Coppel QC
Page 26 shows the significance of some of these redactions....

Para 14 here is concerned with how Prospermill and Ayanda got into the VIP Lane - but the name of the person who referred Prospermill into the PPE process is redacted. glplive.org/hearing-2204
Government has been pretending that there was no such thing as a "VIP" lane. But the emails in our court hearing today show there was...

“This is likely to get escalated to ministerial level” - re Ayanda
The name of the person who did the technical assurance for Pestfix products is redacted. That is going to be a key issue in the proceedings: how did Government end up buying products that were not fit for purpose?
The Court is now being taken to civil servants' emails describing the impact of VIP prioritisation. This seems to show the impact of the 'VIP lane' was to jump the supplier to the front of the queue:
And civil servants were flagging that the VIPs were inhibiting the efficient buying of PPE...

When VIPs without "the correct certification" can "jump to the front of the queue it then has a knock on effect to the remaining offers of help."
This email deals with how Pestfix got into the VIP lane, but there are multiple blanked out names....
"Pestfix has other links with government, but we’re not allowed to know what they are. How Pestfix got into the VIP lane is a significant issue...but we’re not allowed to know, it seems" - Jason Coppel QC
We're updating our case page throughout the day - read the key documents here @EveryDoctorUK goodlawproject.org/case/procureme…
Remember Clandeboye - the confectionery wholesaler that landed PPE contracts worth £108m - without competition?

We can reveal for the first time that Clandeboye were awarded the contracts through the 'VIP' lane:
In arguing for wholesale redactions on grounds of privacy or national security, Government barrister says "open justice has nothing to do with it". Knowing who it was who sent this or that email will have no effect on open justice, and the issues will be ventilated just as well
Government has described Pestfix ending up on the VIP Lane as a "mistake" and the NAO couldn't explain further. 

But these emails we can reveal today show Pestfix was referred to the VIP Lane:
Remember Ayanda, the company fast-tracked through the VIP Lane - who supplied £155m of unusable masks?

Here's a civil servant concerned that "the bar seems to have been lowered on this one":

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More from @GoodLawProject

Jun 13
THREAD: With Labour’s manifesto pledge to appoint a covid corruption commissioner to recoup the billions the government wasted on dodgy PPE deals during the pandemic, here’s a potted history of our work to expose the industrial scale of the scandal…
Covid-19 gripped the UK just four months after the 2019 election, and the pandemic has been the defining issue of this Parliament. Unluckily for our country, these extraordinary times brought out our ministers’ most egregious impulses – as shown in Partygate and the PPE scandal.
At the start of the pandemic, it became immediately clear that the NHS was left woefully underprepared after years of political neglect.

We called for a public inquiry into the initial failures to provide adequate PPE:
goodlawproject.org/ppe-there-need…
Read 38 tweets
Mar 13
🧵THREAD: In the lead up to the shocking revelations around Frank Hester's vile racist comments published by @guardiannews, we were keeping a close eye on the money flowing between him, his company and the Government... 🔎 🧵
💷Back in September, we revealed how Frank Hester's healthtech company, The Phoenix Partnership, had bagged £137m worth of hidden Government contracts⬇️

goodlawproject.org/government-giv…
🚁We followed up by drawing attention to how The Phoenix Partnership shelled out £16,000 to give Rishi Sunak a helicopter ride to one of his political visits ⬇️

goodlawproject.org/sunak-took-160…
Read 6 tweets
Jan 4
With Keir Starmer pledging "a total crackdown on cronyism" if Labour wins power in his speech today, here’s a rundown of just a small portion of the dodgy PPE deals which Good Law Project has helped to expose 🧵
In summer 2020, with @EveryDoctorUK, we challenged three Government PPE contracts set up with a pest controller, a confectioner, and a hedge fund.

The PPE delivered through these deals was either untested or had already been found to be unusable.

goodlawproject.org/update/ppe-mas…
We also worked with cross-party MPs @laylamoran, @carolinelucas and @debbie_abrahams to launch a legal challenge against the Government over its failure to publish PPE contracts worth billions of pounds.

goodlawproject.org/update/governm…
Read 23 tweets
Dec 19, 2023
In the continued fallout of Michelle Mone's disastrous interview, here’s a potted history of Good Law Project’s fight to expose the PPE scandal as we prepare to release more stories in our new series, #TheVIPFiles...🧵
At the start of the pandemic, when NHS workers were betrayed by acute PPE shortages, we called for an independent public inquiry.

It wasn’t until a year later that the Government committed to one.

goodlawproject.org/urgent-inquiry…
Then, with @EveryDoctorUK , we decided to challenge three Government PPE contracts set up with a pest controller, a confectioner, and a hedge fund.

The PPE delivered through these deals was either untested or had already been found to be unusable.

goodlawproject.org/update/ppe-mas…
Read 30 tweets
Nov 13, 2023
Thérèse Coffey’s resigned as environment minister. In her resignation letter, she said “I am proud to have delivered for people, the planet and prosperity [...] Turning ambition into action and delivery has been the hallmark of my service.”

So what did she deliver
Having been a minister responsible for water quality between 2016 and 2019, Coffey would have been well aware of the sewage scandal when she took over the department last October. The deadline was looming to respond to our legal action over sewage dumping:
goodlaw.social/6t9
This came as the number of swimmers falling ill from UK waters had doubled in the space of a year 🤢
cieh.org/ehn/public-hea…
Read 12 tweets
Nov 3, 2023
💥REVEALED: 6,000 out of the 9,000 beds bought for the Nightingale hospitals were not fit for clinical use and have now been sold-off for just a fraction of what was paid for them.

Read our latest investigation🔎⬇️

goodlaw.social/i71
Since August, we have been working with the Daily Mirror to find out what happened to these specialist beds.

It was previously unearthed that in some cases, beds bought for thousands of pounds were being flogged for as little as £6 each.

mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/h…
We have been hearing shocking evidence from the Covid Inquiry about the Government's failure to prepare for the first wave of the pandemic.

After a decade of crippling austerity, the NHS was forced to scramble for resources and staff to fill seven new Nightingale hospitals.
Read 5 tweets

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