No in the charges he was acquitted of the jury didn't decide they didn't happen, they only decided they weren't sure that they happened. They could all of thought it probably did happen but weren't sure so returned a Not Guilty verdict.
I really do understand the semantics, funnily enough. However, nobody deals in semantics better than the legal profession and, as I have no need to push the boundaries, I don't run the risk of taking them on unless I have had legal advice myself.
The one fact is he was cleared of ten charges. It's quite possible that every single member of the jury was absolutely, one hundred percent convinced from the evidence they heard that, in those ten cases, the alleged events did not happen. Unless you were on the jury, you don't know otherwise. Regardless, he was found 'not guilty' which the majority of people will (hopefully) equate with being innocent whether that is technically the same thing or not. Otherwise, there's not much point having jury trials - may as well just bang people up and save the money.
Incidentally, it's "they could all have" rather than "they could all of". Maybe the NCTJ don't bother with basic use of the language.
Anyway, all very interesting chaps. Better crack on with 'Capricorn'...