Jarryd Hayne was not the only one to be relieved when he walked out of prison on Wednesday evening – some of the fallen NRL star’s jailers were happy to see him gone too.
Hayne was released from Mary Wade Correctional Centre at Lidcombe in Sydney’s west shortly before 5pm, having been granted bail after his rape convictions were overturned.
A source familiar with the minimum-security facility, which was previously a women’s prison and before that a juvenile detention centre, said Hayne had a reputation as an arrogant inmate.
‘He’s just constantly rude to staff and just a bit of a nightmare to deal with,’ the source said. ‘I think staff will be cheering today.’
Hayne’s rape conviction was overturned in the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal on Wednesday morning and he was granted bail early in the afternoon.
The NSW Director of Public Prosecutions will now have to decide if the 36-year-old faces trial for a fourth time.
Hayne had been behind bars since April 2023 when a jury found him guilty of two counts of having sexual intercourse without consent with a woman in Newcastle six years ago.
Before being transferred to Mary Wade, Hayne had been housed at Geoffrey Pearce Correctional Centre in Sydney’s north west.
While there he made headlines by rushing to the aid with other inmates when a prisoner collapsed during a touch football game after suffering a heart attack.
Corrective Services officers performed CPR and saved the stricken prisoner’s life.
During a previous stint in custody at Cooma Correctional Centre in the state’s south Hayne was conned out of $780,000 in Bitcoin by another inmate.
A week after Hayne was jailed for the first time in May 2021 he was pelted with apples by inmates at Parklea Correctional Centre in Sydney’s north west.
The fruit was hurled through a steel mesh fence separating Hayne from the general prison population and missed its target.
Hayne has faced trial three times in the NSW District Court over the rape allegations.
His first trial resulted in a hung jury in December 2020 and the second ended with convictions in March 2021 which were overturned in February 2022 on appeal.
A jury in the third trial returned guilty verdicts in April 2023 and a month later Judge Graham Turnbull sentenced Hayne to a minimum three years in jail.
On Wednesday, those convictions were quashed on the basis Judge Turnbull erred in not allowing the rape complainant to be further cross-examined during the trial.
The Court of Criminal Appeal also ruled the judge did not properly direct the jury about how to deal with allegations the complainant had lied.
A third ground of appeal, arguing the now-quashed guilty verdicts were unsafe or unreasonable, was not upheld.
The former Parramatta Eels fullback appeared in court via audio-visual link wearing a green tracksuit and a weary expression as he waited to learn the outcome of his case.
Wednesday’s verdict was greeted with celebrations from Hayne’s supporters.
The dual Dally M-winner’s close mate Daniel Son shared an Instagram image that said: ‘You f***en’ beauty.’
Three separate criminal trials were told the rape complainant changed her mind about having sex with Hayne on the night of the 2018 NRL Grand Final after realising he had a taxi waiting outside her house.
Hayne’s barrister, Tim Game SC, told his appeal hearing in April the woman had deleted messages between herself and Hayne which demonstrated she had initially shown a sexual interest in him.
The footballer’s defence team also argued the complainant 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.’
The third trial heard the complainant sent messages to a man in the hours before the incident with Hayne.
In one message the complainant said, ‘If we aren’t going to keep talking, I’m going to say yes to Jarryd’ coming over to her house.
The messages were only revealed when the man contacted Hayne’s lawyers.
The complainant messaged another woman on the same day she met Hayne, and said the footballer ‘went down on her’ but did not say it was non-consensual.
The court was told the complainant had listened to Hayne’s prior appeal in 2021 and contacted a social media friend on Facebook the same day.
‘I hope this was worth it for you,’ the message read.
‘The pain I have endured from all of this is unfathomable. I have never lied. I have never done anything to you and for you to write something to JH about me having him over does not excuse what happened.
‘I did not tell you because it was disgusting and confusing for me. If he gets out you can thank yourself. This has been the hardest most painful thing I’ve ever been through and you can thank yourself for helping a guilty person.’
Hayne’s lawyers sought to rely on the messages to suggest the victim ‘deliberately concealed her communications because… they did not support her version of what occurred and then (possibly) tried to influence in respect of her evidence’.
Judge Turnbull had refused requests for the woman to be cross-examined on the statement, saying it carried ‘almost infinitesimal weight’.
Hayne played 214 NRL games for Parramatta (191) and the Gold Coast (23) between 2006 and 2018, as well as 23 State of Origin matches for NSW (2007-2017) and 11 Tests for Australia (2007-2003).
He had a stint in the NFL as a running back with the San Francisco 49ers in 2015 and missed selection for Fiji’s rugby sevens squad at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.