The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Depp finishes 4 days on stand in his lawsuit to ‘fight back’

- By Matthew Barakat

FAIRFAX, VA. » Actor Johnny Depp concluded a grueling four days on the witness stand Monday, telling jurors in a calm voice that he filed his libel lawsuit against his ex-wife because it was his best chance to reclaim his reputation, just hours after they heard audio clips of him berating his wife with coarse vulgaritie­s.

“It was the only time I was able to fight back and use my own voice,” Depp said of his decision to sue Amber Heard for a 2018 op-ed piece in The Washington Post in which she refers to herself as “a public figure representi­ng domestic abuse.”

He continued to deny that he ever hit Heard, and accused her of hitting him and throwing items including paint cans and vodka bottles at him. And jurors heard an audio clip of a conversati­on between Depp and Heard in which she seems to taunt him and suggests he won’t be believed or respected if he were to publicly cast her as an abuser.

“Tell them, I, Johnny Depp, I’m a victim of domestic abuse ... and see how many people believe or side with you,” Heard says on the recording.

Earlier Monday, though, they heard recordings in which Depp referred to the violence that could ensue if their arguments were allowed to escalate.

“The next move, if I don’t walk away ... it’s going to be a bloodbath, like it was on the island,” Depp says on the recording.

In other clips, Depp loudly shouts vulgaritie­s at his wife, calling her a degrading name and yelling, “You stupid f—-” at her.

Depp winced on the stand as one of the clips was played; Heard appeared to fight back tears at several points as she listened to the recordings.

Heard’s op-ed never mentions Depp by name, but he argues that he was defamed nonetheles­s because parts of the piece clearly refer to allegation­s of abuse she made in 2016 when she filed for divorce and obtained a temporary restrainin­g order.

The clips were part of a lengthy cross-examinatio­n of Depp that began last week and concluded late Monday morning.

Heard’s lawyers focused throughout the cross-examinatio­n on Depp’s drinking, drug use and charged interactio­ns with Heard during their relationsh­ip.

During Monday’s crossexami­nation, Depp actually said very little. Most of the questionin­g consisted of Heard’s lawyer playing audio clips or reading vulgar text messages sent by Depp and asking Depp if he’d read them correctly.

Throughout the cross-examinatio­n, Depp showed his displeasur­e with Rottenborn’s questions. When Rottenborn interrupte­d one response, Depp said, “I was talking.” When Rottenborn said he considered the question to be fully answered, Depp responded, “as long as you’re happy.”

Depp also expressed disapprova­l as Rottenborn read headlines from a series of negative articles written about the actor, some dating back to 2014.

“These are all hit pieces. These are dreck,” Depp said.

Rottenborn introduced the articles to try to demonstrat­e that it was Depp’s long history of bad behavior, not the 2018 Post article, that damaged his reputation.

While the libel lawsuit is supposed to center on whether Depp was defamed in the article, most of the trial has focused on ugly details of the couple’s brief marriage. Heard’s attorneys say Depp physically and sexually abused her and that Depp’s denials lack merit because he was often drunk and high to the point of blacking out.

On redirect Monday afternoon, Depp sought to explain some of his coarse language. He said he was often speaking figurative­ly or making inside jokes with friends, but added, “I’m ashamed that that has to be spread on the world like peanut butter.”

And he again denied that he cut off his own finger during a fight with Heard, even though he told people as much at the time. He now says the finger was severed when Heard threw a vodka bottle at him.

“Why would I start lopping off digits in my 50s?” he said, showing his right hand to the jury. “I can’t take responsibi­lity for what I now call Little Richard, my chopped finger.”

The jury has seen dozens of Depp’s texts to friends regarding his drinking, drug use and interactio­ns with his then-wife, as well as his notes of contrition to Heard and her father.

He called the drug addiction accusation­s against him “grossly embellishe­d,” though he acknowledg­ed taking many drugs.

Depp says the Post article contribute­d to an unfairly ruined reputation that made him a Hollywood outcast and cost him his role in the lucrative “Pirates of the Caribbean” movie franchise. Heard’s attorneys say only Depp is to blame for his marred career.

 ?? STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Actor Johnny Depp testifies in the courtroom at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Va., on Monday.
STEVE HELBER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Actor Johnny Depp testifies in the courtroom at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Va., on Monday.

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