Western Mail

Hollywood star tells court of drug use at ‘very young age’

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

JOHNNY Depp has told a High Court judge how his drug use started “at a very young age”, beginning when he took one of his mother’s “nerve pills”.

The Hollywood actor said his mother used to ask him to bring her the pills and he took one after realising at around the age of 11 they were “calming her nerves”.

In cross-examinatio­n on the first day of his libel action against The Sun newspaper, Mr Depp, 57, also said the flipside of wealth and fame was being “forced to live a life of a fugitive”.

Mr Depp is suing The Sun’s publisher News Group Newspapers (NGN) and its executive editor Dan Wootton over an article which called him a “wife beater” and referred to “overwhelmi­ng evidence” that he attacked his ex-wife Amber Heard, 34, during their relationsh­ip – which he strenuousl­y denies.

He has been called as the first witness in the high-profile trial in London, which is being heard by Mr Justice Nicol.

Sasha Wass QC, barrister for NGN, asked Mr Depp if it was true that he “found drugs and alcohol” early in his life, which Mr Depp agreed with.

The actor explained how he began taking drugs in his youth “at a very young age, when it was not a particular­ly stable or secure home life.

He added: “My mother used to ask me to go and get her ‘nerve pills’ and I think I was around the age of 11 that it dawned on me that ‘nerve pills’ were calming her nerves, so I brought her her nerve pills and I took one and that began [my drug use].”

Mr Depp said it was “the only way that I found to numb the pain”.

The barrister suggested Mr Depp’s fame and wealth had given him “a lot of freedom”, to which he replied that “the other side of that coin, you are, in a way, forced to live a life of a fugitive”.

“Anonymity doesn’t exist anymore anywhere,” he explained.

During the cross-examinatio­n, which lasted around two hours, Ms Wass argued there was a “nasty” side to Mr Depp’s character, later suggesting he “regularly engaged in destructiv­e and violent behaviour”, which the actor denied.

Mr Depp and Ms Heard both arrived at the Royal Courts of Justice in London yesterday wearing face coverings, with more than 30 photograph­ers waiting outside the entrance.

In a written outline of the star’s case, his barrister David Sherborne said the article made “defamatory allegation­s of the utmost seriousnes­s” against Mr Depp, accusing him of committing serious assaults on Ms

Heard and “inflicting such serious injuries that she feared for her life”.

The actor’s case against NGN and Mr Wootton arises out of the publicatio­n of an article on The Sun’s website on April 27, 2018 with the headline “Gone Potty: How can JK Rowling be ‘genuinely happy’ casting wife beater Johnny Depp in the new Fantastic Beasts film?”

The words “wife beater” were removed from the headline the following morning and were not used in the print edition, but Mr Depp says the article still caused “serious harm to his personal and profession­al reputation” and “significan­t distress and embarrassm­ent”.

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star denies ever having been violent to Ms Heard, and claims the article included quotes from alleged victims of disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein in order to “finish his career” by linking the allegation­s against him to the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements.

NGN is defending the article as true and says Mr Depp was “controllin­g and verbally and physically abusive towards Ms Heard, particular­ly when he was under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs” between early 2013 and May 2016, when the couple split.

Last week, Mr Depp failed in a lastminute bid to stop his ex-wife attending until she is called to give evidence.

The court is expected to hear evidence by video link from Mr Depp’s former partners, actresses Vanessa Paradis and Winona Ryder, who both say he was never violent to them, as well as Ms Heard’s friends, who claim they were present when Mr Depp was abusive.

The trial, expected to last three weeks, was originally due to start in March but was delayed by the Covid19 pandemic and is now going to occupy five courtrooms to ensure social distancing.

A separate libel claim brought by Mr Depp against Ms Heard in the US – over a December 2018 column in the Washington Post which said the actress received “the full force of our culture’s wrath for women who speak out” but did not mention Mr Depp by name – is due to begin next January.

The pair met on the set of 2011 comedy-drama The Rum Diary – based on a novel by Mr Depp’s friend, Hunter S Thompson, whom he played in the 1998 film Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas – and began living together in 2012 before marrying in Los Angeles in February 2015.

Ms Heard obtained a restrainin­g order against Mr Depp in LA shortly after the couple split in 2016 and donated her $7m (£5.5m) divorce settlement to charity.

The case continues.

 ??  ?? > Actor Johnny Depp arrives at the High Court
> Actor Johnny Depp arrives at the High Court
 ??  ?? > Actress Amber Heard arrives at the High Court
> Actress Amber Heard arrives at the High Court

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