A SEX offender who lied about having a laptop full of indecent images of children told police he ‘found the images disgusting but that the voices in his mind told him to do it’.

Burnley Crown Court heard police had been around to the house of 22-year-old Dayle Smith in June and asked if he had possession of any devices containing software capable of hiding or deleting internet history.

The court heard that Smith, now of Calderstones Hospital, Mitton Road, Whalley, but formerly of Market Street, Shawforth, lied about having a laptop which contained 913 indecent images of children. That laptop was later found at a friends house in October.

Prosecuting, Stephen Parker said: “The defendant clearly had the device when the police went to speak to him. While he had the opportunity to give it up he didn’t.

“The police found it at another address some time later.”

Just one week after the police visit, Smith was banned from having possession of any devices containing software capable of hiding or deleting internet history under the terms of a sexual harm prevention order given to him by Judge Beverley Lunt at Burnley Crown Court.

That was after Smith was found with 272 category A images, the most serious, 227 category B images and 1,940 category C images along with 13 videos with six of category A.

Smith was sectioned under the Mental Health Act following that hearing where the court heard he had told police that he ‘found the images disgusting but that the voices in his mind told him to do it’.

The court heard that Smith was a patient at Calderstones, where he remains, during the intervening period of the police visit and the discovery of the laptop. Therefore he couldn’t have been in possession of the images during the period of his five-year sexual harm prevention order.

Smith pleaded guilty to three counts of possessing indecent images of children.

Judge Sara Dodd sentenced him to a six-month conditional discharge and ordered him to sign the sex offender’s register for five years.

Judge Dodd said: “I hope this now brings all of these matters to an end and you can continue being looked after where you are. In relation to each of the charges I am dealing with I will make you subject of a six-month conditional discharge which will run concurrently.

“That means providing you don’t commit any further offences in the next six months this will be the end of these matters.”