Jarryd Hayne has broken his silence, thanking supporters and loved ones, after sexual assault charges were formally dropped inside a Sydney court on Friday.
Three days after the Director of Public Prosecutions announced they would not pursue a fourth trial against the former Parramatta and Gold Coast fullback, Hayne and his lawyers appeared in Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court on Friday.
Judge Craig Everson was told that the DPP had dropped two counts of sexual intercourse without consent.
Judge Everson told the court that all proceedings against Mr Hayne had been discontinued.
“Yeah obviously excited,” Mr Hayne said outside court, looking relieved as he exited court alongside his barrister Margaret Cunneen SC and solicitor Lauren MacDougall.
“I stayed true to myself the whole time, the whole process. Today is a vindication for myself and my family and my loved ones.
“I want to say thank you to all those that supported me from day one, stood by me and stood next to me.”
At one point Mr Hayne stopped as he appeared to become emotional and lost for words.
Mr Hayne, 36, has consistently denied the allegations and has twice had his conviction overturned by the Court of Criminal Appeal.
The 36-year-old was released from prison earlier this month after having his convictions quashed.
He spent more than a year behind bars after a jury in April 2023 found him guilty of two counts of sexual intercourse without consent.
The Officer of the Director of Public Prosecutions on Tuesday confirmed in a statement he would not face a fourth trial.
“Having carefully considered the many competing factors that inform the assessment of the public interest in this case, the ODPP has determined not to proceed to a fourth trial against Mr Hayne,” the DPP said.
The two time Dally M winner and NFL convert has consistently denied the allegations and claimed the sexual encounter, inside the woman’s Newcastle home on NRL grand final night in 2018, was entirely consensual
His first trial in 2021 resulted in a hung jury and following a second trial he was found guilty, however the verdict was quashed on appeal.
Following a third trial, a jury accepted the woman’s version of events that she repeatedly said “no” and “stop”.
However, the state’s highest court quashed Mr Hayne’s conviction after it ruled the trial judge erred by not allowing further examination of the complainant.
The appeal was upheld in a 2-1 majority decision by the Court of Criminal Appeal.
In her portion of the judgment, Justice Deborah Sweeney said the guilty verdicts were unreasonable and said she was “of the view there is a significant possibility that an innocent person has been convicted”.