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Hayne released as prosecutors consider fourth trial

Jarryd Hayne has successfully appealed his rape convictions again. (Dan Himbrechts/AAP PHOTOS)

By Jack Gramenz and Duncan Murray in Sydney

Former NRL star Jarryd Hayne will be released from custody after having his rape convictions again quashed on appeal as prosecutors weigh up whether he should face a fourth trial.

The 36-year-old has spent a year behind bars after a jury convicted him of two counts of sexual intercourse without consent in April 2023 after an earlier guilty verdict was overturned in a separate appeal.

The NSW Court of Criminal Appeal quashed Hayne’s convictions on Wednesday on the basis a judge erred in not allowing the complainant to be further cross-examined during the trial.

The appeal court also ruled the trial judge did not properly direct the jury about how to consider allegations the complainant had lied.

Hayne was granted bail unopposed early on Wednesday afternoon and the case is due to return to the state’s district court in late July, when prosecutors can provide an update on how they will proceed.

Hayne’s third ground of appeal, arguing the now-quashed guilty verdicts were unsafe or unreasonable, was not upheld.

Justice Deborah Sweeney would have upheld that ground, but it was dismissed by the other two appeal judges, Justices Stephen Rothman and Anthony Meagher.

“I am of the view there is a significant possibility that an innocent person has been convicted,” Justice Sweeney said in the court’s published reasons.

Justice Meagher did not support any grounds of the appeal.

“I am comfortably of the opinion that it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt (Hayne) was guilty,” he said.

A new trial has been ordered, which would be Hayne’s fourth, but whether he faces another jury will be a matter for prosecutors.

“I am of the view that in the circumstances of the history of this matter, to put the applicant on trial for a fourth time would not be in the interests of justice,” Justice Sweeney said.

Justice Rothman said there was good reason for no fourth trial to take place, noting it was unlikely to occur before Hayne’s non-parole period expired in May.

A spokeswoman for the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions said the appeal judgment was being considered.

“Any decision about a possible retrial will be made in accordance with the prosecution guidelines,” she said in a statement.

Hayne was accused of raping a woman with his hands and mouth at her Newcastle home on the night of the 2018 NRL Grand Final.

Three separate criminal trials were told the woman, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, changed her mind about having sex with Hayne after realising he had a taxi waiting outside her house.

He was jailed for four years and nine months with a non-parole period of three years in May 2023.

His barrister, Tim Game SC, told an appeal hearing in April that the woman deleted messages between herself and Hayne that demonstrated she had initially shown a sexual interest in him.

The ex-player’s defence team also argued the woman should have been cross-examined on why she allegedly told police, “If those message get out, I’m f***ed and he will get off.”

Judge Graham Turnbull, who oversaw Hayne’s third trial in the NSW District Court, refused requests for the woman to be cross-examined on the statement, saying it carried “almost infinitesimal weight”.

But Justice Sweeney said the judge made the wrong decision.

“It was for the jury to have the opportunity to see how the complainant answered the questions asked, assess her answers and the way she gave them, and decide if they accepted her answers,” she said.

Hayne’s quashed convictions followed a hung jury in his first trial in 2020 and a previous appeal overturning the 2021 guilty verdict from his second trial.

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One Response to Hayne released as prosecutors consider fourth trial

David says: 12 June 2024 at 3:55 pm

Surprise surprise. When you only consider the part of the evidence you want you get the conclusion you want. Just remember these and similar decisions play on the minds of those who fear what their fate may be if they leave it up to this ramshackle opinionated judicial system we have. It’s not a question of whether anyone was guilty or innocent but the judicial system is shown as reasonable, considers all the evidence and not just a game of Russian roulette where legal people play games restricting what the jury is allowed to consider. If people believe it is roulette then it should come as no surprise they might figure they may as well start firing the gun long before the legal system gets a chance.

If you actually want to make a change to Australia’s horrendous DV issue start looking at things that may be starting the fire. Might involve asking some tough question or publishing some uncomfortable things but doing what we’re currently doing doesn’t seem to be making a difference.

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