New York Post

'ARGUMENTS' END AT LAST

Wrap Depp & Heard's vicious history

- By ELIZABETH ROSNER in Fairfax, Va., and SNEJANA FARBEROV and BEN KESSLEN in New York bkesslen@nypost.com

Johnny Depp’s lawyers blasted his ex-wife Amber Heard as the real “abuser in the courtroom,” where the jury heard final pitches from both sides Friday before beginning deliberati­ons in the case.

“There is an abuser in this courtroom, but it is not Mr. Depp,” lawyer Camille Vasquez said. “Ms. Heard is in fact the abuser, and Mr. Depp is the abused.”

After six weeks of grueling and often harrowing testimony, Judge Penney Azcarate sent the seven jurors to deliberate at 2:57 p.m.

The Virginia jury deliberate­d for two hours and went home for the long holiday weekend without reaching a verdict. It will reconvene on Tuesday at 9 a.m.

Depp, 58, sued Heard for $50 million over her 2018 Washington Post essay in which she wrote about facing “our culture’s wrath” as a “public figure representi­ng domestic abuse.” He said even though the piece did not name him, it sullied his reputation and cost him eight figures in potential earnings.

Heard fired back with a $100 million countersui­t, arguing that 2020 statements that she fabricated her domestic-abuse claims given to the press by Depp’s lawyer Adam Waldman destroyed her career and made her life hell.

Azcarate gave each side two hours to summarize the seemingly never-ending testimony that took the jury on a tour of the doomed couple’s relationsh­ip and traversed continents, movie sets and Depp’s slew of homes.

The jury must decide on both suits concurrent­ly, meaning it can find both Depp and Heard guilty, only one of them guilty or both not guilty. It’s unclear if and how much money they will determine to award either plaintiff.

‘Deeply troubled’

Vasquez insisted in her closing arguments that Heard made up the abuse allegation­s because she’s a “deeply troubled person” desperate for attention.

She claimed Heard ruined Depp’s life on May 27, 2016, “by falsely telling the world she was a survivor of domestic abuse at the hands of Mr. Depp.

“Today, on May 27, 2022, exactly six years later, we asked you to give Mr. Depp his life back by telling the world that Mr. Depp is not the abuser Ms. Heard said he is and hold Ms. Heard accountabl­e for her lies,” she continued.

“The mountain of evidence that Mr. Depp abused Ms. Heard is simply not there. What we have is a mountain of unproven allegation­s that are wild, over-the-top and implausibl­e,” Vasquez told the jury.

“And you can’t pick and choose which of these wild allegation­s to believe and which ones to disregard. You either believe all of it or not.

“Either Mr. Depp sexually assaulted Ms. Heard with a bottle in Australia or Ms. Heard got up on that stand in front of all of you and made up that horrific tale of abuse.”

After Vasquez wrapped up her portion of closing arguments, she turned it over to her colleague Ben Chew, who began by recapping Depp’s difficult childhood in Kentucky and his rise to global fame while struggling with substance abuse.

“Mr. Depp is no saint, and he’s never claimed to be one,” Chew told the court. “He has made mistakes in his life as we’ve all had.”

Heard’s team went next, with her lawyer Ben Rottenborn telling the jury Friday that “if Amber was abused by Mr. Depp even one time, then she wins.”

“And we’re not just talking about physical abuse,” he said. It also included “emotional abuse, psychologi­cal abuse, financial abuse, sexual abuse.”

He argued that Depp’s true self had been revealed in court through the vulgar texts he sent about his wife, in which he fantasized about her “rotting corpse.”

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