Police have warned that time is running out for the victims of the Horizon Post Office scandal to receive justice, unless millions of pounds are funnelled into the criminal investigation.
Commander Stephen Clayman, who is leading the national police inquiry, said the investigation could be delayed by five years if the resourcing needs of the investigation were not met.
He said the projected budget for the investigation would be £19.3m for 2026/27 and "beyond".
In addition, the team would need to be almost doubled, from 111 to 210, to meet the timeline to submit files for charging by late 2027 or early 2028, he said.
The Home Office has provided a special grant of £2.8m towards the investigation into potential suspects and their involvement in the scandal, meaning there is a significant shortfall.
The debacle saw hundreds of sub-postmasters wrongly convicted of theft because of the flawed Horizon IT system, in one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in British legal history.
Commander Clayman said the priority remained to "deliver justice for victims and families affected by the Post Office Horizon scandal".
"Many of these victims have been living with the impact of this for 24 years, some have already died and many more are reaching older age," he said.
"Put simply, we do not have the luxury of time and must provide answers as soon as possible to those who so desperately deserve them."
He said police had interviewed seven more suspects under caution so far this year as part of Operation Olympos, meaning 13 out of 53 people under investigation have been questioned.
Read more from Sky News:
Stepmother guilty of girl, 5, in scalding bath
Man pleads guilty over Channel crossing deaths
Commander Clayman said the scope of the inquiry was massive, with eight million documents currently being held by investigators.
"The realities, however, are that our investigation remains hugely complex. Detectives are currently holding eight million documents," he said.
"This number is set to grow, with many of these documents needing to be forensically reviewed and considered.
"Only by doing this can we piece together exactly what happened, establish who knew what and understand the role suspects may have played."
Commander Clayman said police could not afford to "underestimate the task in hand", and investigators would need to overcome the funding challenges at a time when the force was "already severely stretched".
"Dedication, meticulous attention to detail and an unwavering focus on the goal of delivering justice remains at the heart of the team, but we must have the appropriate resources in place to support them," he said.
A government spokesperson said the scandal was "an appalling injustice" and it was important "full and fair redress is paid out quickly to those who suffered".
They also said an investigation by the National Police Chiefs' Council and the Metropolitan Police Service into potential criminality in the prosecutions of sub postmasters and the wider presentation of the Horizon IT system as robust was ongoing.
They added: "The Home Office has provided £3.2m since 2023 to the MPS for Op Olympos and has allocated a further £2.8m in 26/27 and is considering requests for further funding."
(c) Sky News 2026: Horizon Post Office scandal victims 'don't have luxury of time', inquiry commander warns


Trump says health check 'perfect' after scrutiny over rash
BP removed chairman amid suggestions of 'ruthless' behaviour and 'executive' style | Mark Kleinman blog
Family pay tribute to woman found dead in suspected murder
Four teenagers drown as UK experiences heatwave
Court of Appeal to decide if teenage rapists' sentences were unduly lenient
Man pleads guilty over death of four Channel crossing migrants
Police Scotland officer raped two women and violently abused a third
Stepmother guilty of killing five-year-old girl in scalding bath in 1978






