Footballer Benjamin Mendy breaks down when acquitted of sex offences
CHESTER, United Kingdom (AFP) — Former Manchester City and France footballer Benjamin Mendy broke down in tears on Friday as a UK jury cleared him of sex offences.
Mendy, 28, put his head on his knees and wiped away tears on hearing the verdict at the end of the three-week trial at Chester Crown Court in north-west England.
He had previously been cleared in January of six counts of rape and one of sexual assault following a six-month trial.
Jurors in that trial had been unable to reach a verdict on one count of rape and another of attempted rape, resulting in a retrial.
Mendy, whose contract with Manchester City expired at the end of June, had denied all the charges filed against him.
He was accused alongside Louis Saha Matturie, 41, an alleged “fixer” who was found not guilty by the jury at the earlier trial of three counts of rape relating to two teenagers.
Jurors also failed to reach verdicts on three counts of rape and three counts of sexual assault against Matturie by five other women.
He faces a separate retrial later this year.
The prosecution had alleged that Mendy was a sexual “predator” who raped or sexually assaulted young women procured by Matturie at parties at his luxury home south of Manchester.
But Mendy denied ever forcing any woman into sex, and both said any sexual activity they had with women was consensual.
Mendy, a record signing for a defender when he moved to Manchester City from French club Monaco in 2017, played 75 times for City.
But his playing time was limited by injuries and a loss of form.
The last of his 10 caps for France came in November 2019, after the defender won the World Cup in 2018.
The trials meant that he missed Manchester City’s treble last season of the English Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League.
The footballer’s lawyers said in a statement after the verdict that he was “delighted” to have been acquitted in both trials.
“Benjamin Mendy would like to thank the members of the jury for focusing on the evidence in this trial rather than the rumour and innuendo that has followed this case from the outset,” they added.
They said he had “tried to remain strong” throughout, but the court process had had a “serious impact” on him.