A 22-year-old woman, who was working as an untrained teacher and reliever in Bay of Plenty childcare centres, has admitted to having hundreds of videos of child sexual abuse, accessed through encrypted social media apps.
Warning: This story deals with details of the sexual assault of children and may be distressing.
A young woman who worked in early childhood told police she has “a serious addiction to disgusting things” after she was found with nearly 400 videos containing child exploitation material.
There were 298 videos classed as the most serious type of this material, some involving toddlers and infants, and some showing sexual acts between animals and children.
Six electronic devices were seized in a search of her home.
Multiple videos and images were on two iPhones. The material had been accessed through encrypted social media apps Telegram, Wire, Wickr Me and Kik.
The material ranged from pre-pubescent children engaging in sexual acts with each other and performing acts on adults, to toddlers and infants being subjected to sexual offending by adults.
There was also material that involved sadism, torture and humiliation of infants, toddlers, and adult women.
Some of the material included bestiality with adults, toddlers, and infants.
The young woman appeared in the Tauranga District Court on Tuesday where she pleaded guilty to four representative charges of possessing objectionable material involving child exploitation.
Her lawyer David Pawson asked for interim name suppression to continue until sentencing so that grounds for permanent name suppression could be explored.
Police discovered a total of 602 sexual videos on her devices, of which 390 were examined and deemed objectionable.
There were 298 classed as “category A”, which court documents said could involve either penetrative sexual activity, penetrative sexual activity with animals, or sadism. All of those types of exploitation were in the material discovered on her iPhones.
There were 95 objectionable images found on her devices, of which 52 were deemed category A.
“He disclosed to us that she is being charged with possession ... of objectionable material and child abuse images.
“He has reassured us that there has been zero evidence that she has taken any images herself and everything that she is accused of possessing and supplying are images she has sourced from the internet.”
A parent whose child attends the childcare centre said there had been good communication since news of the woman’s arrest broke.
“The centre has been amazing,” she said.
“Now when they get a reliever they let us know by email first.”
They also provided information about who the reliever was.
She said when the offending came to light she’d had questions like: “Were they with my child, did they do nappy changes, all that kind of thing”.
She’d been reassured that the reliever had done “outside duties” only, and hadn’t had the same level of contact with the children as the permanent staff.
She still “really liked” the childcare centre and felt they were taking all the steps they could to hopefully prevent something like this from happening again.
The centre did not want to comment.
HannahBartlettis a Tauranga-based Open Justice reporter at NZME. She previously covered court and local government for the Nelson Mail, and before that was a radio reporter at Newstalk ZB.