Man who showed Lottery co-worker abuse video gets suspended sentence

Content came to light after incident which upset colleague and attracted attention

The judge  said the man fully accepted his guilt and was ashamed and sorry for what he had done.
The judge said the man fully accepted his guilt and was ashamed and sorry for what he had done.

A man who showed a video of what appeared to be a child and an adult simulating sex to a colleague in the National Lottery Headquarters has avoided a jail term for having child pornography.

Marko Lovric (28) of Quinsborough Road, Bray, Co Wicklow, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to possession of the material at National Lottery Office, Abbey Street Lower, Dublin on September 1st, 2019. He has no previous convictions.

Detective Garda Paul Griffin told Kieran Kelly BL, prosecuting, that Lovric was working in National Lottery HQ dealing with calls at the time, when he approached a colleague, held up his phone to her and started to play a video.

The woman later told gardaí­ that what she saw on the video was a woman and child and it looked as if they were “simulating sex”. The colleague told Lovric to go away and became upset which caused a second colleague, who observed the exchange, to check if she was Okay.

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He later reported the incident to HR which led to the Garda investigation.

Det Gda Griffin said Lovric had a number of items seized from him during the course of the investigation and four videos, which were found to be movies depicting the abuse of children, were discovered.

He said the videos either involved children being raped by adults or children witnessing such an interaction. Some of the videos also showed children with their genital area exposed.

Det Gda Griffin told Judge Melanie Greally that the videos were shared, by people from outside of Ireland, to a WhatsApp group Lovric was engaged in.

Det Gda Griffin agreed with Fiona Murphy SC, defending, that her client co-operated fully with the garda investigation. He has been suspended from work as a result of his behaviour.

Ms Murphy handed in a number of personal references which confirmed Lovric’s work for charity in the past.

She said he fully accepts his guilt and is ashamed and sorry for what he has done.

“People accepting this kind of material, when it is sent to them, creates a market for it,” counsel submitted before she added that Lovric fully accepts his responsibility in that regard.

Ms Murphy said her client instructs that he had been sent the videos from a WhatsApp group that he was engaged in and he accepts that he should have told the group he didn’t want these videos.

Lovric is originally from Croatia and his wife and child live there.

“He hopes to return to Croatia and put this matter behind him,” Ms Murphy submitted before she confirmed that her client fully accepts the seriousness of the situation.

Judge Melanie Greally said that Lovric clearly didn’t truly appreciate the highly harmful nature of this material, which was demonstrated by the manner in which he viewed it in his work place.

She accepted that it was “a significant wake up call on that front” and he now realises how serious the offence is.

Judge Greally accepted a submission from the defence that Lovric is willing to engage with the Probation Service before she imposed a nine-month sentence which she suspended in full on condition that he engage with the Probation Service for 18 months.

She acknowledged Lovric’s plea of guilty, the limited number of videos involved, his co-operation and remorse; and the fact that it “appears he was not necessarily seeking out this material”.

Lovric was registered as a sex offender and he must engage with the “safer lives” and “harmful sexual behaviour in the community” programmes during his supervision by the Probation Service.