Prosecutors in South Carolina dropped charges of cocaine possession against Georgia Southern quarterback Shai Werts on Thursday, according to ESPN.

Werts was arrested on July 31 after police discovered what they suspected was cocaine on the hood of his car, a substance the the quarterback contended was bird poop.

“I have worked with Shai on a daily basis for three years, and these charges do not reflect the young man I have come to know,” athletic director Tom Kleinlein said in a statement. “Shai has had our unwavering support throughout this entire process. We are glad to put this incident behind us and focus again on football and the upcoming academic semester.”

Werts was held out of the Eagles’ first two practices while he awaited results from a university-administered drug test. He passed the test, and returned to practice Sunday.

The junior was fully reinstated to the team Friday morning. 11th Judicial Circuit solicitor Rick Hubbard said in a statement that his office reviewed the police report, dash cam video and body camera footage and determined “the charge lacks prosecutorial merit and the evidence is insufficient for the State to proceed.”

Werts was driving to his grandmother’s house when officers pulled him over for speeding.

Werts did pick up a speeding ticket, but Kleinlein and coach Chad Lunsford deemed the suspension he had already served was ample discipline.

An officer tested the white substance with a field test kit, and it tested positive for cocaine. The officers took photographs of the hood of the car on the phones and a digital camera. The Saluda County Sheriff’s Office sent the white substance to South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, for testing, the results of which are still uncertain.

Deputy solicitor for the 11th Judicial Circuit Al Eargle told ESPN that from the test results, “the only things they could tell for certain was it wasn’t a controlled substance.” Even if the substance had tested positive for cocaine, the charges would have been dropped, according to Eargle.

Werts started 24 games for the team over the past two seasons. A dual-threat quarterback, he threw for 987 yards and 10 touchdowns, while adding 908 rushing yards and 15 touchdowns. He currently has a school record with 119 consecutive passes thrown without an interception.