As a random aside: In Scotland court cases can have 3 possible outcomes, “Guilty”, “Not Guilty” and “Not Proven”. Where the last one (as I understand it) basically translates to “The jury are confident that you are guilty, but reluctantly admit that their isn’t enough legally admissible evidence to get a fair conviction.” I think that, legally “Not proven” is equivalent to “Not guilty”. Although while “Not guilty” should (ideally) undo any reputational damage from the accusation, “Not proven” will not.
As a random aside: In Scotland court cases can have 3 possible outcomes, “Guilty”, “Not Guilty” and “Not Proven”. Where the last one (as I understand it) basically translates to “The jury are confident that you are guilty, but reluctantly admit that their isn’t enough legally admissible evidence to get a fair conviction.” I think that, legally “Not proven” is equivalent to “Not guilty”. Although while “Not guilty” should (ideally) undo any reputational damage from the accusation, “Not proven” will not.