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Chris Budgen consents to extradition over rape allegation

By Online Editors
Chris Budgen (Photo by Mitchell Gunn/Getty Images

Former New Zealand rugby union star Chris Budgen may be extradited from the United Kingdom to face trial over a rape allegation from 1991.

UK's Home Office, which oversees immigration, security and law and order, confirmed to the Herald that Budgen appeared at the Westminster Magistrates' Court on December 2, where he consented to his extradition to New Zealand.

"The District Judge therefore sent the case to the Home Secretary to decide whether to order extradition," a spokeswoman from the department told the Herald.

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"The Home Secretary has two months from the date the case was sent to her in which to make her decision."

Budgen, 47, a lance corporal in the Royal Welsh Regiment, is accused of attacking the woman when he was 18 on the day he played a rugby match in Rotorua.

Police took DNA samples at the time, but were unable to make a match and the Mirror reported that police also travelled to the UK to take a further sample in 2015 after advanced testing flagged up a potential link.

Budgen, who was born in New Zealand, had served in the NZ Defence Force before moving to the UK in the 1990s.

There, he served with the Royal Welsh regiment in Northern Ireland, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Budgen also played professional rugby with the Northampton Saints and was a key member of the Exeter Chiefs' successful 2010 RFU Championship side.

He became the oldest try scorer in Premiership rugby history in 2012 when he scored for Exeter Chiefs 78 days short of his 40th birthday.

Budgen retired from professional rugby in 2014.

The Mirror reported that he was held by Scotland Yard's Extradition Unit at his Hampshire barracks in December.

As part of his bail conditions, he agreed not to go to any international travel hub and must report to a police station every weekend.