A former BBC producer has been found guilty of downloading child abuse images.
Dylan Dawes, 50, had more than 6,000 indecent images of children on his devices when they were seized by police.
Dawes denied having a sexual interest in children and said someone else may have used the devices.
Cardiff Crown Court heard the married father-of-three was arrested in 2022 after officers searched his home and found indecent images on four devices, including a hard drive, laptop and two iPads.
Dawes, who worked with presenters including Final Score host Jason Mohammad and comedian Rhod Gilbert, told the court he had ‘fairly regularly’ viewed ‘adult pornography’ but denied having downloaded indecent images of children.
Harry Baker, prosecuting, said the images had been found on four of Dawes’s devices – which were sometimes left overnight at the BBC’s Cardiff headquarters – and it was unlikely this was an ‘unhappy coincidence’.
Judge Eugene Egan told the jury: ‘The prosecution effectively said to you: “What are the chances of that?”‘
Dawes joined the Corporation while living in London in 2000 and started his job at BBC Wales after moving to Cardiff in 2001, where he worked as a producer on radio shows and podcasts.
Dylan Dawes pictured arriving at Cardiff Crown Court after more than 6,000 indecent images of children were found on his devices
The images were found on devices which were sometimes left overnight at the BBC’s Cardiff headquarters
While at work Dawes said he would not take his computer with him to the studio, instead leaving it at his desk for ‘extended periods of time’ where it was freely available to colleagues.
He had been on a family holiday to Disneyland Paris in February 2022 and arrived home in Canton, Cardiff, at around 1am. He was woken by police at 7am and taken for questioning.
After his arrest he said he was suspended on full pay and signed off sick with ‘stress’ – adding he did not investigate who else may have used his devices.
Dawes was one of hundreds of staff at the BBC Wales building in Cardiff, which opened in 2020.
Mr Baker said: ‘During a period of time of about 16 years between December 31, 2006, and March 1, 2022, the defendant has been downloading child pornography, that is indecent images on four different and distinct computer devices he owned.’
He added that Dawes claimed he had loaned an iPad to a colleague ‘for purely work-related purposes’.
During a police interview, Dawes gave a prepared statement saying: ‘I have no knowledge of any indecent images on my devices. I have never been in possession of any indecent images.
‘I have never knowingly used, accessed, downloaded or sought indecent images of children. I have no sexual attraction to children.
‘I have downloaded regular pornography with zip or jpegs. All devices have at times been left for extended periods in open plan offices.’
Andrew Taylor, defending, said Dawes was of ‘good character’ and described him as an intelligent man who would have known to dispose of any evidence rather than move images into the easily-accessible bin on his devices.
‘He didn’t get rid of it because he had no reason to believe that there was any imagery on his devices that was incriminatory,’ Mr Taylor said.
Dawes will be sentenced on May 14 and has been bailed. He must also register as a sex offender
The court heard Dawes had ‘no idea’ how the images were downloaded and denied having used the search term ‘jailbait’, suggesting someone else may have accessed the devices.
Dawes, of Cardiff, was suspended from his job at the BBC after his arrest and is no longer employed by the broadcaster.
On Friday he was found guilty of three counts of possessing an indecent image of a child, and three counts of making an indecent image of a child.
Judge Egan said the jury had reached their decision ‘on what they found to be absolutely overwhelming evidence’.
Dawes was bailed ahead of his sentencing on May 14 and must now register as a sex offender.