A NEW Forest dad has spoken out after a "sick sadist" admitted posting offensive material about his dead 20-year-old daughter on Facebook.

Paul Hind, 38, called Olivia Burt a "sex worker" and "prostitute" on the social media site.

Miss Burt, who attended Durham University, died from head injuries after an incident outside the city's Missoula nightclub in February. The former head girl at Bournemouth School for Girls, who came from Milford-on-Sea, had only joined the university in October. She was studying natural sciences.

South East Northumberland Magistrates' Court heard on Thursday that Hind, of Westacres in Wark, also doctored an image of Miss Burt and posted pictures of children who were "clearly terminally ill" on her Facebook page on April 20.

Speaking after Hind had admitted four separate offences of conveying false information which was indecent or grossly offensive, relating to four dead people, Miss Burt's father Nigel Burt said the defendant's actions were a "desecration" of his daughter's memory.

Describing how the postings had made both he and Miss Burt's mother Paula feel "physically sick", he said: "The person who carried out this trolling can only be described as a sick sadist who knows that they are adding to our anguish and gets enjoyment out of this.

"Even though the Facebook posts have now gone, we keep expecting them to reappear on some other social media platform.

"This is causing us continuing anxiety and distress."

The family's dealings with Facebook have "compounded [their] misery," Mr Burt said.

The social media giant only tackles individual posts and not "overall trolling", he said.

As well as Miss Burt, Hind also targeted a tribute page for Hannah Witheridge, a 23-year-old who was killed on the Thai island of Koh Tao in 2014.

The other counts related to the deaths of Joe Tilley, 24, who was found dead at the bottom of a waterfall in Colombia in May, and 19-year-old Duncan Sim, whose remains were found at West Sands in St Andrews earlier this year.

District Judge Kate Meek sent the case to Newcastle Crown Court for sentence on September 27, and praised the Burt family for sitting in on the proceedings.

Speaking outside court after the hearing, Hind said he was "deeply sorry" for his actions and that he had done them "for attention".

Describing how he was suffering from mental health issues and was "highly intoxicated" at the time of the offences, he said: "All I can say to the families for the actions I have committed is sorry, that is all I can say - sorry.

"I don't expect them to accept any apology from me whatsoever for what I have done."

When asked whether his actions could be seen as worthy of a jail sentence, he said: "From my point of view, personally, and for what I did, I would say yes.

"I do deserve a punishment, and I don't just deserve a punishment of being banned from social media, trying to apologise to the parents and forgetting about the whole thing.

"I have to be punished accordingly for causing people the anxiety and the stress I have caused them, there's no question about that."