Nick Read, the Post Office's outgoing chief executive, will give three days of testimony from Wednesday, amounting to a grilling of about 16 hours.
Read, who was brought in to replace Paula Vennells in 2019 and "right the wrongs of the past", announced in the summer that he was stepping back from running the company to focus on preparing and proving that "nothing like this could happen again".
The executive, who has given himself 88 days to prepare for the appearance, has been heavily criticised by witnesses and has become embroiled in his own reputational crisis.
Here are some of the issues the judge-led inquiry is likely to ask him to explain.
'Obsession' with pay and bonuses
Henry Staunton, the former chair of the Post Office, twice asked the government for Read's pay to be doubled, and has told the inquiry that Read had threatened to leave over the issue.
Staunton, who was sacked in January by then business secretary Kemi Badenoch, said he only put forward the requests because he knew they would be refused.
"It was astonishing," Staunton told the inquiry last month. "It was taking up a disproportionate amount of my time. If I was a subpostmaster I would have been horrified with my remuneration going up 1% or 2%, costs going up more, many losing money - to see discussion of moving [Read's] pay to £1.1m just for hitting target, let alone the amount he would have got for good performance."
Jane Davies, the former people officer at the Post Office, bluntly called it an "obsession" while Amanda Burton, the chair of the Post Office's remuneration committee, said she was surprised at how often the topic of Read wanting a pay increase was raised.
The 'untouchables'
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin October 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin October 07, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Beaumont may step in at RFU if Ilube quits over pay fiasco
Sir Bill Beaumont could be parachuted into the Rugby Football Union as interim chair in the event Tom Ilube falls on his sword amid the botched handling of the executive pay scandal engulfing the game.
'An exciting new era' Everton owners promise return to glory days after £500m deal
The Friedkin Group vowed to restore Everton to their \"rightful place in the Premier League table\" after completing a takeover that brought the turbulent era of Farhad Moshiri to an end.
Friedkin Group brings hope of much-needed stability and ambition
The Friedkin Group's takeover of Everton represents a momentous day for those exhausted and resigned to calamity by the tenure of Farhad Moshiri.
A humble Hamilton hero who was born to score
Ex-coaches in New Zealand on Chris Wood's rise from selfless schoolboy to poster boy at Nottingham Forest
Solanke puts Spurs through despite Forster's blunders
Like a song that changes time signature for the hell of it, like a friend that inexplicably blanks you, like a match report that noodles away for ages instead of just telling you what happened, Tottenham Hotspur remain medically incapable of doing things the simple way.
“The World Cup loss fuelled a fire in me to become the best’
Ellie Kildunne's infectious enthusiasm for the women's game has her dreaming of a Twickenham final in 2025
'Usyk is fighting for his country': Dubois tips Fury to lose rematch
Daniel Dubois, the IBF world heavyweight champion, believes that Oleksandr Usyk will again defeat Tyson Fury in Riyadh tomorrow night.
Coe pledges radical reform in bid for IOC presidency
Sebastian Coe has promised to radically transform the International Olympic Committee if he is elected its next president in March - and says his track record of delivering at the London 2012 Games and at World Athletics shows he is the right choice for the leading job in sport.
Football's new fetish Forget Nicolas Jover and stylish set-piece coaches, bring on the directors of vibes
It's 25 October 2012. Those of you who follow the Austrian regional leagues won't need reminding.
Rush to start work caused enormous cost overruns, says new boss of HS2
Enormous budget overruns on the HS2 high-speed railway have been blamed by its new chief executive on a \"rush to start\", as the Department for Transport admitted it did not know what the line would cost.