If you have to put innocence in quotes then it is no longer presumed.
That was kinda the point though: Trump is "innocent" of using campaign money to pay off Pornstars. OJ Simpson "innocent" of killing his girlfriend. And Harvey Weinstein "innocent" of his behaviour toward women. Because none of these have been proven in court. This is in stark contrast to cases the public actually knows nothing about: When Joe Everymen gets questioned by the police, you should presume innocence until proven otherwise. If on the other hand a public thing happened, where all the details are readily available and obvious for anybody, but the courts don't manage to convict because of legal obfuscation, hung juries, or just plain old corruption, the situation is a little different. It's the difference between being legally innocent and actually innocent - i.e. never actualy doing the thing. Official media would use the word "allegedly" in such a case. BP "allegedly" criminally ommitted safety measures resulting in the Deep Water Horizon spill.
CBS allegedly stole the Tardigrade idea.
Better?