The key to NRL star Jarryd Hayne’s sexual assault case is a critical 27-minute window, court told

A period of just 27 minutes is what a jury is being told they must critically analyse after former NRL star Jarryd Hayne used a woman’s letterbox as a stand for his ‘half-finished’ Cruiser before allegedly sexually assaulting her at her home, a court has been told.

Crown prosecutor John Sfinas addressed the jury in his closing arguments on Friday morning as the two-week NSW District Court trial comes to an end.

The 35-year-old Dally M winner has pleaded not guilty to two counts of sexual assault without consent, with the jury hearing more than eight days of evidence.

Mr Hayne denies sexually assaulting the woman at her home on Newcastle’s outskirts in September 2018, on the night of the NRL grand final, claiming they engaged in consensual sexual acts.

The former footy star is accused of pulling off the woman’s pants before allegedly performing oral and digital sexual acts on her without her consent, causing cuts and substantial bleeding.

The evidence concluded in the former NSW and Parramatta fullback’s trial, with closing submissions from the crown prosecution beginning on Thursday afternoon.

Jarryd Hayne (pictured outside court with his barrister, Maragaret Cunneen SC) is nearing the end of his sexual assault trial after more than eight days of evidence

The woman and the Crown prosecution have argued that while she had sent him sexually suggestive messages via social media, the first time that they met at her Fletcher home – which she shared with her mother – she was not consenting to sexual intercourse.

She said she refused to consent because he had a cab waiting in her front yard, just outside her bedroom window, which he had paid $550 to ferry him from a buck’s party to Sydney where he was booked in to attend a midnight event.

In the final 25 minutes of his closing address, Mr Sfinas told the court that Mr Hayne lied to both the alleged victim and the taxi driver, saying neither would be ‘happy about the situation’.

The court was previously told that Mr Hayne did not respond to the woman when she questioned him about why a taxi was waiting for him.

Mr Sfinas said the lack of response was a ‘sinking feeling of being found out’.

He said Mr Hayne also lied to the taxi driver, saying he was at the woman’s house to ‘pick up a bag’.

‘He wanted both to remain none the wiser,’ Mr Sfinas told the court.

‘The question of sex, which was up in the air, needed to be answered sooner rather than later.

‘If you accept the complainant’s version of the accused manhandling her, you might think that was borne out of frustration because things weren’t going quickly enough.’

Mr Sfinas told the court that Mr Hayne’s version of events was implausible.

The former Parramatta Eels superstar has been accompanied by his wife Amelia Bonnici (left) throughout the trial in Sydney

The former Parramatta Eels superstar has been accompanied by his wife Amelia Bonnici (left) throughout the trial in Sydney

He told the jury that Mr Hayne’s version was he did what he did to ‘pleasure the woman’.

‘He wanted to give pleasure to someone whose letterbox served as a stand for his half-finished drink,’ Mr Sfinas said.

‘He wanted to pleasure someone who was filthy, in his words, that a taxi was waiting.

‘He wanted to pleasure someone who was wigged out … he wanted to pleasure someone who said they weren’t having sex.’

Defence barrister Margaret Cunneen SC began her opening address, telling the jury there were two phases to the night in question.

She told the court that Mr Hayne arrived at the house at 9.07pm and left 46 minutes later, but the sexual activity did not occur until 9.26pm in the final 27 minutes of the visit.

‘He’s in there for 27 minutes, while showers are taken, while explanations are made … he doesn’t rush off in the boorish way that has been described,’ Ms Cunneen told the jury.

‘Ladies and gentlemen time doesn’t lie and the most important timing in this case is the amount of time Mr Hayne was at the address.’

Hayne's barrister Margaret Cunneen SC told the court 'police had no idea' about one area of evidence in the case

Hayne’s barrister Margaret Cunneen SC told the court ‘police had no idea’ about one area of evidence in the case

She told the court the police were ‘never aware’ of communications the woman had with two people in the days leading up to the alleged incident.

Ms Cunneen said it was an area of evidence the ‘police had no idea about’ until earlier court proceedings.

‘Mr Hayne was charged, the criminal justice process was taking place from 2018 as the productive years of his career ebbed away,’ she said.

‘A couple of years later it is found that this chronology that we have here was originally much shorter in three very distinct respects.’

She said the police never knew about communications the woman had with another man, which indicated her ‘frame of mind’.

‘You can see in the end, she deliberately curated the material that she gave to the police,’ Ms Cunneen said.

‘If Mr Hayne had committed these dreadful crimes, why would she be deleting any of these messages?’

Mr Sfinas on Thursday said the woman did ‘certain acts’ which were consistent with demonstrating she was not consenting during a fleeting encounter at her home.

During his closing address to the jury, Mr Sfinas said in terms of demonstrating a lack of consent, it’s separated into words and actions.

‘The Crown says the complainant in this matter said words and made actions,’ he told the jury.

Hayne (pictured playing for NSW in 2007) lied to both his alleged victim and his cab driver, Crown prosecutor John Sfinas told the court

Hayne (pictured playing for NSW in 2007) lied to both his alleged victim and his cab driver, Crown prosecutor John Sfinas told the court

The jury was told the woman held up her pants when Mr Hayne tried to remove them, while saying ‘no’ and ‘stop’ and resisting Mr Hayne.

She had also texted her friend in the hours following the alleged incident, saying: ‘I feel like I let it happen to myself by not screaming at him.’

‘You might think trying to hold up her pants is an act, moving away from someone, being pushed and trying to push back against it,’ Mr Sfinas said.

‘They are actions, so while she says here, ‘I feel like I let it happen to myself’, the Crown says she did actually do certain acts which are consistent with demonstrating resistance.’

Mr Sfinas told the court the woman had always been ‘forthright’ about her intentions with Mr Hayne.

In the beginning of his address, Mr Sfinas told the jury they were asked by Ms Cunneen to view the alleged victim’s evidence ‘through a prism that she embellished and lied to police’.

He told the court: ‘It is the Crown submission that she did not lie. She did not exaggerate and she did not embellish.’

Mr Sfinas asked the jury to accept the woman’s evidence, saying she was forthright about her original intentions when texting Mr Hayne in the weeks leading up to the alleged incident.

‘She didn’t diminish, she didn’t minimise, she didn’t try to make herself look better,’ he said.

‘Yes she was sexually interested and sexually attracted … she wasn’t that desperate to meet him.’

It's alleged that Hayne sexually assaulted the woman on the night of the 2018 NRL grand final while his taxi waited outside her house

It’s alleged that Hayne sexually assaulted the woman on the night of the 2018 NRL grand final while his taxi waited outside her house 

The jury was told the woman was ‘open’ to the possibility of sex with Mr Hayne but then it diminished when she realised there was a taxi waiting for the former NRL star outside.

Mr Sfinas said this was the ‘defining moment’ for the woman as she felt like she was simply a ‘diversion’.

‘She realises he didn’t intend on staying too long given a taxi was waiting for him and hurrying him up,’ he said.

The court heard the woman did not initially report the matter to police because she was scared about what could happen to her.

In a message to a friend, the court was told she wrote: ‘I’m too scared to report it, he would have the money to ruin me and the last thing I need is my life in the public eye.’

The Crown said it was compelling evidence because at the time the alleged incident occurred, the woman said she wasn’t sure what had even happened.

Mr Sfinas said the woman wasn’t sure she had been digitally penetrated.

‘It was at a time she did not want to go to police, it significantly informs her authenticity,’ he said.

‘You might think these actions are not consistent with someone who prepares to lie, embellish, exaggerate or mislead.’

The court was told the taxi was the ‘straw that broke the camel’s back’.

Mr Sfinas read to the court some of the woman’s prerecorded evidence in the trial.

When asked how she felt after the taxi driver knocked on the door, the woman said ‘like absolute crap’.

‘I felt like it was obvious what he wanted, I felt sad and stupid for flirting with him at the start,’ she said.

‘There was no way in hell I was going to touch him … I was angry, I was hurt, I was sad, I felt like in my mind I thought this could one day, maybe turn into something so when I worked out he only wanted (sex) I felt crap.’

The closing addresses continue before Judge Graham Turnbull on Friday.

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