The Guardian (USA)

Amber Heard evaluation revealed two personalit­y disorders, psychologi­st says

- Edward Helmore

An expert in intimate partner violence called to give evidence in Johnny Depp’s defamation lawsuit against Amber Heard has testified that her evaluation of the actor revealed two psychiatri­c diagnoses – borderline personalit­y disorder and histrionic personalit­y disorder.

Depp’s witness, Shannon Curry, said that the diagnosis came from examinatio­n of Heard’s previous psychologi­cal assessment­s, coupled with direct examinatio­n on two occasions, and participat­ion in a Minnesota Multiphasi­c Personalit­y Inventory (MMPI) test, a court in Alexandria, Virginia, heard on Tuesday.

Curry said that Heard, 36, displayed a “reactive”, “overly dramatic presentati­on” and used words like “magical” and “wonderful” to describe events. Heard, she said, flitted between “princess and victim”.

As sophistica­ted, “cute and girlish” as such people may present, Curry said, they “may in reality be very destructiv­e”, “dramatic, erratic and unpredicta­ble” and possessed of an “underlying drive to not be abandoned but also to be center of attention”.

Curry said borderline personalit­y disorder represente­d an unstable personalit­y, alert to rejection, with little access to self-regulation and marked by “a lot of anger, cruelty toward people less powerful, concerned with image, attention seeking and prone to externaliz­ing blame, a lot of suppressed anger that may explode outwards”.

Anyone attempting an intimate relationsh­ip with such a personalit­y, Curry said, would likely go from “idolized to dumpster”. It was typical of borderline personalit­ies, she added, to be “assaultive as partners. They’ll make threats using the legal system, threaten to file for a restrainin­g order, claim abuse.”

The doctor referred to Raquel Pennington, a mixed martial artist and friend of Heard. Heard allegedly punched Pennington, who lived rentfree in the Depp-Heard five penthouse complex, on a shopping trip. Curry said that people with borderline personalit­ies can devalue friends quickly.

The testimony on the forensic psychologi­cal evaluation of Heard – which the defendant would have to have agreed to have aired in court – came during the ninth day of the trial in which Depp is suing his former wife for defamation after she wrote an article describing herself as a survivor of domestic abuse during their marriage. Depp, 58, claims Heard abused him.

The court has been presented with witnesses’ recollecti­on of the couple’s disputes and investigat­ed for their observatio­ns of the relationsh­ip dynamics that underpinne­d them, as each side attempts to establish for the jury the probabilit­y of their version of events.

Earlier on Tuesday, Tara Roberts, the manager of Depp’s residence on an island in the Exuma chain of the Bahamas, testified that she witnessed a dispute between the couple during which “Amber was telling him he was a washed-up actor going to die a fat, lonely old man”.

Moments later, as Depp attempted to leave, Heard was observed “hugging and kissing” the actor as his wife “begged him to return”. Roberts said Depp “stood there with his arms by his side. He didn’t do anything”. She later noticed that Depp had a “mark across the bridge of his nose”, she said.

The housekeepe­r disputed she had ever seen Depp “passed out drunk” but acknowledg­ed he had once fallen out of a hammock and had been found lying beneath it. After that incident, Roberts said, she arranged for Heard and Depp, and Depp’s children from his marriage to Vanessa Paradis, Lily Rose and Jack, to leave the island.

Throughout the trial, jurors have heard from a number of medical and mental health profession­als.

Heard has claimed that she suffers from PTSD as a result of alleged abuse she faced from Depp. But on Tuesday afternoon, Curry claimed that PTSD is one of easiest psychologi­cal conditions to fake.

Rounding out witnesses on Tuesday was Los Angeles police officer Melissa Saenz, who testified about visiting the Los Angeles penthouse in May 2016, just days before Heard filed for divorce and showed up at a courthouse to seek a restrainin­g order with a large mark on her face that she says came from a fight with Depp that night.

Officer Saenz said in a recorded deposition that she could see that Heard had been crying but saw no evidence of an injury. Depp’s lawyers say Saenz’s testimony is evidence that Heard faked her injury to damage Depp’s reputation.

The trial continues.

 ?? Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? Amber Heard in court in Virginia on Tuesday. Depp is suing his former wife for defamation after she accused him of domestic abuse.
Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images Amber Heard in court in Virginia on Tuesday. Depp is suing his former wife for defamation after she accused him of domestic abuse.

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