Welsh international footballer Ched Evans is to give a video statement next week after being released from jail after serving half of a five-year sentence for raping a 19-year-old woman in a hotel.
A statement on his website said: “Next week Ched will make a very personal and profound statement by video which will be on his site and available for use by the media should they choose to do so. Ched is now adjusting to normal life after serving a sentence for a crime consistently denied.
“Whilst we understand the media interest, we would respectfully request some privacy over the next few weeks. Ched would like to thank prior to the video statement, the thousands of people from all walks of life who have supported him and believe in him.”
Evans left Wymott prison, near Leyland, Lancashire, in a silver Mercedes 4x4 just before 5am on Friday.
In statement posted on his website, his family and girlfriend Natasha Massey confirmed his release and said they were determined to overturn his conviction.
The statement said: “Today at 5am he was released from custody and will continue the fight to clear his name. Chedwyn Evans maintains his absolute innocence and his family, friends and many who know the true facts of the case believe that his conviction was a gross miscarriage of justice.”
The striker was jailed in April 2012 for raping the woman in a hotel room in Rhyl, North Wales.
The 25-year-old striker’s release will pile more pressure on his former club, Sheffield United, to say whether he will be allowed to play for them again.
Many Blades fans have called for him to be rehabilitated, but almost 150,000 people have signed an online petition urging the League One club not to welcome him back.
A man, believed to be Evans, was seen getting into the back of the Mercedes, which had blacked-out windows, and the vehicle drove off immediately.
The 25-year-old denied raping the woman but was found guilty by a jury at Caernarfon crown court. He admitted having sex with her, but the woman told the jury she had no memory of the incident. The prosecution said the woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was too drunk to consent to sexual intercourse.
Another footballer, Port Vale defender Clayton McDonald, also admitted having sex with the victim but was found not guilty of the same charge.
An appeal against Evans’s conviction was rejected by three judges at the court of appeal in 2012.
Massey has led a campaign to have the conviction overturned and the case is due to be looked at by the Criminal Case Review Commission in the coming weeks.
She has reiterated her support for her partner, telling ITV’s This Morning that she put her feelings about his cheating to one side to support him through his trial and prison and said she had visited him every week in jail.
Massey said Evans hoped to play professional football again.
Sheffield United have refused to say whether they allow Evans to play again.
Manager Nigel Clough has said: “We have had one or two discussions; we are awaiting a decision and the owners will make that in good time.”
The deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, who is MP for Sheffield Hallam, said the owners of the club should “think really long and hard” before deciding whether to allow Evans back.
Clegg said footballers were role models to youngsters and that should “weigh heavily” on the club’s owners.
Clegg said: “I don’t think it’s right for politicians to tell football clubs what they will do and who they employ. All I’m saying is I think football players these days, they get paid a lot of money, they are public figures and you can’t ignore that.”
Richard Caborn, a former sports minister and a United fan, said Evans should be allowed back only if he shows remorse and says sorry.
Labour’s sport spokesman, Clive Efford, said it was “not appropriate” for Evans to return to professional football.
Efford told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I think there are many areas of employment where, when you’ve committed a crime like that, you are not allowed to be employed in that form of employment, and I think football is one of them, because you are a role model within a community.
“I know this is sad for Ched Evans, who’s been to prison and paid a price, but I think that in these circumstances it’s not appropriate to have someone with that record in a profession where you are idolised by young people.”
Evans scored 48 goals in 113 games for United before his imprisonment, including 35 in 42 games during the 2011-12 campaign, which was cut short for him due to his trial and conviction. He has been capped 13 times for Wales.
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