Tag Archives: Heards

Johnny Depp files appeal over Amber Heard’s $2 million defamation payout

Johnny Depp filed documents Wednesday to appeal a Virginia court’s ruling that one of Depp’s lawyers defamed his ex-wife, Amber Heard.

Depp was awarded $10.35 million in damages after a jury found Heard defamed Depp following a six-week trial

Heard lost the defamation case but was awarded $2 million in her countersuit as jurors found that Depp defamed her through his attorney.

In documents reviewed by Fox News Digital, Depp argued the court “should reverse the judgment on Ms. Heard’s counterclaim,” but he was otherwise in favor of the jury’s decision.

JOHNNY DEPP SET TO MAKE HISTORY WITH RIHANNA

Johnny Depp filed documents in the Court of Appeals of Virginia Wednesday following a jury’s ruling in favor of awarding Amber Heard $2 million due to statements made by Depp’s legal team.
(Getty Images)

“The jury’s emphatic favorable verdict on all three defamatory statements alleged in his complaint fully vindicated Mr. Depp and restored his reputation,” the documents stated. 

“However, the trial court was confronted with a number of novel and complex legal and factual issues, and although the trial court decided the vast majority of those issues sensibly and correctly, a few rulings were erroneous.”

HOLLYWOOD ON TRIAL: HARVEY WEINSTEIN, DANNY MASTERSON AND PAUL HAGGIS IN COURT OVER SEXUAL ASSAULT ALLEGATIONS

Heard claimed Depp was “vicariously liable” for statements his attorney made to a tabloid in 2020, a point the jury agreed with when awarding her $2 million following the trial. 

His lawyers argued in Depp’s appeal that the lawyer, Adam Waldman, was retained as an independent contractor and Depp wasn’t liable for his statements. 

Johnny Depp and lawyer Camille Vasquez appeared in court at his June defamation trial against ex-wife Amber Heard.
(Shawn Thew)

Another point of contention was proving Waldman acted with “actual malice.” 

“No evidence of Mr. Waldman’s actual malice was presented at trial, so the judgment against Mr. Depp cannot be sustained,” the documents state. 

Depp’s team also argued Waldman’s words were a “non-actionable statement of opinion insufficient to support a claim of defamation.”

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER

The “Pirates of the Caribbean” star initially sought a $50 million payout over a 2018 Washington Post op-ed Heard wrote that didn’t specifically name Depp but discussed her experiences with domestic abuse at the hands of a former partner. Heard countersued for $100 million in damages. 

Amber Heard leaves the Fairfax County Circuit Court in Virginia following the Johnny Depp defamation trial. 
(Win McNamee)

Less than one month after the ruling, Heard filed a notice of appeal to overturn the verdict. 

“We believe the court made errors that prevented a just and fair verdict consistent with the First Amendment. We are therefore appealing the verdict,” Heard’s spokesperson said in a statement. 

A spokesperson for Depp said there is no basis for Heard’s appeal. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“The jury listened to the extensive evidence presented during the six-week trial and came to a clear and unanimous verdict that the defendant herself defamed Mr. Depp in multiple instances,” a representative said. “We remain confident in our case and that this verdict will stand.” 

Read original article here

Legal experts applaud Amber Heard’s choice of new lawyers for Johnny Depp verdict appeal

Amber Heard has hired new lawyers as she appeals the $10 million verdict awarded to Johnny Depp in their defamation battle — a move experts said could be advantageous for the “Aquaman” actress.

Heard, 36, has brought on David Axelrod and Jay Ward Brown, of national law firm Ballard Spahr, who successfully represented the New York Times against former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s libel lawsuit.

They’ll help Heard as she fights to overturn the largely unfavorable verdict against her handed down by a jury following the ex-couple’s bombshell trial in Fairfax, Virginia.

Virginia lawyer Elaine Bredehoft — who repped Heard at trial — will be leaving the team, according to a spokesperson for the actress.

Amber Heard has hired new lawyers as she appeals the $10 million verdict awarded to Johnny Depp in their defamation battle.
Rod Lamkey/Consolidated News Pictures/Getty Images

“A different court warrants different representation, particularly as so much new evidence is now coming to light,” the rep said.

Texas civil lawyer Katherine Lizardo — who followed the trial closely — said she expected the change in the legal team and noted it would benefit Heard.

“This is a good move for her because it would give her a different point of view legally from trial counsel,” Lizardo told The Post.

Appeal lawyers are a “different breed” of attorneys who are experts in the “nuanced and specialty” field of law, Lizardo explained.

The Virginia jury found that Heard defamed Depp in her essay alleging domestic abuse.
Cliff Owen/Consolidated News Pictures/Getty Images

“If Amber Heard did not hire an attorney that was familiar with the appellate system then she would lose,” she said.

Lizardo also noted that it takes a certain demeanor to argue an appellate case — which in Virginia only allows for each side to speak for 15 minutes before a three-judge panel.

“Elaine Bredehoft’s style at trial and her time management issues wouldn’t work for appeal,” Lizardo said. “We saw when Elaine would ramble on or argue unrelated matters and that would be very detrimental if she argued similarly in front of the court of appeal judges.”

New York civil lawyer William Newman told The Post that Axelrod and Brown’s maneuvers in Palin’s case against the Times signal the type of strategy the legal team will use in Heard’s appeal.

The lawyers had focused on trying to prove that statements made about the 2008 Republican vice presidential nominee in a Times piece weren’t made with actual malice — which is a higher legal standard applied to cases involving public figures.

“By selecting a lawyer that famously made that argument in the Sarah Palin case — that tells me that [actual malice] is going to be something that they are going to likely focus on in this appeal,” Newman said.

Still, Newman said it’s smart that Heard is still hanging onto one of her Virginia lawyers from trial, Benjamin Rottenborn.

“I think it’s a good choice,” Newman said of hiring Axelrod and Brown. “Ballard Spahr is a very well regarded firm. She is in good hands.”

“It’s still very good to have local Virginia lawyers working on it too,” Newman added.

Heard has brought on David Axelrod and Jay Ward Brown, of national law firm Ballard Spahr.
EVELYN HOCKSTEIN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Former California appeals court judge and current criminal defense attorney Halim Dhanidina told The Post that hiring new lawyers for an appeal is routine and has many upsides, including gaining the expertise of an appellate lawyer and getting a fresh set of eyes on the case.

A trial lawyer “is almost too close to the issues.” Dhanidina said. “Whereas an appellate specialist might be able to look at what happened in the lower court record and have perhaps a different perspective or a different strategy of how they might be successful on appeal.”

“What an attorney might want to do at the appellate level is perhaps second guess some of the strategies or actions taken by the trial attorney and the attorney who handled the trial would obviously not be in a position to be critical or to second guess their own actions,” the former judge noted.

The 59-year-old “Pirates of the Caribbean” actor won a $10.35 million verdict in June with a jury siding with his claims that Heard defamed him in a 2018 Washington Post op-ed piece on being a victim of domestic violence.

While she didn’t specifically name Depp in the essay, his side argued at trial that it clearly referred to her allegations that he abused her around their 2016 divorce.

The jury awarded Heard $2 million in her counterclaims that Depp defamed her when his lawyer Adam Waldman called her claims a hoax.

Bredehoft didn’t return a request for comment Monday.

Read original article here

Judge rejects Amber Heard’s motion for mistrial in Johnny Depp case

Comment

A judge on Wednesday rejected Amber Heard’s request for the high-profile defamation case involving her and her ex-husband, Johnny Depp, to be declared a mistrial. Heard lost to Depp last month.

“There is no evidence of fraud or wrongdoing,” Judge Penney Azcarate stated in the court order.

Representatives for Heard have not responded to The Washington Post’s request for comment.

Depp sued Heard for $50 million over a 2018 Post op-ed in which she described herself as a public figure representing domestic abuse (without mentioning Depp by name). Heard countersued for $100 million after a former lawyer for Depp, Adam Waldman, referred to her allegations as a hoax.

Following six intense weeks of testimony in Fairfax County Circuit Court — the trial took place in Virginia because The Post’s printing presses and servers are located there — a seven-person jury on June 1 found that Heard had, in fact, defamed Depp with the op-ed. He was awarded $15 million, a sum reduced to $10.35 million because Virginia law caps punitive damages. Heard was awarded $2 million after the jury found that Waldman had defamed Heard, one of three points made in her countersuit.

After the Depp-Heard verdict: confusion, elation and — for a few — disappointment

Earlier this month, Heard’s lawyers filed to have a mistrial declared over multiple factors, including their claim that one of the seven jurors was not actually the person summoned for jury duty in April. The lawyers argued that the jury panel list included someone who “would have been 77 years old at the time,” but that the juror who participated was a 52-year-old with the same name who lived at the same residence.

“As the Court no doubt agrees,” the lawyers wrote, “it is deeply troubling for an individual not summoned for jury duty nonetheless to appear for jury duty and serve on a jury, especially in a case such as this.”

In Wednesday’s court order, Azcarate denied several of Heard’s post-trial motions for “reasons stated on the record” but provided a detailed explanation for why the juror’s service was not reason for a mistrial. The summons did not include a birth date, according to Azcarate, and the juror wrote their birth date on a questionnaire that “met the statutory requirements for service.” The judge noted that both parties questioned the jury panel and declared it acceptable: “Therefore, Due Process was guaranteed and provided,” she wrote.

Azcarate also stated that Heard’s team was provided the jury list “five days prior to the commencement of the trial” and had numerous opportunities to object throughout the weeks-long proceedings.

“The juror was vetted, sat for the entire jury, deliberated, and reached a verdict,” Azcarate wrote. “The only evidence before this Court is that this juror and all jurors followed their oaths, the Court’s instructions, and orders. This Court is bound by the competent decision of the jury.”

Read original article here

Amber Heard’s Lawyers Single Out Juror 15 In Attempt To Get Johnny Depp Verdict Axed

The Johnny Depp and Amber Heard defamation trial might technically be over, but with each passing day, it’s becoming clearer we’re not even close to a legal resolution. On Friday, Heard’s attorneys filed a 43 page motion in an attempt to get the court to overturn the more than ten million dollar judgment against their client. The filing runs down a host of different reasons they feel the verdict should be thrown out, including problems with Juror 15. 

We have no idea who Juror 15 is. His identity is legally protected, but according to Heard’s legal team, his inclusion in the jury may have “compromised” her due process. That’s because, they claim, his age was reportedly listed incorrectly on the juror list panel. He was apparently identified as being born in 1945, but he looks much younger and seems, in their estimation, to have actually been born decades later. They want it investigated as to whether he actually received a summons to appear and want to look into whether he was properly vetted by the court. Here’s a quote from the filing per Law & Crime…

The Court should investigate whether juror 15 properly served on the jury. On the juror list panel sent to counsel before voir dire, the Court noted that the individual who would later be designated juror 15 had a birth year of 1945. Juror 15, however, was clearly born later than 1945. Publicly available information demonstrates that he appears to have been born in 1970. This discrepancy raises the question whether juror 15 actually received a summons for jury duty and was properly vetted by the Court to serve on the jury.

In the same legal filing, Heard’s team admits jury panel errors aren’t ordinarily grounds for getting a verdict overturned, but they claim there’s a possibility Juror 15 isn’t who he says he is, which would be, in their estimation, a due process violation. The allegation is just one in a long list of problems they run down in this most recent filing.

Amber Heard’s team claims Johnny Depp didn’t actually prove that he suffered that much financial hardship because of the op-ed. They argue it was very unlikely the actor would have appeared in Pirates Of The Caribbean 6, and they argue Depp himself said he wouldn’t have taken the role for one million alpacas. In addition, her team is arguing that what actually matters here is whether Heard believes she was abused. If she believed her own allegations, a jury can’t find she acted with malice, and they claim Depp’s legal team never proved she didn’t believe her own claims.

Johnny Depp and Amber Heard were only married from 2015 to 2017, but their relationship has lived on through a series of court cases and legal issues in the aftermath. Most recently, Depp sued Heard for defamation after she published an op-ed claiming she was the victim of domestic abuse. The televised six week trial proved enormously popular with the general public, and millions watched as both took the stand and hurled allegations against each other ranging from abuse to drug use to intentionally pooping in the bed.

The jury ultimately awarded mostly in favor of Johnny Depp. The jury ruled she acted with malice and defamed him on several counts and awarded him more than fifteen million dollars in damages, which was later reduced to ten million and change. They also found in her favor on one count over a statement Depp’s former attorney made and awarded her two million dollars. There was some hope the two would settle and move on after the trial, but this latest motion would seem to indicate their legal situation will continue.

No word on whether an investigation will be launched into Juror 15, but if anything shady does come out, expect to hear about it.

Read original article here

After Johnny Depp And Amber Heard’s Final Judgment Is Rendered, Her Rep Made A Bold Comparison

The public is now a few weeks removed from the defamation trial between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, but the dust hasn’t settled just yet. Since the courtroom drama ended, Heard has been sharing her thoughts on the verdict and discussing factors (like suppressed evidence) that she believes would’ve changed the outcome, which she didn’t think was “fair.” The actress’ legal representation has now confirmed that she’s seeking to appeal the jury’s decision, which requires her to pay Depp millions of dollars. And following the final judgment being rendered and amid this attempt to appeal, Heard’s rep made a bold comparison. 

A final judgment in the court case between the two stars was rendered during a hearing this past Friday. As Deadline reports, it was thought that both sides would attempt to reach a settlement before Judge Penney Azcarate delivered the final verdict. Amber Heard’s main attorney, Elaine Bredehoft, reportedly engaged in a tense back-and-forth with Azcarate before expressing her client’s intention to appeal. Sometime later, while addressing the move, a rep apparently referenced something said in another major ongoing legal situation:

As stated in yesterday’s congressional hearings, you don’t ask for a pardon if you are innocent. And, you don’t decline to appeal if you know you are right.

The sentiments come from the House select committee’s recent hearings, which centered on the insurrection that took place on January 6, 2021. What the star’s representative is more specifically referencing is the committee’s allegations that some Republican members of Congress sought pardons from former President Donald Trump in relation to the incident. That’s a serious comparison, to say the least. If anything though, it indicates just how serious her client is about appealing her case. 

Such a process could be somewhat difficult for Amber Heard, though. As the judge informed the star’s attorney, an appeal will require her legal team to file motions within the court on her behalf. Heard will also have to provide an $8.35 million bond, which includes 6% interest per year, in order to get the ball rolling. 

Before this latest development, the actress was already required to pay a hefty sum of money to former husband Johnny Depp, per the jury’s verdict. Earlier this month, the seven-person tribunal found the Aquaman actress guilty on three counts of defamation and, as a result, Depp was awarded a compensatory $10 million and $5 million in punitive damages. His ex-wife, however, was awarded $2 million in compensatory damages from her $100 million countersuit. 

Amber Heard’s financial standing has since been a significant topic of discussion. After the ruling was announced, her lawyers insisted that she was unable to pay the money. However, a number of people seemed to take notice when Heard used a private plane days after her legal team made the assertion about the money. Some may continue to discuss this matter now that the star seems set on pursuing the pricey appeal, she and her legal team have 21 days to file for.

All in all, it would appear that things are far from over, from a legal standpoint, between Amber Heard and Johnny Depp (who’s about to return to court for an assault-related case). One has to wonder how Heard’s legal team will proceed financially – and whether her team will make any further comparisons to other high-profile cases from either the past or present.

Read original article here

What attorneys say about Amber Heard’s options to appeal Johnny Depp verdict

After Johnny Depp largely prevailed in his defamation lawsuit against Amber Heard, her attorney Elaine Bredehoft announced her client “absolutely” intends to appeal.

The jury of five men and two women announced on Wednesday (1 June) it had found that Ms Heard defamed Mr Depp on three statements. Jurors also found that Ms Heard was defamed by one of three statements in her countersuit.

The Independent spoke with three attorneys about Ms Heard’s possible grounds for an appeal, or even a new trial: Lisa Bloom of The Bloom Firm, whose clients have included Janice Dickinson, Mischa Barton, and several victims of Jeffrey Epstein; Jesse Weber, a host and attorney at the Law & Crime network, who covered the trial from the courthouse in Fairfax, Virginia; and Mitra Ahouraian, an entertainment attorney in Beverly Hills who represents actors, directors, producers, and musicians.

The phrasing of Amber Heard’s op-ed

Ms Bloom saw several appealable issues in the Depp v Heard verdict, beginning with the wording of the 2018 Washington Post op-ed from which Mr Depp’s defamation claims stemmed.

“Because of the First Amendment, the precise words [of a given statement] are closely scrutinized,” she said. “Here, Amber Heard said only that she was a public figure representing domestic violence. In my view, this means that if even she was a domestic violence victim even once, the statement is true, and the case is over. She did not have to win that she was a victim of multiple incidents, or even significant incidents. Just domestic violence of some kind.”

Ms Bloom highlighted the fact that Ms Heard “never even named” Mr Depp in the op-ed, which means “the appellate court may say the comment was not specific enough to overcome her First Amendment rights.”

One of the three statements in Mr Depp’s lawsuit is the op-ed’s headline, which is another potential issue in Ms Bloom’s view.

“[Ms Heard[] was found to have defamed him based on a headline that she did not write, but merely retweeted,” she said. “This verdict, if upheld, would cause major First Amendment problems for the millions of tweeps who RT articles all day long. Are they to be held liable for defamation if the article is inaccurate?”

Damages

Ms Bloom also saw possible problems in the ways in which jurors awarded damages: After they first announced they had a verdict, they were sent back, as it appeared they had omitted to award some or all of the necessary damages. They returned shortly afterwards having awarded Mr Depp $15m and Ms Heard $2m. (Judge Penney Azcarate adjusted the damages awarded to Mr Depp to conform to a state cap; he has actually been awarded $10.35m.)

The timing of how the damages were awarded, to Ms Bloom, “seems very slapdash”, and is an issue she would raise on appeal.

Possible evidentiary issues

Mr Weber pointed to statements made by Ms Bredehoft in interviews after the trial in seeking to outline possible strategies for Ms Heard’s legal team.

“The arguments on appeal are focused on what Heard believes are incorrect legal rulings by the judge. That is why making objections and motions during the course of the trial is so important to preserve these issues for appeal,” he said.

“Based on Elaine Bredehoft’s comments after the verdict, it seems they will be focusing on evidence that was ‘suppressed’ at trial, such as medical records, and perhaps arguing prejudicial evidence from [Mr Depp] was allowed to be introduced. It also seems [Ms Heard’s team] took issue with the fact that the UK ruling, where a judge found multiple instances of abuse by [Mr Depp], could not be presented to the jury.”

Mr Depp sued The Sun’s publishing company in 2018 over a headline which had called him a “wife beater”. A judge ruled against him in the UK case in 2020.

Ms Heard’s attorneys “could also argue there were problems with the jury instructions/jury form,” Mr Weber added.

Ms Ahouraian underlined the fact that “an appellate judge does not retry the facts or question the jury’s verdict”.

“An appellate judge looks at whether there was a legal error that resulted in an unfair ruling, for example, if the judge made a serious mistake such as excluding evidence that was relevant,” she said.

“[Ms Heard]’s lawyers contend that relevant evidence that could have affected the outcome of the case was excluded. Some of this evidence made it into the UK trial against The Sun, which [Mr Depp] lost, and didn’t make it into this trial, which makes her point understandable, but the laws there are of course different.”

An ‘inconsistent’ verdict

In an interview with BBC Newsnight, Ms Bloom described the verdict in Depp v Heard as “inconsistent”, because of the way in which jurors found that both Mr Depp and Ms Heard were defamed.

Jurors found that Mr Depp was defamed in Ms Heard’s op-ed in which she describes herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse”, but also determined that Ms Heard was defamed in a statement by Adam Waldman (a former lawer for Mr Depp) calling some of Ms Heard’s claims “a hoax”.

“How can it be that Amber Heard was defamed when Johnny Depp’s lawyer said that her allegations were a hoax, and yet Johnny Depp was also defamed when she said she was representative of domestic violence?” Ms Bloom asked on the programme. “I think that’s inconsistent, and you can’t have an inconsistent verdict.”

Mr Weber expressed doubt as to whether this could prove to be solid grounds for an appeal, because “usually appeals are not about the jury’s decision per se”.

He also pointed to the specific statement which jurors found defamed Ms Heard. It was a statement in which Mr Waldman said: “Quite simply this was an ambush, a hoax. They set Mr Depp up by calling the cops, but the first attempt didn’t do the trick. The officers came to the penthouses, thoroughly searched and interviewed, and left after seeing no damage to face or property. So Amber and her friends spilled a little wine and roughed the place up, got their stories straight under the direction of a lawyer and publicist, and then placed a second call to 911.”

To Mr Weber, the verdict isn’t necessarily inconsistent. “The jurors basically said we don’t believe [Ms Heard] was telling the truth about her experience with Johnny Depp, namely being an abuse survivor, but we also believe that [Mr Depp]’s lawyer, who was acting as his agent, went too far and falsely stated that [Ms Heard] and her friends staged the scene of an alleged attack,” he said. “They could believe Heard was not actually hit in the face with a cell phone as she claimed in May 2016, but also not think her friends helped to create a hoax coverup attack.”

The jury

Jurors weren’t sequestered during the seven weeks of the trial. They were instructed not to read up on the case nor do any outside research, but the length of the proceedings, coupled with the fact that it aired on television and was overwhelmingly discussed online, has raised questions over whether jurors could feasibly have remained isolated from any content related to the trial.

“[Ms Heard’s team] could even try to show that since the jury was not sequestered that they were exposed to all the Depp fans and media scrutiny and that tainted the verdict,” Mr Weber said, adding that this seems “like it will be a major issue for [Ms Heard]’s team on appeal”.

“On one hand, sure you can ask how they could not have been exposed and tainted by the coverage, the crowds, social media,” Mr Weber said. “On the other hand, that is an assumption. They were instructed not to view any outside material or watch anything about the trial. Unless a juror does an interview and says something about this, or unless [Ms Heard]’s team can present evidence of juror misconduct, right now that is a speculative argument and is unlikely to be successful.”

Ms Ahouraian highlighted with the judge’s decision not to sequester the jury.

“It makes sense that the jury on a highly publicized case like this should be sequestered, not just ‘instructed’ to not go on the Internet or talk to anyone about the case,” she said. “That isn’t realistic in a case like this: People go home to their families, and the case is everywhere. I’m sure that, giving the jury the benefit of the doubt, perhaps when someone was checking their email or something seemingly innocuous, some information popped up.”

While Ms Ahouraian acknowledged this possibility, and the fact that it “could have heavily swayed the outcome and made the trial unfair”, she’s not certain it would constitute a legal mistake, “since I don’t know if anyone could have predicted the level of attention on social media and the vitriol people have directed at [Ms Heard].”

“However, if a juror actually did look online, and actually did hear or see something despite the judge’s order, then that could be grounds for a mistrial,” she added.

Ms Bloom suggested that potential issues with the jury could lead to an appear or even to a new trial, but acknowledged similar difficulties.

“She would have to prove that interference, which would be challenging,” she said. “Perhaps a juror will talk about this in a press interview. I will be watching for that. Stay tuned!”



Read original article here

Johnny Depp-Amber Heard: Depp’s team asks judge to toss last statement from Heard’s lawyer

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The legal counsel representing Johnny Depp in a blockbuster defamation suit with fellow actor and ex-wife Amber Heard claims a final statement from Heard’s team could drastically change the perception of the case for the jury.

On Tuesday, they asked Judge Penney Azcarate to tell the jury to disregard the statement and to provide them with clearer instructions amid their ongoing deliberations.

Depp’s attorneys argued that Heard’s attorney Benjamin Rottenborn told the jury its final verdict in the case would send a message to “every victim of domestic abuse everywhere.”

Johnny Depp and Amber Heard in the courtroom for closing arguments at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Virginia on Friday, May 27, 2022.
(AP Photos/Steve Helber, Pool)

The language could potentially shift the jurors to weigh in on domestic violence as a social issue and away from the facts of the case, Depp’s attorney’s argued.

JURORS DISMISSED TUESDAY WITHOUT REACHING A VERDICT IN JOHNNY DEPP V. AMBER HEARD: LIVE UPDATES

“Such argument by Ms. Heard’s counsel improperly invites the jury to decide the case ‘based on passion and prejudice’ and a specific jury instruction is necessary to cure this impropriety,” they said.

Johnny Depp waves to supporters as he departs the Fairfax County Courthouse Friday, May 27, 2022, in Virginia.
(AP Photo/Craig Hudson)

The statement in question came during the closing arguments when Rottenborn told the jury that a ruling against Heard “sends a message that no matter what you do as an abuse victim, you always have to do more.”

ELON MUSK WEIGHS IN ON DEPP-HEARD TRIAL: ‘I HOPE THEY BOTH MOVE ON’

“No matter how honest you are about your own imperfections and your own shortcomings in a relationship, you have to be perfect in order for people to believe you. Don’t send that message,” Rottenborn said.

In response, Judge Azcarate told Depp’s attorneys she would not entertain the motion as the jury had already started its deliberations.

Amber Heard departs the Fairfax County Courthouse Friday, May 27, 2022 in Virginia.
(AP Photo/Craig Hudson)

KATE MOSS ATTENDS JOHNNY DEPP’S CONCERT IN LONDON

The jury has deliberated for nine hours across two days and is set to resume on Wednesday.

Depp is seeking $50 million in the case as he claims Heard libeled him when she called herself “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” Heard is seeking $100 million in a countersuit as she claims Depp and his legal team have called her allegations a hoax.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Johnny Depp calls ex-wife Amber Heard’s allegations “unbelievably brutal, cruel, and all false” in return to stand in libel trial

Editor’s note: Some testimony contains graphic language and descriptions of sexual and physical assault.

Johnny Depp called his ex-wife’s accusations of sexual and physical abuse “insane” Wednesday as he returned to the witness stand in his libel suit against Amber Heard.

“Ridiculous, humiliating, ludicrous, painful, savage, unbelievably brutal, cruel, and all false,” Depp said when asked about his reaction to hearing Heard’s allegations when she testified earlier in the trial.

Actor Johnny Depp testifies in the courtroom in the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Va., Wednesday, May 25, 2022. 

Evelyn Hockstein / AP


Depp was testifying Wednesday as a rebuttal witness – both he and Heard each testified extensively earlier in the trial.

He gave some specific responses to some of the particular allegations levied by Heard and also her sister, Whitney Henriquez, who provided some of Heard’s strongest corroborating testimony.

He concluded the questioning by his attorneys with a final denial of the allegations.

“I have never in my life committed sexual battery, physical abuse, all these outlandish, outrageous stories of me committing these things,” he said. “And living with it for six years, and waiting to be able to bring the truth out.”

He said that “no matter what happens I did get here and I did tell the truth and I have spoken up for what I’ve been carrying on my back, reluctantly, for six years.”

In cross-examining Depp, Heard’s lawyers took aim at that claim, quizzing the actor about his earlier lawsuit against the U.K.’s Sun newspaper, which referred to him as a “wifebeater.” Depp lost that defamation case.

Heard’s attorney, J. Benjamin Rottenborn, also read text messages between Depp and his assistant in which he used vulgar terms to refer to a woman’s sexual organs and said “I NEED. I WANT. I TAKE.” Depp called the idea that he had written if he wanted to be with a woman sexually, she was rightfully his, “ludicrous.”

“You can pull up what you like, I’ve never said those words. There’s not enough hubris in me,” he told Heard’s attorney, suggesting the text was doctored or someone might have commandeered his phone. “That’s quite grotesque.”

Depp is suing Heard in Fairfax County Circuit Court over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” His lawyers say he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name.

Depp has denied he ever struck Heard, and says she was the abuser in the relationship. Heard has testified about more than a dozen separate instances of physical abuse she says she suffered at Depp’s hands.

Depp also disputed a claim made by Heard that Depp had nothing to do with getting her a role in the superhero blockbuster “Aquaman.” When Heard testified, she was clearly offended by a question from Depp’s lawyers insinuating Depp got her the role.

Depp, though, said that after Heard auditioned for the role, he talked to the studio on her behalf. He was barred from discussing the details of his conversations when Heard’s lawyers objected, but said that “ultimately she did get the job, so hopefully, I suppose, I had curbed their worries to some degree.”

On cross-examination, though, jurors saw a text message sent after Heard filed for divorce in which Depp told his sister, “I want her replaced in that WB (Warner Bros.) film.”

Still, when Heard’s lawyer asked Depp whether he tried to get Heard fired from “Aquaman,” he denied it. He said instead that he just felt duty-bound to let the studio know “that it was going to end up ugly” if they kept Heard in the film.

Also Wednesday, supermodel Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of Depp, denied that she had ever been pushed or assaulted by Depp during the course of their relationship.

Model Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of actor Johnny Depp, is sworn in to testify via video link during Depp’s defamation trial against his ex-wife Amber Heard, at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Virginia, May 25, 2022.

Evelyn Hockstein / Reuters


Moss also testified as a rebuttal witness. Heard, in her testimony, made a reference to Moss and a rumor that Depp had pushed Moss down a set of stairs when they dated.

Moss, in testimony provided by video link, said Depp never assaulted her. She said she did once slip down a flight of stairs after a rainstorm at a Jamaican resort, and that Depp came to her aid.

She testified for less than 5 minutes and was not cross-examined.

Depp also addressed the accusation in his testimony, saying it happened just as Moss said. He said he’d told the story about Moss to Heard years ago and “Ms. Heard took the story and turned it into a very ugly incident, all in her mind.”

Read original article here

Depp retakes witness stand, calls Heard’s allegations insane

FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) — Johnny Depp called his ex-wife’s accusations of sexual and physical abuse “insane” Wednesday as he returned to the witness stand in his libel suit against Amber Heard.

“Ridiculous, humiliating, ludicrous, painful, savage, unbelievably brutal, cruel, and all false,” Depp said when asked about his reaction to hearing Heard’s allegations when she testified earlier in the trial.

Depp was testifying Wednesday as a rebuttal witness — both he and Heard each testified extensively earlier in the trial.

He gave some specific responses to some of the particular allegations levied by Heard and also her sister, Whitney Henriquez, who provided some of Heard’s strongest corroborating testimony.

He concluded his testimony with a final denial of the allegations.

“I have never in my life committed sexual battery, physical abuse, all these outlandish, outrageous stories of me committing these things,” he said. “And living with it for six years, and waiting to be able to bring the truth out.”

He said that “no matter what happens I did get here and I did tell the truth and I have spoken up for what I’ve been carrying on my back, reluctantly, for six years.”

On cross-examination, jurors saw text messages from Depp’s phone to his assistant in which he used vulgar terms to refer to a woman’s sexual organs and said “I NEED. I WANT. I TAKE.”

When Heard’s lawyers asked whether the text message shows Depp believes he can claim ownership rights over a woman he desires, Depp denied he wrote the message.

“I don’t have that kind of hubris,” he said, suggesting the text was doctored or someone might have commandeered his phone. “That’s quite grotesque.”

Depp is suing Heard in Fairfax County Circuit Court over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” His lawyers say he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name.

Depp has denied he ever struck Heard and says she was the abuser in the relationship. Heard has testified about more than a dozen separate instances of physical abuse she says she suffered at Depp’s hands.

Depp also disputed a claim made by Heard that Depp had nothing to do with getting her a role in the superhero blockbuster “Aquaman.” When Heard testified, she was clearly offended by a question from Depp’s lawyers insinuating Depp got her the role.

Depp, though, said that after Heard auditioned for the role, he talked to the studio on her behalf. He was barred from discussing the details of his conversations when Heard’s lawyers objected, but said that “ultimately she did get the job, so hopefully, I suppose, I had curbed their worries to some degree.”

On cross-examination, though, jurors saw a text message sent after Heard filed for divorce in which Depp told his sister “I want her replaced in that WB (Warner Bros.) film.”

Still, when Heard’s lawyer, J. Benjamin Rottenborn, asked Depp whether he tried to get Heard fired from “Aquaman,” he denied it. He said instead that he just felt duty-bound to let the studio know “that it was going to end up ugly” if they kept Heard in the film.

Also Wednesday, supermodel Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of Depp, denied that she had ever been pushed or assaulted by Depp during the course of their relationship.

Moss also testified as a rebuttal witness. Heard, in her testimony, made a reference to Moss and a rumor that Depp had pushed Moss down a set of stairs when they dated.

Moss, in testimony provided by video link, said Depp never assaulted her. She said she did once slip down a flight of stairs after a rainstorm at a Jamaican resort, and that Depp came to her aid.

She testified for less than 5 minutes and was not cross-examined.

Depp also addressed the accusation in his testimony, saying it happened just as Moss said. He said he’d told the story about Moss to Heard years ago and “Ms. Heard took the story and turned it into a very ugly incident, all in her mind.”

Read original article here

Amber Heard’s attorneys rest case as civil trial continues

Editor’s note: Some testimony contains graphic language and descriptions of sexual and physical assault.

The civil trial between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard continued Tuesday as Heard’s legal team rested its case. The trial in Depp’s $50 million lawsuit and Heard’s $100 million counterclaim is in its sixth week.

Judge Penney Azcarate rejected a motion from Depp’s attorneys to toss out a $100 million counterclaim she filed against Depp. The counterclaim alleges Depp’s then-lawyer, Adam Waldman, defamed Heard when he called her abuse allegations a hoax.

Azcarate said the bar for tossing out a claim before it goes to the jury is exceedingly high, and said there is enough evidence to allow it to go forward. She had already ruled Depp could be held responsible for statements made by his lawyer, a principle Depp’s team disputes.

Depp is suing Heard for libel in Fairfax County Circuit Court over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” His lawyers say he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name.

CBS News has confirmed Depp’s team is expected to call supermodel Kate Moss, who dated Depp in the 1990s. Earlier, Heard testified that during a 2015 fight she recalled an alleged incident of Depp pushing Moss down a staircase. That opened the door for Depp’s attorneys to call Moss to the stand. 

Depp has denied he ever struck Heard, and says she was the abuser in the relationship. Heard has testified about more than a dozen separate instances of physical abuse she says she suffered at Depp’s hands.

Also Tuesday, Walter Hamara, the president of DC Films, testified that Amber Heard lacked chemistry with “Aquaman” star Jason Momoa, and the studio considered replacing her for the blockbuster’s sequel, “Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom,” slated to be released next spring.

Hamara said in court: “It’s like what makes a movie star a movie star? You know it when you see it. And the chemistry wasn’t there.”

Hamara’s testimony is in contrast to Heard’s lawyers claim that her role was scaled back and almost cut completely from the sequel because of public backlash to her abuse allegations against Depp. 

Depp’s attorneys also called the actor’s hand doctor Dr. David A. Kulber to the stand. Heard’s attorneys called a hand surgeon who had not treated Depp who testified the star’s injury to his finger was unlikely to have occurred as he claimed. 

Wayne Dennison, Depp’s attorney’s also sought to discredit expert Dr. David Spiegel, who was called by Heard’s legal team and said during earlier testimony that he had not personally spoken with or evaluated Depp, but that he had reviewed depositions, medical records, video and other evidence.

Dennison questioned whether Spiegel could accurate assess Depp without ever having spoken to him. He also noted that the doctor referred to Depp as an idiot during a taped deposition.

“So I’m thinking back, where was he coming in from Europe for a deposition, video deposition that he gave and he took a overnight, the night before,” said Spiegel. “And what I think I said was that … if you’re going to do a major thing for a trial that you’re involved with, I think you’d be an idiot to come in the night before.”

Dennison also questioned why Spiegel felt that Depp’s use of an earpiece on movie sets was a sign of cognitive problems.

“Maybe Hollywood stars get lines fed to them through earpieces all the time. And I don’t know, That could be said,” said Spiegel. “It sounded to me to be unusual, if you’re doing a movie and you don’t know the lines. But as you said, I’m just judging, you know, what I do with lectures and that would never happen.”

While it had been reported Heard’s attorneys would call Depp as a witness Monday, they did not do so. Depp’s attorneys are planning to recall the star to the stand ahead of closing arguments Friday.

Both Depp and Heard have each testified extensively already about details of their toxic relationship.

Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site