Amber Heard 'stole' my rape survival story and 'twisted it into her own story to benefit herself', says her fired personal assistant who says she was raped at knife point

  • Heard's former PA accused the actress of 'stealing' her own story of being the victim of sexual violence
  • Personal assistant Kate James chose to break her anonymity by submitting a statement in High Court today
  • It declares that she was violently raped at knife point when aged 26 while she was travelling in Brazil
  • Ms James claimed that Johnny Depp's ex-wife subsequently 'twisted it into her own story to benefit herself'

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Amber Heard's former personal assistant accused the actress of 'stealing' her own harrowing story of being the victim of sexual violence - and 'twisting' it for her own benefit.

Kate James chose to break her anonymity by submitting a statement in the High Court declaring that she was violently raped at knife point when aged 26 while she was travelling in Brazil and that Johnny Depp's ex-wife subsequently 'twisted it into her own story to benefit herself'.  

Ms James worked as Heard's PA between March 2012 until February 2015. She claimed that in 2013, she confided in the actress about what happened to her and her battle to overcome her experience.

She was giving evidence to Johnny Depp's blockbuster libel trial against The Sun in London as he accuses the newspaper of falsely branding him a 'wife beater.' 

James told the court that Heard asked to hear her story of surviving sexual violence, and as they spoke in her office, Heard suggested that Ms James should buy a gun to which she responded that she saw herself as a 'rape survivor' and not a 'rape victim'.

In her statement, parts of which were read out in court, Ms James revealed that she only received documents related to the High Court libel hearing last month.

She adds: 'As I perused the documents, much to my utter shock and dismay, I discovered that Ms Heard had in fact stolen my sexual violence conversation with her and twisted it into her own story to benefit herself.  

'This of course caused me extreme distress and outrage that she would dare to attempt to use the most harrowing experience of my life as her own narrative.'

In other developments in court today:  

  • Johnny Depp said he wanted to DNA test faeces to determine its origin and said Amber Heard 'left a whooper poo on my bed' after she allegedly defecated on their marital bed following a row
  • Depp told Heard he wanted a divorce over the faces after a dramatic conference call in which assistant said she had told him it was a 'harmless prank' 
  • A dramatic photograph was today released of the carnage left at a property in Australia after Amber Heard and Johnny Depp had a huge fight which resulted in the actor's finger being partially severed
  •  The photograph shows blood spattered on the floor and smashed glass, but the phone handset that Heard claims Depp smashed and cut off his finger with while attacking her is intact
  • Amber Heard ignored warnings that it was illegal to smuggle her dogs into Australia, and tried to get an assistant to lie about it under oath to clear her 
  •  Estate manager Ben King said he found Depp's fingertip while clearing up following the row in Australia;
  • Claims over urine in the flat were contested as the Sun's barrister told of paint and graffiti left on the walls;
  • Mr King saw cuts on Heard's arms and suggested she 'should put her sleeve down' after the finger incident;
  • The estate manager also said he was never told the couple's dogs 'had been brought into Australia illegally'; 
  • Winona Ryder will later give evidence and has already claimied Depp was 'never, never abusive towards me';
  • Actress Katherine Kendall will appear and says she has 'heard several times' that Heard was abusive to Depp.
Amber Heard (right) in Los Angeles with assistant Kate James (left) on September 27, 2012

Amber Heard (right) in Los Angeles with assistant Kate James (left) on September 27, 2012

Johnny Depp
Amber Heard

Johnny Depp (left, leaving the High Court this afternoon) is suing The Sun's publisher over an article which alleged he was violent towards ex-wife Amber Heard (right, leaving the court today)

Scene where assistant found Depp's severed finger: The carnage in a property in Australia after Depp and Heard allegedly had a fight in 2015, which was released today as part of Ben King's evidence. The picture shows an undamaged phone handset, with Mr King insisting ' I did not see any phones which had been broken', despite Heard's claims that he smashed it against a wall and cut off his fingertip while attacking her

Scene where assistant found Depp's severed finger: The carnage in a property in Australia after Depp and Heard allegedly had a fight in 2015, which was released today as part of Ben King's evidence. The picture shows an undamaged phone handset, with Mr King insisting ' I did not see any phones which had been broken', despite Heard's claims that he smashed it against a wall and cut off his fingertip while attacking her

Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Kate James, Amber Heard's former assistant, giving evidence via video link at the High Court in London today

Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Kate James, Amber Heard's former assistant, giving evidence via video link at the High Court in London today

As they spoke in her office, Heard suggested that Ms James should buy a gun to which she responded that she saw herself as a 'rape survivor' and not a 'rape victim'.

In her statement, parts of which were read out in court, Ms James revealed that she only received documents related to the High Court libel hearing last month.

She adds: 'As I perused the documents, much to my utter shock and dismay, I discovered that Ms Heard had in fact stolen my sexual violence conversation with her and twisted it into her own story to benefit herself. 

'This of course caused me extreme distress and outrage that she would dare to attempt to use the most harrowing experience of my life as her own narrative.' 

When asked by Sasha Wass, representing the Sun in Johnny Depp's libel trial, why she was giving evidence Ms James declared: 'I'm a sexual violence survivor and it's very serious to take that stance if you are not one and I am one and that's the reason I'm here because I take offence.'

When further questioned by Depp's lawyer David Sherborne, Ms James added: 'Amber Heard referred to conversations about me being raped in Brazil. She twisted it into her own story, she used it for her own use.'

Ms James earlier told the court that Heard would drink 'vast quantities of red wine' each night and then subject her to a 'barrage' of abusive texts.

She added: 'I knew she drank wine because when I would go (to her house) in the morning there would be a lot of bottles there. I would also receive a barrage of drunken, incoherent abusive text messages between the hours of 2-4 in the morning.'

Ms James, who has been a PA to a number of notable figures in the entertainment industry, described Ms Heard as the 'least famous person' she has ever worked for.

Ms James also claimed Heard drank 'vast quantities of red wine each night' and would only allow Depp to drink non-alcoholic beer. 

Ms James, who worked for Heard for three years until 2015, said in a statement to London's High Court that she would be asked to buy the 0 per cent beer for Depp.

She added that she 'never saw any physical violence' by either Heard or Depp, despite visiting her house in Los Angeles almost every day including on weekends. 

And she praised Depp for being 'calm and quite shy' as well as 'always thoughtful and kind and a genuinely decent person' who taught her son how to play guitar. 

Heard was already dating Depp when Ms Jones first started working for her in March 2012, but she claimed the actress only referred to him as 'dating this old man'.

Heard later said it was Depp, and Ms Jones said her first impression was of a 'softly spoken and peaceful' man who was 'very pleasant and courteous upon meeting me'.

Ms James added that she never saw any bruising or swelling on Heard despite often seeing her naked or semi-naked when she was getting dressed or at fittings.

Amber Heard has rubbished accusations that she defecated in Johnny Depp's bed, as bombshell photographs of faeces at the centre of their bitter court row were made public for the first time

Amber Heard has rubbished accusations that she defecated in Johnny Depp's bed, as bombshell photographs of faeces at the centre of their bitter court row were made public for the first time

Ms James also wrote about when Heard drafted a letter to US Homeland Security allegedly falsely claiming her set assistant Savannah McMillan was just a friend.

It came after British Ms McMillan was held in immigration and questioned about how often she had been coming and going from the US despite being on a tourist visa.

Johnny Depp v The Sun: Key issues in libel trial 

Hollywood star Johnny Depp's libel claim against The Sun enters its second week on Monday. These are the key issues the trial judge, Mr Justice Nicol, has to determine.

- Whether the April 2018 article by the tabloid's executive editor Dan Wootton was defamatory of Depp. Under the Defamation Act 2013, a statement is not defamatory unless its publication causes 'serious harm to the reputation of the claimant'.

- The Sun's publisher, News Group Newspapers (NGN), is defending the claim and relying on a defence of truth. It is for the publisher to prove that the allegations made in the article are 'substantially true'.

- The meaning of the article, which is defined as what it would mean to the 'reasonable reader', will have to be determined by the judge. But NGN's lawyers say the differences between the rival meanings contended by each side are 'not significant' and the outcome of the case will therefore not turn on meaning.

- Depp's case is that the article bore the meaning that he was 'guilty, on overwhelming evidence, of serious domestic violence against his then wife, causing significant injury and leading to her fearing for her life, for which he was constrained to pay no less than £5 million to compensate her, and which resulted in him being subjected to a continuing court restraining order; and for that reason is not fit to work in the film industry'. He strenuously denies the allegations and claims he 'has never hit or committed any acts of physical violence against Ms Heard'.

- The meaning which NGN will seek to prove is true is that the Claimant beat his wife Amber Heard, causing her to suffer significant injury and on occasion leading her to fearing for her life. They rely on 14 separate allegations of violence and allege more generally that Depp was 'controlling and verbally and physically abusive' towards Ms Heard, particularly when he was under the influence of alcohol and or drugs, throughout their relationship. NGN's lawyers say an important issue for the judge to decide will be what substances Depp was using during the relationship. They contend that he frequently lost control of himself, partly because of his heavy drug and alcohol use, and also that his memory has been impaired by his heavy use of drugs.

- If Depp wins his case, the judge will have to decide what level of compensation he should receive for the harm to his reputation and for the 'distress, hurt and humiliation caused'. There is an upper limit on general damages for libel of £300,000 to £325,000. However, if he succeeds, Depp may also be entitled to aggravated damages. The actor is also asking for a final injunction against NGN, who his legal team say 'have retained the article on their website and maintained their allegation to the bitter end'.

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Heard allegedly wanted Ms James to send the letter in which she said claims Ms McMillan was working unlawfully were 'entirely false'.

The actress wrote: 'Savannah McMillen is a personal friend, and to my knowledge, has never worked unlawfully or otherwise in the United States. Or for me.'

But in Ms James's court statement released today, she said: 'I knew this to be untrue, and that Amber was therefore wilfully lying to the US immigration department'.

Ms James took a photo of the letter and what she said was one of the paycheques from Heard to Ms McMillan, which she also included in her evidence submission.

Ms James gave evidence by video link from Los Angeles during the case at the High Court in London today.

Ms Wass referred her to an email sent by Ms Heard to Ms James on May 10 2014, which she said was around the time Ms Heard was 'working on a film called The Adderall Diaries' with James Franco in New York.

The email read: 'Hi there. Can you please do me a favour? Can you please be sure you don't send Nathan (Holmes) and Christi (Dembrowski) or anyone on Johnny's team the one liner of my schedule?'

Ms James explained that the 'one liner' was something which 'describes in one line the scene that's going to be shot'.

The email continued: 'I don't want them to see a one liner ... that mentions anything romantic or anything that could (cause) Johnny to lose it.'

Ms Wass asked: 'Did you understand that Ms Heard was concerned that Mr Depp would become either upset or angry if he was made aware of romantic scenes between Ms Heard and the leading man of the film?'

Ms James replied: 'I feel like it was more of an insurance policy because she had history with James Franco that was negative, at least she described it as negative. She described him as being sexually aggressive towards her in a previous film.'

She added that there was 'some confusion' that she wanted to work with 'someone she described as rapey and sexually aggressive and so I imagine that's why she wrote that.'

Ms Wass asked why Ms James used the 'exact same word' - 'rapey' - to describe Mr Franco and asked: 'Have you spoken to Mr Depp or anyone acting for Mr Depp?'

Ms James said: 'I have not spoken to Mr Depp in many years.' She said she thought it was 'at least five years' since she spoke to the actor.

Ms Wass then read a text from Depp to Ms James sent on August 13 2016, which read: 'Thank you sweetheart. I'm disgusted that I f****** touched that scum. Back on Tuesday and then court.

'Will hit you when I get back ... come for a spot of purple and we will fix her flabby ass nice and good. Loveth, J.'

Ms Wass said: 'It appears from that that Mr Depp contacted you a few days before his divorce came through.'

Ms James said: 'I had forgotten because I don't save text messages and that was many phones ago.'

She added that the reference to 'a spot of purple' probably meant red wine, and agreed with Ms Wass that Depp had texted her 'out of the blue'.

During a tense exchange, Ms Wass said: 'I am suggesting to you that either Mr Depp or somebody acting for him had you put your heads together to give false evidence in this case.' Ms James replied: 'Well that is simply not true.'

Johnny Depp wanted to DNA test faeces to determine its origin and said Amber Heard 'left a whooper poo on my bed' 

The court also heard today that Johnny Depp wanted to DNA test faeces to determine its origin and said Amber Heard 'left a whooper poo on my bed' before telling her he wanted a divorce over it during a conference call with his assistant.

Kevin Murphy, who worked for Depp for eight years until 2016, said Heard had dismissed the so-called 'defecation incident' as a 'harmless prank' shortly after it took place following her 30th birthday party in April that year.

Days later on May 21, Mr Murphy received a phone call from both Depp and Heard on speakerphone in which the actor asked him to repeat what he had already told him about what happened at their Los Angeles penthouse. 

Mr Murphy said in a submission to the High Court in London revealed today: 'I then relayed to Ms Heard, again, that (housekeeper Hilda) Vargas had discovered faeces on top of the bed sheet in Mr Depp's and Ms Heard's bed. 

'I also repeated that Ms Heard had admitted that she was responsible for what she referred to as a 'harmless prank'. Ms Heard yelled and called me 'a f***ing liar'' multiple times. I asked her to stop yelling and swearing at me and overheard Mr Depp in the background saying 'please don't speak to him that way. Be respectful'. 

'I then heard Mr Depp say he couldn't do this anymore and wanted a divorce. When Ms Heard would not stop yelling, I hung up the telephone. I received multiple additional telephone calls from the same number in the minutes that followed, but I did not answer them.' 

Depp was allegedly so incensed at the excrement that he considered getting it DNA tested to establish who had left it. He wrote in one text to a friend: 'My wife left a whooper poo on my bed' and referred to her as 'Amber Turd'. 

Meanwhile Mr Murphy also said Heard threatened him that his job was under threat if he did not make a statement exonerating her of blame for taking the couple's Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo into Australia illegally in May 2015 and putting it down to errors committed by him and Heard's assistant Kate James. 

The court also heard that Boo had 'a number of difficulties with toilet training', and Heard had texted Mr Murphy to say: 'I'm worried she's got brain damage. She can't seem to predict or control when she uses the bathroom. Last night she s**t ON Johnny while he was sleeping, like all over him. Not exaggerating.' 

It comes as another of the actor's former estate managers, Ben King, told the court that Heard travelled with a 'large number of cases of wine', regularly drank two bottles a night and started most of the arguments with Depp.

Mr King also said Heard was the 'antagoniser' in her relationship with Depp, often 'goading' and attempting to provoke him, and they argued 'like schoolchildren', with rows starting from 'banal beginnings' before escalating.

The court has been told how Depp tried to write Heard's name in urine across the floor of an Australian mansion, allegedly yelling: 'I need to take a f***ing p***, it's my house', following an apparent row in March 2015.

But Depp has claimed he would have been prevented from doing so by his finger which was severed during the mayhem - and Mr King denied noticing any signs of urine when he cleaned up the wreckage later on. 

Depp is suing the Sun's publisher News Group Newspapers (NGN) and its executive editor Dan Wootton over an April 2018 article which alleged he was violent towards ex-wife Amber Heard during their relationship. 

On another day of dramatic evidence at the Royal Courts of Justice in London this morning, the court heard:

Johnny Depp today
Amber Heard today

Johnny Depp (left, outside the High Court this morning) is suing The Sun's publisher over an April 2018 article which alleged he was violent towards ex-wife Amber Heard (right, at the court also today) during their tumultuous relationship.

Depp, 57, and Heard, 34, met on the set of the 2011 comedy "The Rum Diary" and married in Los Angeles in February 2015. They are pictured at the film's premiere in London in November 2011

Depp, 57, and Heard, 34, met on the set of the 2011 comedy 'The Rum Diary' and married in Los Angeles in February 2015. They are pictured at the film's premiere in London in November 2011

Mr Murphy gave evidence today by videolink from Chicago. Sasha Wass QC, for NGN, said: 'You had a working relationship with Ms Heard... but your employer, your paymaster, was Mr Depp?' Mr Murphy said that was correct.

Ms Wass said: 'Your relationship with Ms Heard was such that you would not have expected her to share details of her personal life with you, would you?'

Mr Murphy said he did not know if Heard was the type of person who 'would share personal things or not'. Ms Wass then asked: 'Mr Depp would complain about Ms Heard to you?' 

When Mr Murphy said that was correct, Ms Wass said: 'So, in effect, you were given one side of the story.' Mr Murphy said: 'I didn't hear anything from Amber.'

Heard 'asked estate manager to lie under oath about illegally bringing dogs into Australia' 

Ms Wass then asked Mr Murphy about his witness statement, in which he claims that Amber Heard asked him to ask her former assistant, Kate James, 'to lie under oath to the Australian court prosecuting Ms Heard' for bringing dogs into Australia illegally in April 2015.

The barrister referred to an email sent by an American lawyer called Marty Singer to Heard in October 2015, which read: 'If you could get Kate to sign a statement, it could be helpful.

'I don't know what your relationship with her is at this time since you fired her. You will have to be careful that she will co-operate and not go public if you ask her not to be truthful,' it said.

Ms Wass said that the first mention of 'untruthfulness' in relation to the Australian criminal proceedings was made by Mr Singer and asked if Mr Murphy agreed. Mr Murphy replied: 'No, because I had had conversations with Amber prior to that.'

Ms Wass continued: 'The issue of the dogs illegally entering into Australia would have been a problem for Mr Depp?' Mr Murphy said he agreed.

She added: 'Mr Depp's visa into Australia could have been affected if he had been charged with an offence arising out of the illegal entry into Australia of his dog?' Mr Murphy replied: 'I don't know the answer to that.'

Heard felt she was 'above the law', former personal assistant today alleged  

Ms James, who was fired by the actress in February 2015, claimed Ms Heard 'did not care about throwing anyone under the bus, if it meant saving her own skin'.

In her first witness statement, submitted to the court in Johnny Depp's libel action against The Sun newspaper, Ms James said she had been asked by Ms Heard in September 2014 to send a letter the actress had drafted to Homeland Security officials in the US about a woman named Savannah McMillan.

She claimed Ms Heard, 34, had hired the woman to work as a set assistant.

Ms James said in her written statement: 'Savannah, a British citizen, had been held in immigration and questioned about the frequency that she had been coming and going from the USA.

'In Amber's letter, she called it fraudulent that it was being alleged that Savannah was working for Amber unlawfully.

'She (Ms Heard) said that, as Savannah's 'friend', she could 'say truthfully and unequivocally that this allegation is entirely false ... I would like to go on the record saying that Savannah McMillan is a personal friend, and to my knowledge, has never worked unlawfully or otherwise in the United States. Or for me.'

Ms James alleged in her statement that she 'knew this to be untrue' and 'Amber was therefore wilfully lying to the US immigration department'.

She added that she took a photo of the letter and a pay cheque from Ms Heard to Ms McMillan.

Her statement also referred to the episode when Ms Heard faced criminal proceedings over her dogs entering Australia illegally.

She claimed she had attempted to talk to Ms Heard about a date discrepancy in the time needed for the dogs' immigration process, but said the actress's eyes 'would glaze over and she would walk away'.

Ms James alleged Ms Heard 'chose to ignore' her and Mr Depp's then estate manager, Kevin Murphy.

'She deliberately smuggled the dogs into Australia,' Ms James said in her statement, adding: 'As in several circumstances which I observed, it was as if she felt that she was above the law.'

Ms James said she had been told about a discussion in which the actress is alleged to have considered asking Mr Murphy to ask her to sign a statement supporting Ms Heard's position that 'she (Ms Heard) did not know the dogs were not ready to be taken into Australia'.

The witness statement said: 'The fact that she was willing to ask me to sign such a statement under oath... is a reflection of her approach to me... in general.

'She did not care about throwing anyone under the bus, if it meant saving her own skin.' 

Pirates Of The Caribbean filming had been delayed because Depp's finger was severed

Ms Wass said that Mr Depp's filming of the Pirates Of The Caribbean sequel 'had already been interrupted in 2015 (because of) an incident in which his finger was damaged'.

The barrister said that 'the last thing Mr Depp wanted was any interruptions' so he would 'be able to fulfil his contract'.

Ms Wass also said the illegal entry into Australia of the two dogs came to light after 'somebody posted something on social media'.

She suggested that 'when this came to light... Mr Depp arranged that his lawyer in America, Marty Singer, dealt with this'. Mr Murphy replied: 'I don't know the answer to that.'

Heard was accused of forcing Depp's staff to lie on her behalf after she was charged with bringing their Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo into Australia illegally.

Estate manager says job was under threat if he did not make a statement exonerating Heard

Mr Murphy said Heard threatened him that his job was under threat if he did not make a statement exonerating her of blame for taking the dogs to Australia in May 2015 and putting it down to errors committed by him and Ms James.

In 2016, Heard and Depp recorded a video apologising for taking their Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo into Australia illegally

Heard took the dogs to Australia when she went to visit Depp, who was filming Pirates of the Caribbean at the time. Mr Murphy said that he also lied because he did not want to oppose Heard. 

Amber Heard 'IGNORED warnings that it was illegal to smuggle her dogs into Australia and then forced assistant to lie about it under oath or face sack' 

Amber Heard was 'repeatedly' told it would be illegal for her to take her two dogs with her to Australia, a former Johnny Depp employee has claimed.

Kevin Murphy, who worked for the Pirates Of The Caribbean star for almost eight years, alleged Ms Heard, 34, 'demanded' he make a false statement about the animals being 'smuggled' into the country.

He also claimed Ms Heard asked him to contact her former assistant, Kate James, and ask her to 'lie under oath' to an Australian court.

In October 2015, Ms Heard faced criminal proceedings in Australia for taking the couple's two Yorkshire Terriers, Pistol and Boo, into the country illegally.

She and Mr Depp, 57, recorded a now infamous video in 2016 apologising for doing so.

In a written witness statement submitted as part of Mr Depp's libel case against News Group Newspapers (NGN), Mr Murphy, who worked as an estate manager for the Hollywood actor until 2016, claimed that on October 11 and 12, 2015, Ms Heard asked him to contact Ms James and 'ask Ms James to lie under oath to the Australian court prosecuting Ms Heard'.

A photograph of Amber Heard's pet Yorkshire Terriers Pistol and Boo, which has been referred to as an exhibit in the hearing of Johnny Depp's libel case against the publishers of The Sun

A photograph of Amber Heard's pet Yorkshire Terriers Pistol and Boo, which has been referred to as an exhibit in the hearing of Johnny Depp's libel case against the publishers of The Sun

He said: 'Specifically, Ms Heard wanted Ms James to give a false statement that Ms Heard was unaware that it would be illegal for her to bring her dogs into Australia.

'Ms Heard was aware that this was illegal, because I had informed her repeatedly by email, telephone and in person.'

Mr Murphy alleged he had told Ms Heard he was 'uncomfortable' with giving a false statement to the court and that 'he would not ask Ms James to do so'.

In his written statement, Mr Murphy also said that shortly after this, Ms Heard 'demanded verbally that I myself make a false witness statement regarding the dogs' illegal entrance into Australia'.

He said: 'I expressed that I was extremely uncomfortable with doing so, to which Ms Heard responded with words to the effect of: 'Well I want your help on this ... I wouldn't want you to have a problem with your job'.

'Ms Heard's threatening language made me feel anxious and uneasy.

'As stated above, I had instructed Ms Heard on a number of occasions by email, telephone and in person that she could not take the dogs to Australia because the relevant paperwork and permits were not complete and the required ten-day quarantine arrangements had not been put in place.'

Mr Murphy claimed he told Ms Heard the penalties for taking animals into Australia without following the correct procedures 'could be severe'.

In a second witness statement, Mr Murphy said he was 'shocked' to learn that Ms Heard had taken the dogs to Australia, 'despite our discussions and my warnings of severe legal ramifications'.

He alleged that he co-operated with Ms Heard's request to provide her with a statement supporting her account for the Australian authorities, saying: 'I felt extreme pressure to co-operate, despite knowing this would involve being untruthful.'

Mr Murphy said that on October 13, 2015, he signed a declaration on the circumstances in which the dogs were taken into Australia, claiming this was prepared by Ms Heard's US lawyer.

'That declaration contained statements that were not entirely truthful,' he said.

Mr Murphy said in his written statement that in May 2016, after Ms Heard filed for divorce from Mr Depp, he sought legal advice over the declaration and retracting it.

'I felt I could take this step at this time because Ms Heard no longer had control or influence over my job,' he said. 'This was my attempt to right a wrong.'

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After news of the dogs being in Australia became public, Depp and Heard were given 72 hours to send Pistol and Boo back to the US, with officials warning that the dogs would otherwise be euthanised.

In April 2016 in an Australian court, Heard received a $1,000 fine and a one-month good behaviour bond after pleading guilty to one count of falsifying border protection documents when entering the country with the dogs.

Australian prosecutors dropped more serious charges of illegal animal importation which could have resulted in Heard being imprisoned for ten years. Heard and Depp then recorded a now-infamous video apologising for their actions.

Heard allegedly told manager: 'I wouldn't want you to have a problem with your job' 

Mr Murphy alleged that when Heard asked him to provide a false statement she told him: 'Well I want your help on this… I wouldn't want you to have a problem with your job.'

Mr Murphy told the court that travelling with the dogs was always something that Heard wanted and not Depp. He added: 'Johnny never wanted the dogs to travel, it was only Amber who wanted to the dogs to travel.'

Ms Wass told the court that the dogs were as much Depp's responsibility as Heard's but that she was being blamed for what has been dubbed the dog episode to 'discredit her.'

Referring to Mr Murphy's allegation that Heard ordered him to lie, Ms Wass said: 'She never asked you to lie. I suggest that you are lying. You have represented this (issue of the dogs) in a misleading way in an attempt to discredit Miss Heard.'

Ms Wass asked Mr Murphy: 'Ms Heard never asked you to make a false statement in the Australian proceedings relating to the dogs?' Mr Murphy replied: 'That's incorrect.'

Ms Wass continued that Mr Murphy's evidence was that Heard 'threatened' him and said to him: 'I want your help on this. I wouldn't want you to have a problem with your job.'

The barrister said: 'Ms Heard, I suggest, never said that to you at any stage... I suggest you lied in that witness statement.' Mr Murphy said: 'I completely disagree.'

Ms Wass continued: 'Because your evidence on that point is that Ms Heard wanted you to commit perjury?' Mr Murphy replied: 'That's correct.' Ms Wass said: 'Would you commit perjury if somebody asked you?' He replied: 'I would not.'

Ms Wass then pointed out that Mr Murphy did give a false statement to the Australian court, which was not mentioned in his first statement and was only referred to in his second witness statement, filed in June.

The barrister said: 'It (the omission from the first witness statement) was intentional and it was deliberately misleading on your part.' Mr Murphy said: 'I wouldn't agree with that.'

Ms Wass took Mr Murphy through the declaration he gave to the Australian court, which said that it was 'a household policy to arrange all the necessary travel-related paperwork' for the dogs to travel with Mr Depp and Ms Heard.

Mr Murphy also said that he would 'only inform Mr Depp or (Ms Heard)' if the paperwork could not be obtained.

'Johnny never wanted the dogs to travel', says Depp's aide

Asked by Ms Wass whether that was true, Mr Murphy said it was not 'completely' true, adding: 'Johnny never wanted the dogs to travel; it was always Amber who wanted the dogs to travel.'

Ms Wass said: 'Mr Depp was as keen for the dogs to go to Australia as Ms Heard was?' Mr Murphy replied: 'That's incorrect, ma'am.'

Asked why he made a false statement, Mr Murphy said he did it because of 'the threat of losing my job or having trouble with my job'.

Ms Wass said: 'Your evidence is that you were being asked not only to commit perjury in a witness statement, but committing perjury, or potentially having to commit perjury, in a court after having sworn to the truth. That's what you are saying Ms Heard asked you to do?' 

Mr Murphy said: 'That's correct.' Ms Wass continued: 'It is a really serious thing, isn't it, lying on oath.'

She said Mr Depp was 'very loyal' and 'approachable', and asked: 'Why on earth did you not go to Mr Depp to ask him to intervene rather than just lying on oath?' Mr Murphy replied: 'Because Amber wielded a lot of power and would have made my life miserable.'

Ms Wass asked Mr Murphy how Heard could have made his life 'miserable' while working for her and Depp. Mr Murphy said: 'I think there's many ways that she could have, by being subversive, saying negative things to Johnny.

'I think if you imagine yourself and your own employer, what somebody in power over you could do to you, I think you would understand.'

Ms Wass suggested: 'Mr Depp would have intervened if this was a false statement that you were being asked to make?' Mr Murphy replied: 'I didn't feel like that was an option.'

Mr Murphy later said that his false statement was 'written for me by Marty Singer and Amber Heard'. Ms Wass asked: 'Where was this statement made?'

Mr Murphy said: 'In conversations with me, Amber had explained that it was her idea to place the blame on Kate (James, Ms Heard's former assistant) as she was no longer working there.

'However, as things progressed and the charges in Australia were so severe, she also need additional back-up and that was me. I believe that she targeted Kate first and then it was me second.'

Ms Wass said: 'You are now admitting that you committed perjury in Australia as a result of something your boss's wife asked you to do?' Mr Murphy said: 'That's correct.'

Ms Wass then suggested that it would be 'much easier... to commit perjury as a result of what your boss asked to do'. Mr Murphy said: 'It wouldn't, no, because Johnny's never asked me to lie.'

Ms Wass said Mr Murphy's witness statements in the present proceedings contained 'a number of lies that you have made in order to assist Mr Depp and discredit Ms Heard'. Mr Murphy denied that was the case.

Ms Wass put to Mr Murphy that Heard and Depp were 'equally involved' in their pet dogs Pistol and Boo being taken to Australia.

Mr Murphy said: 'No that is not true, Johnny never wanted the dogs to travel and that is why Amber's name is on the paperwork.'

The court was then played a clip of Depp appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live! in September 2015, in which the actor discussed the dogs incident with the chat show host.

Ms Wass suggested that Depp took 'joint responsibility' for taking the dogs illegally into Australia.

The court was then played a video Depp and Heard recorded after the incident, in which they apologised for taking their pets into the country.

Ms Wass put it to Mr Murphy that Depp 'knew exactly what was going on with the dogs' and had arranged for legal representation, to which Mr Murphy responded: 'I don't agree.'

She then read out a text sent by Depp to Heard on April 20, 2016, and she told the court the Australian legal action over the dogs was concluded on April 18.

The text message read: 'How many times can I be apologise (sic) for the same f****** thing? What is it with you? I have been by your side for every drama ... how do you think the goddamn felony charges went away?'

Amber Heard and girlfriend Bianca Butti were seen shopping in London following a day in court
The duo strolled around Oxford Street before they were accompanied by her sister Whitney and personal assistant

Amber Heard and her girlfriend Bianca Butti were seen shopping in London last night following a day in court

Ms Wass asked: 'Were there any other felony charges?' To which Mr Murphy replied: 'I don't know.'

A clip of Depp banging cupboard doors and pouring red wine was again played to the court. Ms Wass asked if Mr Depp had a 'problem with alcohol', to which Mr Murphy said: 'Yes.'

Ms Wass then said: 'He would drink to excess and behave in a way that we have just seen in that clip?'

Mr Murphy said he disagreed, before adding: 'Even in the clip, he seemed very angry at the cabinets and then he was angry at Amber for trying to film him.'

After lunch, Ms Wass showed Mr Murphy a series of photos taken in Depp and Heard's LA penthouse in March 2015, which showed a clothes rail which had apparently been thrown down the stairs and shelves which had been knocked over.

The barrister also read a text sent by Heard's sister, Whitney Henriquez, to Mr Murphy which read: 'Good morning, sir. So, um, Johnny destroyed Amber's closet.' Ms Henriquez also said: 'Insanity. Just f****** insanity.'

Ms Wass then referred to an encounter with Heard on December 16 2015, the day after Depp is said to have attacked his ex-wife.

The barrister said: 'This is the day you were told by Ms Heard that she had been assaulted by Mr Depp.' Mr Murphy said: 'The moment that I walked in the door, Amber called to me.'

He added that he went upstairs and Heard told him that Depp had hit her in the face and pulled out some of her hair.

Mr Murphy said: 'I remember her pointing to a tuft of hair and saying that 'this is the hair that Johnny pulled out'. I remember her pointing at the bed and saying 'this is where Johnny broke the bed'.'

He continued: 'There were no marks, no bruising, no redness (on Ms Heard).'

Ms Wass then showed Mr Murphy photos of Ms Heard, dated December 16 2015, which showed her with marks on her face. The barrister asked: 'Is that how Ms Heard looked to you when you saw her?'

Mr Murphy replied: 'When I saw her, I saw no bruises, no redness, no scratches, no signs of any physical abuse or confrontation.' Ms Wass suggested that Mr Murphy was lying to 'try to absolve Mr Depp from the accusations he faces'. Mr Murphy said: 'That's incorrect, ma'am.'

Ms Wass then moved on to the 'defecation incident', when faeces were found in the couple's bed after Heard's 30th birthday party in April 2016.

The barrister said: 'You were aware that, as far as Mr Depp's dog Boo was concerned, Boo had a number of difficulties with toilet training.' Mr Murphy replied: 'I did, but not in the bed.'

He added: 'I don't think it was about the training, it was about the follow through.'

Ms Wass then read out a text conversation between Ms Heard and Mr Murphy in October 2014, in which Mr Murphy suggested putting Boo with a dog trainer which he said was a 'good training environment'.

Ms Heard replied: 'I'm worried she's got brain damage. She can't seem to predict or control when she uses the bathroom. Last night she s**t ON Johnny while he was sleeping, like all over him. Not exaggerating.'

Ms Wass asked if Mr Murphy reported the faeces in the bed to Mr Depp after his housekeeper, Ms Vargas, had informed him about it.

Mr Murphy said: 'I believe at the time Johnny was busy, had a busy day or the day after, and I sent a photo to his security person who was with him, Sean Bett, and he showed it to Johnny.'

Ms Wass asked about Mr Murphy's witness statement, in which he said he later spoke to Depp who was 'sullen and disgusted'. Mr Murphy also said in his statement: 'At that stage, I believe he suggested getting the faeces DNA tested to see where they had come from.'

Ms Wass then read out a text sent by Depp shortly after the incident which read: 'It brings a smile to the face.' Ms Wass said Depp said in another message that 'my wife left a whopper poop on my bed' and 'then he says 'Amber Turd''.

She said: 'In fact, it appears from those texts that Mr Depp found the subject quite amusing.' Mr Murphy replied: 'I believe he is being sarcastic, I would not agree with that, no.'

Ms Wass then asked if Mr Depp had a 'slightly lavatorial sense of humour'. Mr Murphy said he did not think he did.

Ms Wass asked if Mr Murphy reported the faeces in the bed to Mr Depp after his housekeeper, Ms Vargas, had informed him about it.

Mr Murphy said: 'I believe at the time Johnny was busy, had a busy day or the day after, and I sent a photo to his security person who was with him, Sean Bett, and he showed it to Johnny.'

Ms Wass asked about Mr Murphy's witness statement, in which he said he later spoke to Depp who was 'sullen and disgusted'. Mr Murphy also said in his statement: 'At that stage, I believe he suggested getting the faeces DNA tested to see where they had come from.'

Ms Wass then read out a text sent by Depp shortly after the incident which read: 'It brings a smile to the face.' Ms Wass said Depp said in another message that 'my wife left a whopper poop on my bed' and 'then he says 'Amber Turd''.

She said: 'In fact, it appears from those texts that Mr Depp found the subject quite amusing.' Mr Murphy replied: 'I believe he is being sarcastic, I would not agree with that, no.'

Ms Wass then asked if Mr Depp had a 'slightly lavatorial sense of humour'. Mr Murphy said he did not think he did.

Ms Wass put it to Mr Murphy that a conversation he claims to have had with Heard in which the actress claimed faeces found on her bed was 'just a harmless prank' in fact 'never took place'.

He said: 'I can assure you that it did.'

Ms Wass said: 'This detail of the case has been an attempt to make Ms Heard appear disgusting and absurd in the public eye.'

Mr Murphy replied: 'It is just the truth.'

Ms Wass then asked about a series of text messages between Mr Murphy and Depp, in which Mr Murphy claimed that Heard's photographs of the aftermath of an alleged incident in the couple's LA penthouse were different from the ones he took at that time.

The barrister said: 'You are suggesting that there is some sort of conspiracy.'

Mr Murphy said: 'Well I am not suggesting, I think that it is a hoax.'

Ms Wass said: 'You, Mr Waldman (Mr Depp's US attorney) and Mr Depp have, between you, concocted this story that Amber's (allegations) of domestic abuse is a hoax, that is what you have done altogether.' Mr Murphy said: 'No I disagree with that.'

David Sherborne, Depp's barrister, asked Mr Murphy about a text message sent to him by the actor in which he offered his 'profound thanks' and referred to wanting to 'rid this fraud of the ability to hurt all womankind'.

Mr Murphy said Depp felt that Heard's allegations were 'not only a fraud against him, but a fraud against women in general'. Mr Sherborne said: 'Because?' To which Mr Murphy replied: 'Because Johnny would never hit a woman.'

The barrister then said: 'Were you saying anywhere in those texts that you were going to give evidence that was untrue?' To which Mr Murphy replied: 'No.'

Mr Sherborne asked: 'Did you believe that Ms Heard was telling the truth when she said that Mr Depp hit her?' Mr Murphy said: 'No, she was not.'

Mr Sherborne referred to an email exchange between Heard and Mr Murphy in which he had told her the dogs could not fly to Australia unless they went in the cargo hold and Heard did not want them to fly that way.

Mr Murphy told the court: 'She (Ms Heard) wanted Kate (James) to make a statement saying that Kate messed up the paperwork, didn't give the right paperwork, something to that effect.'

Mr Sherborne asked: 'And did Ms James make that statement?' Mr Murphy said 'no' and when asked what happened he said: 'I didn't ask her.'

The barrister said: 'Why didn't you ask her, Mr Murphy?' To which Mr Murphy replied: 'I refused.'

Mr Sherborne referred to a statement Mr Murphy made in the Australia dogs case, asking what did Heard tell him she wanted him to say.

Mr Murphy said: 'She wanted me to say, essentially, that it was my fault in one way or another that the paperwork wasn't completed, so that I could take the blame for her.'

Mr Sherborne asked Mr Murphy about his evidence that he was 'scared of what Ms Heard would do because she wielded the power in the relationship'. Mr Murphy replied: 'Yes, I said she was in a position of power, yes.'

Mr Sherborne said: 'She could subvert your relationship with Johnny ... did you think she would follow through with what you said was the threat or not?' Mr Murphy said: 'Yes, I thought she would follow through.'

The barrister also asked about the false statement he made to the Australian court and whether he was 'happy' to sign it. 

Mr Murphy said he was not. He added: 'Once ... Amber had filed for divorce and I knew she didn't have any power over me, I hired an attorney to get me to retract my declaration.' Mr Murphy confirmed that he had paid for the attorney himself.

Mr Sherborne then referred to the photos Mr Murphy was shown with marks on Heard's face, and asked: 'Had you seen Heard looking the way those photos appear to suggest, would you have said in your statement that there were no marks, bruises, cuts, redness or swelling?'

Mr Murphy said: 'If I would have seen signs of physical abuse, I would have said so.'

Mr Sherborne then asked about Mr Murphy's evidence that Mr Depp was being 'sarcastic' when he said he found the faeces in the bed funny.

Mr Murphy said: 'I saw when I told him about the faeces, he was very upset, depressed ... surprised. He was not joking at that moment.'

Asked if Heard described the incident as a 'harmless prank' to him, Mr Murphy said: 'She certainly did.'

Mr Sherborne then said: 'Final question - did you have to come here to give evidence for Mr Depp and be accused of lying under oath?' Mr Murphy replied: 'I definitely did not have to come here.'

Housekeeper was 'horrified and disgusted' to find 'a large pile of faeces' in the bed

Yesterday, Depp's housekeeper Hilda Vargas said in a witness statement submitted to the court that she was 'horrified and disgusted' to find 'a large pile of faeces' in the bed the actor shared with Heard.

Ms Vargas claimed it was 'clear' that the excrement was human, saying she knew they could not have come from the couple's two small dogs. Heard claims one of the two small Yorkshire terriers, Pistol and Boo, were responsible.

Pirates of the Caribbean star Depp has told the court it was 'a mystery' who defecated in the bed, adding he was 'convinced' Ms Heard 'or one of her cohort' was involved in the so-called 'defecation incident'.

In her written statement, Ms Vargas, who has worked for Mr Depp for more than 30 years, said she arrived at the apartment at around 3pm on April 22, 2016, and had just finishing washing dishes and vacuuming when she heard another cleaning lady call out and she joined her in the master bedroom.

'She was pointing to the bed and told me that she couldn't believe what she had found,' Ms Vargas said. 'I pulled back the top sheet on the bed and saw a large pile of faeces.

'I was horrified and disgusted. It was clear to me that this was human faeces. I knew that the faeces could not have come from either of Mr Depp's or Ms Heard's two small dogs. 

'I have cleaned up after those dogs many times and their faeces are much smaller. Further, I have never known those dogs to defecate in the bed.'

Heard (front centre) is pictured arriving at the High Court in London this morning with her girlfriend Bianca Butti (rear left, wearing a mask), her lawyer Jennifer Robinson (in the red dress) and her sister Whitney Heard (front right)

Heard (front centre) is pictured arriving at the High Court in London this morning with her girlfriend Bianca Butti (rear left, wearing a mask), her lawyer Jennifer Robinson (in the red dress) and her sister Whitney Heard (front right)

Ms Vargas said in her statement that she took photos of the faeces in the bed, before washing and changing the sheets. She later told Mr Murphy what she had found because she was 'so angry'.

Ms Vargas said that on May 24, 2016, she was working at Depp's West Hollywood home when Heard arrived with her friend Raquel Pennington.

The housekeeper claimed Ms Heard called her over and told her the photos she had taken of the faeces in the bed 'had destroyed her marriage'.

Ms Vargas said: 'I was very nervous and so I apologised, even I did not believe that their marital problems were my fault or that I had done anything wrong.

'I also told Ms Heard that the faeces were there, that there was nothing I could do. Ms Heard argued with me saying that there were no faeces in the bed.

'I, again, said that the faeces were there, that they were large and smelled awful. Ms Heard continued to disagree with me, but I wanted to end the conversation as quickly as possible.'

In her statement, Ms Vargas also said she had 'often' heard Heard 'yell at Mr Depp and at other people'. She alleged: 'She has a bad temper in my opinion, and I did not want her to yell at me.

'On the contrary, in the over 30 years I have worked for Mr Depp, I have never seen Mr Depp be physical with or yell at anyone.'

Also giving evidence was Mr King, who released a photograph of the carnage left at a property in Australia in March 2015 after the couple were said to have had a fight which resulted in Depp's finger being partially severed.

Mr King found the severed finger as he cleared up the mess after the fight in which Depp says Heard cut it off by throwing a bottle of vodka at him, while Heard claims Depp severed it while smashing a phone as he attacked her.

Mr King's picture shows an undamaged phone handset, with the aide insisting 'I did not see any phones which had been broken', despite Heard's claims that he smashed it against a wall and cut off his fingertip while attacking her.

The estate manager also said the couple's rows 'could start from very banal beginnings' and they would be 'like school children', claiming Heard was the 'antagoniser and more aggressive' and Depp was 'always polite'. 

Mr King, who worked as Depp's estate manager in Australia, London and Vancouver, Canada for three periods between 2014 and 2016, gave evidence at the High Court this morning as Depp's sensational libel trial continues.

He also said Heard appeared to instigate most fights that he heard, saying: 'On one occasion in London, I recall Ms Heard complained that Mr Depp had removed his hand from hers. The argument then carried on and escalated seriously. I saw Ms Heard as the antagoniser. Mr Depp seemed keen to walk out of, or away from, arguments.'

The court was also told about notes left around the house after arguments when the couple were in London during their tempestuous relationship, in which Mr Depp would write: 'Let's not do that again, I love you.' 

Today, Sasha Wass QC, representing NGN, asked Mr King about his second witness statement - filed on Monday - and which said that Heard 'drank two bottles of wine a night and was taking medication'. 

Amber Heard today
Amber Heard today

Amber Heard arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in London this morning for legal proceedings to continue

Ms Wass spoke about the clean-up operation in the aftermath of the incident in Australia in 2015, during which Mr Depp sustained a severed finger.

Estate manager says he found Depp's fingertip while clearing up following row in Australia

The barrister asked if Mr King had the task of trying to find the missing tip of the actor's finger, to which he replied: 'It was mentioned that it may be somewhere and when I was clearing up I found it.'

Ms Wass then referred to an image, introduced into evidence, of part of the house where the couple were staying in Australia after the incident. She said there is a telephone visible in the photograph, and asked if there were any other photographs of a 'wall telephone' which Mr Depp had admitted ripping off the wall.

Mr King said: 'I don't recall a phone having been ripped off the wall, or having to replace a wall telephone.' Ms Wass asked Mr King if there was any 'urine on the floor' in the house in Australia, to which he said there was not.

Claims over urine in the flat are contested as barrister tells of paint and graffiti on the walls

The barrister said that 'there was a lot of paint' and graffiti on the walls, which she said read: 'Billy Bob Thornton, Amber Easy'. She asked: 'Amongst all this blood and paint, you say you are sure that there was no urine.'

Mr King replied: 'Quite sure.' Ms Wass asked: 'How can you be so sure?' Mr King said that he later returned to the house to 'chaperone' a professional cleaning team and they 'didn't mention anything'. 

He said in his witness statement: 'I did not see any signs of urine, and I did not smell it, as I would have done had someone urinated around the house.'

Mr King said that it took him '12 or 13 hours' to clean up after their fight which took place in a luxury mansion, they were staying in. The damage included broken glass, blood, liquid spillages, broken china and a smashed television. He also revealed that he also cleared graffiti from mirrors and walls in the house.

Depp alleges that the top of his finger was 'lopped' off when Heard threw a vodka bottle at him after discovering he wanted her to sign a post-nuptial agreement. Heard claims that he sustained the injury during a savage attack on her in which she 'feared for her life'.

Ms Wass has already told the court that Depp is alleged to have caused $100,000 worth of damage to the house and subjected Heard to a three-day ordeal of physical assault which left her with injuries including a broken lip, swollen nose, and cuts all over her body.

Depp (pictured outside the High Court today) is suing The Sun's publisher News Group Newspapers and its executive editor

Ms Wass then asked about Mr King finding the top of Depp's finger after it had been cut off, which he said was near the bar area. Depp claims his ex-wife Heard threw a vodka bottle at him, slicing off the top of his middle finger.

The 14 times Johnny Depp is accused of attacking Amber Heard 

1. Early 2013

Heard says Depp was completely sober until early 2013, and around that time he allegedly hit her for the first time when they were in Los Angeles.

She claims Depp later cried and apologised, telling her that he sometimes turns into 'the monster' when he snaps.

Depp has 'expressly denied' hitting Heard and said that, around early 2013, he had 'confined himself to drinking wine and using marijuana, having been sober from around December 2011 to August 2012'.

2. March 8, 2013

Heard claims Depp was angry she had hung up a painting by her ex-partner Tasya Van Ree by her bed in her LA home, then tried to set the painting on fire and hit her 'so hard that blood from her lip ended up on the wall'.

Depp, however, says he simply asked Heard to move the painting from the bedroom 'as a courtesy' and that she had an 'extreme reaction'.

He also says a text he later sent describing the evening as a 'disco bloodbath' was to 'placate Ms Heard' and not an apology for alleged violence.

3. June 2013

Heard and Depp were in Hicksville, US with a group of people including Heard's sister Whitney and Depp's assistant Nathan Holmes.

Heard says Depp, who was 'taking drugs', became 'enraged' and 'jealous' when one of her friends touched her, and he then threw glasses at her, ripped her dress and damaged the cabin they were staying in.

Depp says he drank and took magic mushrooms, as did Heard and her friends who also took MDMA.

He claims Heard's friend touched Heard in an 'extremely sexual manner' and he spoke to her to ask her to stop.

4. May 24, 2014

The pair took a private plan from Boston to LA: Heard says that during the flight Depp, who had been drinking heavily, threw objects at her, pushed a chair at her, slapped her and kicked her in the back before passing out in the toilet.

Depp says Heard 'began to harangue him' as he was sketching in a notebook, he then tried to 'playfully tap her on the bottom with his foot', at which Heard took 'great offence' and 'continued to verbally berate' him.

5. August 17, 2014

The couple went to the Bahamas, Depp says to 'cure his dependence on painkillers', although Heard claims he was trying to give up other drugs too.

Heard says Depp had 'several manic episodes' and his private doctor had to be flown over to help. She alleges that he slapped, kicked and grabbed by the hair during an attack.

Depp alleges Heard stopped a nurse from giving him treatment while he was going through withdrawal.

6. December 17, 2014

Heard says Depp was 'violent towards' her in LA, and later texted calling himself a 'f****** savage' and a 'lunatic'.  Depp denies any allegation of violence and says NGN has 'failed to provide any particulars of the alleged violence'.

7. January 25, 2015

While the couple were in Tokyo, Japan, Heard claims Depp shoved and slapped her and grabbed her by the hair, before standing over her and shouting while she was on the floor - which Mr Depp denies.

8. Around March 3-5, 2015

Depp is said to have repeatedly assaulted Heard after an argument over his alleged use of MDMA during a three-day trip to Australia. She says he stayed up all night, taking pills and drinking, and then attacked her again the next morning.

Heard says, the following night, Depp pushed her into a table tennis table, tore off her nightgown and attacked her, before smashing a telephone into a wall and severing the top of his middle finger.

She also claims he had written messages to her around the house in a mixture of paint and blood from his finger, which Depp admits doing while 'in shock', as well as having 'urinated all over the house in an attempt to write messages', which he denies.

Depp says Heard was in 'a prolonged and extreme rage' following an argument over a post-nuptial agreement. He says he then 'broke my sobriety' with several glass of vodka, before Heard threw a bottle at him, severing the top of his finger, and stubbed a cigarette out on his cheek.

9. March 2015

Heard says Depp became 'enraged' when they were in LA with her sister and began destroying things in the house before hitting her 'hard and repeatedly'. She also claims he tried to push her sister down the stairs before hitting Heard again.

Depp, however, says Heard was 'berating him in a rage' as he tried to leave, threw a can of Red Bull at him and punched him in the face before he finally left.

10. August 2015

While they were on the Eastern and Oriental Express in south east Asia, Heard alleges Depp 'picked a fight' with her, hit her and pushed her against a wall by the throat, 'causing her to fear for her life' - which is denied by Depp.

11. November 26, 2015

In LA, Depp is alleged to have ripped Heard's shirt and 'threw her around the room', also throwing a wine glass and a 'heavy glass decanter' at her, as well as pushing her over a chair which caused her to bang her head against a wall. Depp says they were in LA for Thanksgiving, but denies any allegation of abuse.

12. December 15, 2015

Heard claims Depp threw a decanter at her in their penthouse in LA, then slapped her and dragged her through the apartment by her hair, allegedly pulling 'large chunks of hair' from Heard's scalp.

She says he then followed her upstairs and pushed her to the floor while shouting 'you think you're a f****** tough guy' before headbutting her.

Heard says that when she told Depp she wanted to leave him he grabbed her and screamed: 'I f****** will kill you - I'll f****** kill you, you hear me?'

Depp, though, says 'Ms Heard fabricated the alleged violence', falsely claiming that 'blonde hair on the floor was her hair'.

He also claims that 'the only violence committed on that date was by Ms Heard', who allegedly 'violently attacked' him.

13. April 21, 2016

Heard says Depp arrived at her birthday party at their LA home late, 'drunk and high on drugs' and they had an argument after the guests had left.

She claims he threw a bottle of champagne at her and shoved her to the floor several times before leaving a note reading: 'Happy F****** Birthday.'

Depp says he arrived at the party around two hours late following a meeting with his new business manager and accountants, and that he was not on drugs but 'shocked from what he had learnt at the meeting about his business affairs'.

He claims Heard had been 'drinking heavily' and attacked him while he was reading in bed, punching him in the face four times before he grabbed her arms to stop her.

Depp says the next day Heard or one of her friends 'defecated in Mr Depp's and Ms Heard's bed', and that Heard later told the building manager Kevin Murphy that it was 'just a harmless prank' - at which he point he 'then resolved to divorce Ms Heard'.

14. May 21, 2016

Depp arrived at their LA apartment, allegedly 'drunk and high' while Heard was there with friends. 

Heard said Depp became 'very angry', throwing her phone at her and hitting her in the eye before smashing 'everything he could' with a magnum of champagne.

He says he went to the apartment with two security guards to collect his belongings after Heard and her sister 'repeatedly' tried to contact him.

Depp claims his two security guards entered the room when they heard Heard shouting, and saw her 'repeatedly screaming, 'stop hitting me, Johnny'' while he was 20 feet away in the kitchen.

He also says that two police officers who attended the apartment after the incident 'saw no injuries or bruising or swelling'.

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Ms Wass asked: 'You heard about the vodka bottle on the countertop in the media?' Mr King said: 'Correct.'

Ms Wass suggested that 'because the fingertip had been found near the bar area, it must have been lost near the bar area'. She added that it appeared as if Mr Depp 'must have been moving around a lot'.

Mr King said: 'It looked to me like he had walked away from that area to go to another area, yes.' Ms Wass said Mr King was 'not qualified... to say where the injury took place or how the injury took place, you are not a pathologist'.

Mr King said: 'I'm not a pathologist... I know what I saw when I arrived at the house.'

Estate manager saw cuts on Heard's arms and suggested she 'should put her sleeve down' 

Mr King was asked about his evidence that, when he and Heard returned to LA from Australia after the finger incident, he noticed 'some cuts on one of her (Ms Heard's) arms'.

Ms Wass asked if they were 'fresh', to which Mr King said: 'They were enough for me to say 'maybe you should put your sleeve down'.'

The barrister added: 'You advised her to roll down her sleeves because somebody might take a photograph of her injuries... and Ms Heard was fully aware of the fact that photographers might take photos of her from time to time?' Mr King said that was correct.

Ms Wass then asked about his evidence that Ms Heard asked him on the flight 'have you ever been so angry with someone that you just lost it?' and that he replied that he had not.

The barrister said: 'If it was said, nothing was said about who she was talking about?' Mr King said: 'She was asking me a question.'

Ms Wass asked: 'And you didn't inquire as to what she was referred to, did you?' Mr King replied: 'I don't recall asking.' He added: 'I know she said it and I know my response.'

Aide found it 'strange' that a 'large number of cases of wine were brought to the house' 

Earlier this morning, Ms Wass started by asking Mr King: 'When you were first interviewed for the job, you were told that Depp was teetotal, having been a drinker.' Mr King said that was correct.

Ms Wass then said: 'When you arrived at the house were Depp and Heard were staying in London, there was a relatively large number of cases of wine that had been brought to the house and you found that strange.'

The barrister also said: 'You reached the conclusion that Ms Heard drank two bottles of wine a night.' Mr King replied: 'Not every night... it was a regular occurrence, but not every night.'

Ms Wass said: 'Because you were counting the bottles of wine.' Mr King said he had kept 'a mental tally, just in case I needed to restock'.

Ms Wass said to Mr King: 'As far as you were concerned, Mr Depp was sober at that time. Did you know whether he was clean from drugs at the time?' Mr King said: 'I don't know.'

Ms Wass asked: 'Is that something he would have done in front of you in any event?'

Mr King replied: 'I didn't know if he was clean from drugs. It was not any of my business.' Ms Wass then read out a text message sent by Depp in 2014 in which he wrote: 'I am going to quite gracefully glide into a massage of my broken neck and back.

'I will emerge in one hour a monster. Shall we each swallow an E or perhaps MDMA at around 8pm and go for dinner... at a wee Peruvian spot.' The barrister said: 'Your evidence is you saw no sign whatsoever of Mr Depp taking any drugs.'

Depp 'seemed to smoke cannabis sometimes around the house', says estate manager

Mr King initially agreed, but after further questioning from Ms Wass he admitted that Depp 'seemed to smoke cannabis sometimes around the house'. He said it was 'possibly every day' but added: 'That wasn't any of my business.'

Ms Wass asked how he knew only Heard was drinking the wine, to which Mr King said he would only see one glass in the morning. Mr King added: 'I'm quite sure for the time I was there in the house (that Mr Depp was not drinking).'

Ms Wass then referred to notes which would be left around the house after arguments when the couple were in London, in which Mr Depp would write: 'Let's not do that again, I love you.'

Ms Wass suggested they were 'peacemaking notes', to which the former estate manager said he did not know the details.

The barrister asked: 'Did you know the content of these arguments? How on earth can you say that (Ms Heard was aggressor)?' 'That's how I see it.'

'Because you have come here to give evidence in support of Mr Depp against Ms Heard'? Ms Wass asked. Mr King said: 'I am supporting Mr Depp's claim, yes.'

The court was again played a video clip in which Depp can be seen pacing a room and banging cabinet doors, filmed secretly by Heard. 

But Mr King said of Heard: 'She was the antagoniser and more aggressive. That was my impression, it became apparent to me that this was the case. 

'I never saw Mr Depp smash anything or become violent. He is always polite.'  

Estate manager says he was never told the couple's dogs 'had been brought in illegally'

Ms Wass also asked about another trip the couple made to Australia in April 2015, when Depp and Heard brought their dogs into the country 'illegally'.

Mr King explained that he had returned to Australia before the pair and was already there when they arrived.

Ms Wass said: 'There were no secrets at all that there was their two dogs with them... the dogs weren't hidden from public view?'

She added: 'You were certainly never told that the dogs had been brought into Australia illegally?'

Mr King said he had not been and said he took the dogs to a local grooming parlour, where pictures of the dogs were taken.

Ms Wass said: 'And it was only at that stage that it was apparently there was a problem with the dogs... and the photos were shown in the media?'

Mr King said in his witness statement that Heard 'complained about me to Mr Depp' after the photos were published, which 'alerted the authorities to the fact that Heard had illegally smuggled the dogs into the country'.

Heard often 'goaded' and tried to provoke Depp - but actor was never violent, says aide

In one written statement, Mr King said that during his employment he 'frequently witnessed Ms Heard goading and attempting to provoke Mr Depp', adding he never saw the actor 'be violent or unkind towards Ms Heard, or indeed towards anyone else'.

In a second statement, he said: 'Of what I heard of their arguments, they could start from very banal beginnings.

'On one occasion in London, I recall Ms Heard complained that Mr Depp had removed his hand from hers, and she complained along the lines of 'maybe you don't love me' (because you took your hand away).

'The argument then carried on and escalated seriously. The way they argued could make them seem like schoolchildren. In hindsight, during the month in London, and thereafter during my time in Australia, I saw Ms Heard as the antagoniser. Mr Depp seemed keen to walk out of, or away from, arguments.'

He added: 'I want to make clear that I did not see any violence at any time. I do not want to accuse Ms Heard of anything, but this was what I saw of the pattern of their arguments.'

He also claimed that on a number of occasions, mainly during a trip to Australia, Mr Depp 'left notes downstairs before he went to work, saying things like 'let's not do this again' and 'I love you'.'

Mr King said he had been told when he interviewed for the job that Mr Depp was teetotal, adding he was 'surprised' when they arrived at the London house that they brought 'a relatively large number of cases of wine'.

He went on to say that during their London stay in October 2014, he did not see Mr Depp drink, but he believed Ms Heard 'would regularly drink at least one or two bottles a night'.

Estate manager made a tally of wine bottles and would 'often' see Heard drinking

Mr King claimed he made a tally of the bottles each morning and would 'often' see Ms Heard drinking wine.

Amber Heard leaves the Ham Yard Hotel in London's Soho this morning with her lawyer Jennifer Robinson (in the red dress)
Amber Heard leaves the Ham Yard Hotel in London's Soho this morning

Amber Heard leaves the Ham Yard Hotel in London's Soho this morning with her lawyer Jennifer Robinson (in the red dress)

In his first witness statement, Mr King said that in March 2015, he was summoned to the house the couple were renting in Australia, where he found a 'significant amount of damage' and discovered the actor's severed finger tip on the floor of the bar area while cleaning up broken glass and debris.

Mr Depp has been accused of subjecting Ms Heard to a 'three-day hostage situation' and trashing the house during the Australia trip, which he denies.

The actor's finger was severed during the stay, which he says was caused by Ms Heard throwing a bottle at him, which she denies.

Sounds like it was murder on Amber and Johnny's Oriental Express honeymoon: Depp wrapped his shirt around Heard's neck and hit her several times during a blazing row, actress's diary claims 

Amber Heard wrote in her diary how Johnny Depp wrapped his shirt around her neck during their honeymoon aboard the Oriental Express.

The entry on July 27, 2015, read: 'After three hours of sleep and the terrible fight we got in last night, we are both walking zombies today.

'We finally fell asleep with one another smashed together in desperate childlike anger, fear and love.

'Our fight was terrible. J at one point found himself with his shirt wrapped around my neck. He hit me several times.

The Oriental Express travels over the Tham Kra Sae viaduct in Thailand (file picture)

The Oriental Express travels over the Tham Kra Sae viaduct in Thailand (file picture)

'I don't even know how I wound up with this huge, rather annoying knot round back of my head. F*** I hate that.'

The couple's cabin on the luxury train - which winds through South East Asia - was three or four doors down from Depp's bodyguard Malcolm Connolly. He agreed he would not have known about the 3.30am argument.

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Mr King said that on the flight back to Los Angeles from Australia with Ms Heard, she asked him 'have you ever been so angry with someone that you just lost it?'

He said: 'I replied that that had never happened to me. She seemed incredulous and asked again, 'you have never been so angry with someone that you just lost it?'

'Again, I answered that I had not and Ms Heard did not continue on this topic. This question seemed alarming to me, given the severity of the damage I had earlier witnessed at the house and the apparent serious injury to Mr Depp's finger.'

Estate manager confirms he 'never witnessed Depp be violent or unkind towards Heard'

Depp's lawyer David Sherbourne asked Mr King about part of his statement in which he said: 'During my employment with Mr Depp and Ms Heard, I frequently witnessed Ms Heard goading and attempting to provoke Mr Depp.

'I never witnessed Mr Depp be violent or unkind towards Ms Heard, or indeed towards anyone else.'

Following questions from Mr Sherborne, Mr King confirmed that this was his experience 'throughout' his time working for the couple and not just while they were in Australia.

Mr Sherborne also asked if the evidence in his second witness statement, which was entered as part of the case on Monday, was his own evidence or that of someone else, to which he replied: 'It is all my evidence in both statements.'

Mr King was then asked about his evidence regarding Heard's wine consumption, in which he had expressed surprise at the number of wine bottles when the couple were in London and said that the actress was drinking but Depp was not.

He told the court: 'There was only a glass left on the side in the morning, amongst all the dinner-time clear-up that I had to do when I came in, and there was only one glass and one bottle.'

Mr King added: 'Sometimes I would open the wine before I left in the evening and give Ms Heard a glass.'

The former estate manager also said that 'occasionally' Heard would have a group of friends to stay with them for a couple of days and confirmed they would drink alcohol.

He was also asked about notes Depp would leave around the house, which he said the actor did because he had to leave early to get to the studio for filming.

Mr King said he had to read them as they sometimes contained details of errands he was asked to run, or thanks for something he had done previously, and he confirmed to Mr Sherborne that there would sometimes be a 'lovely note' for Heard from Depp. 

Mr Sherborne referred to part of Mr King's witness statement in which he said the couple's arguments could start from 'banal beginnings'.

Estate manager says he heard Heard complain because Depp had removed his hand from her

Mr King told the court there was a 'snug room' where Depp and Heard would sit and watch television and confirmed he had once overheard Ms Heard complain because the actor had removed his hand from her and she'd said something like 'maybe you don't love me'.

He said the arguments would escalate to 'raised voices and shouting' and he was asked by Mr Sherborne about his evidence that: 'The way they argue can make them seem like children.'

Mr King replied: 'Sorry, yes, but that was how I saw it, yes.'

He was then asked if he stood by his view that Heard was the 'antagoniser' and Depp would try to get away from arguments, to which he said: 'Absolutely, yes.'

Johnny Depp and Winona Ryder in Los Angeles in September 1990. Ryder is due to give evidence via videolink this afternoon

Johnny Depp and Winona Ryder in Los Angeles in September 1990. Ryder is due to give evidence via videolink this afternoon

Mr King said his reason for concluding that was: 'Mainly that I know that Mr Depp isn't a confrontational person and he would try to extract himself from those arguments... and move to another room, go to another part of the house to get away from the argument.

He was asked about his evidence that Heard would try to provoke Depp, and responded by saying: 'That was my impression, on one or two occasions I saw (Ms Heard) go to the room that Mr Depp had gone to to get away from the situation.'

Mr King confirmed that, during his clean-up of the house in Australia where the couple stayed in March 2015, there were no urine stains and he could not smell urine either.

He told the court he had found blood in the bar area of the house and a trail of blood spots up the stairs to a bedroom, where there was more blood staining.

Mr Sherborne then referred to Mr King's evidence that Heard had asked him: 'Have you ever been so angry with someone that you just lost it?' and he had told her not to him.

Mr King said that exchange took place while they were waiting on the tarmac for the flight, and said they didn't really speak after that. He told the court: 'Neither of us really spoke after that point because we were both pretty exhausted.

'I had been cleaning up the house for 13 hours and she was emotional... and she was probably quite tired from being hysterical for that amount of time.'

He added: 'I slept for most of the flight. She was in the bathroom for a long time before the second flight, I think - we had to connect in Sydney.'

Mr King said he believed Heard was making a phone call while she was in the bathroom, before take-off.

At the conclusion of Mr King's evidence, Mr Sherborne said: 'It has been suggested to you that you have come here in order to support Mr Depp and... to lie on oath. What do you say about that?'

Mr King replied: 'Well firstly I would not lie on oath at all, I have no reason to because everything is true.'

In a separate incident weeks later in March, Depp is alleged to have trashed a $3million penthouse in LA which Heard used as a colossal closet
In a separate incident weeks later in March, Depp is alleged to have trashed a $3million penthouse in LA which Heard used as a colossal closet

Depp is alleged to have trashed a penthouse in Los Angeles, California, which Heard used as a colossal closet

Mr Sherborne then asked if Mr King was dependent on Depp for his income, to which he responded: 'Not at all, I never have.

'I was hired as a sort of 'hired help' for that period, which I did for many other clients, and I wasn't dependent on him, no.' 

Winona Ryder will give evidence and claims Depp was 'never, never abusive towards me' 

Depp's ex-fiancee Winona Ryder is set to appear at the court in London via videolink from Los Angeles this week in support of the actor's sensational libel claim against the Sun over an article that labelled him a 'wife beater'.

Stranger Things actress Ryder, 48, who had a relationship with Depp, 57, in the 1990s, was due to give evidence in support of the actor's case over a video link from Los Angeles this afternoon - but this has now been delayed after the morning's witnesses did not finish before lunch.

The court has previously heard Depp had a 'Winona Forever' tattoo when the pair were an item, which he later changed to 'Wino Forever'. 

At a preliminary hearing, part of Ryder's witness statement was revealed to say: 'I cannot wrap my head around (Ms Heard's) accusations. He was never, never violent towards me. He was never, never abusive at all towards me.' 

The actress will give her evidence this afternoon, after the court hears from Depp's former and current estate managers, Mr King and Mr Murphy, in the morning session. 

Also today, the court is due to hear from actress and advocate for the #MeToo movement Katherine Kendall, who claims she was 'misquoted' in The Sun's article.

In court documents, Depp's lawyers said Kendall will explain how annoyed she was that the article was presented as if she was 'endorsing' a comparison between the actor and disgraced film mogul Harvey Weinstein. 

Actress Katherine Kendall says she has 'heard several times' that Heard was abusive to Depp

In a complaint to the Sun, Kendall wrote: 'I never meant to be in an article that called Johnny Depp a 'wife beater'. I told you that I didn't know that to be true at all! I have heard SEVERAL times that she was in fact abusive to him. 

'He's never been a convicted 'wife beater'. It seems that the whole article was about defaming him. I said over and over that I didn't KNOW that he had caused her harm.

'Even a picture only makes it 'seem' so. I'm telling you that you misquoted me and intentionally took things I said out of context in what I now realise was your purpose in defaming Johnny Depp.

'I told you I have heard Amber Heard hit him, which is why as you know I don't condone 'any' violence. You have improperly tried to use the #MeToo movement for your purposes by using me in this way.'

The court will also hear from Kate James, Heard's former personal assistant, who is expected to give evidence on Heard's consumption of red wine and her impression of Depp.

She is also expected to claim that Heard asked her to help draft a letter to US Homeland Security in 2014, which falsely claimed one of Heard's employees was just a friend, which meant she would not fall foul of regulations.

Johnny Depp being taken to hospital with a severed finger, following the incident in Australia in March 2015

Johnny Depp being taken to hospital with a severed finger, following the incident in Australia in March 2015

Johnny Depp's severed finger, following the incident in Australia in March 2015. The photo was released in court proceedings

Johnny Depp's severed finger, following the incident in Australia in March 2015. The photo was released in court proceedings

Trial judge Mr Justice Nicol said in a preliminary ruling that he will determine during the trial whether Ms James's evidence relating to what has been referred to in court as the 'Australia dogs episode' will be allowed to form part of Depp's case.

In 2016, Heard and Depp recorded a now infamous video apologising for taking their Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo into Australia illegally. 

Security guard says Depp lied about finger severing incident to protect Heard 

Yesterday, one of Depp's security guards told the court that the actor lied about how he lost the top of his middle finger 'only to protect' his ex-wife Heard.

Malcolm Connolly, who has worked for Depp and his family for about 16 years, said the Hollywood star was 'in emotional distress and panicking' after his finger was severed during an incident in Australia in March 2015. 

Johnny Depp v The Sun: Key issues in libel trial 

Hollywood star Johnny Depp's libel claim against The Sun enters its second week on Monday. These are the key issues the trial judge, Mr Justice Nicol, has to determine.

- Whether the April 2018 article by the tabloid's executive editor Dan Wootton was defamatory of Depp. Under the Defamation Act 2013, a statement is not defamatory unless its publication causes 'serious harm to the reputation of the claimant'.

- The Sun's publisher, News Group Newspapers (NGN), is defending the claim and relying on a defence of truth. It is for the publisher to prove that the allegations made in the article are 'substantially true'.

- The meaning of the article, which is defined as what it would mean to the 'reasonable reader', will have to be determined by the judge. But NGN's lawyers say the differences between the rival meanings contended by each side are 'not significant' and the outcome of the case will therefore not turn on meaning.

- Depp's case is that the article bore the meaning that he was 'guilty, on overwhelming evidence, of serious domestic violence against his then wife, causing significant injury and leading to her fearing for her life, for which he was constrained to pay no less than £5 million to compensate her, and which resulted in him being subjected to a continuing court restraining order; and for that reason is not fit to work in the film industry'. He strenuously denies the allegations and claims he 'has never hit or committed any acts of physical violence against Ms Heard'.

- The meaning which NGN will seek to prove is true is that the Claimant beat his wife Amber Heard, causing her to suffer significant injury and on occasion leading her to fearing for her life. They rely on 14 separate allegations of violence and allege more generally that Depp was 'controlling and verbally and physically abusive' towards Ms Heard, particularly when he was under the influence of alcohol and or drugs, throughout their relationship. NGN's lawyers say an important issue for the judge to decide will be what substances Depp was using during the relationship. They contend that he frequently lost control of himself, partly because of his heavy drug and alcohol use, and also that his memory has been impaired by his heavy use of drugs.

- If Depp wins his case, the judge will have to decide what level of compensation he should receive for the harm to his reputation and for the 'distress, hurt and humiliation caused'. There is an upper limit on general damages for libel of £300,000 to £325,000. However, if he succeeds, Depp may also be entitled to aggravated damages. The actor is also asking for a final injunction against NGN, who his legal team say 'have retained the article on their website and maintained their allegation to the bitter end'.

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Giving evidence at the Royal Courts of Justice in London yesterday, Mr Connolly said that when he and another security guard arrived at the property, Depp told him: 'She's cut my f****** finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle.'

The episode in Australia is one of 14 allegations of violent behaviour Heard, 34, has made against Depp which The Sun relies on in its defence of the claim that he was a 'wife beater'.

Heard claims that Depp lost the top of his finger while slamming a telephone against a wall, but the actor says his ex-wife threw a vodka bottle at him which smashed and severed his finger.

The security officer said Heard's account of the incident bore 'no resemblance' to his recollection and that, when he arrived at the house, the actress 'did not have any marks on her face or arms'.

He also said that Heard was 'absolutely hysterical' and shouted at Depp: 'Are you just going to leave it like this, you f****** coward?'

Sasha Wass QC, representing NGN, said Mr Depp had 'come up with a variety of potential explanations to give to other people about how his finger was damaged'.

Mr Connolly said that those explanations were 'only to protect Amber', adding: 'The usual victim pattern is to protect the abuser for some reason.'

The former prison officer also claimed that 'Ms Heard hitting or slapping Mr Depp' was not a 'one-off', saying that it had happened 'in Australia and in Los Angeles'.

Depp's barrister David Sherborne asked Mr Connolly: 'Did you ever witness Mr Depp physically attack or hit Ms Heard at any time?'

Mr Connolly said: 'No - and I wouldn't tolerate any man striking a woman. No matter who he was, I just wouldn't tolerate that.' Mr Sherborne asked: 'Not even if it was your boss?' Mr Connolly replied: 'Not even if he's my boss. I don't care if he's the pope.' 

Depp was 'never violent or aggressive with Amber', says his Bahamas estate manager

The court also heard evidence from Tara Roberts, Depp's estate manager on his island in the Bahamas, who said in her witness statement: 'I never saw Johnny, who is an unusually kind man, be violent or aggressive with Amber or anyone else.'

Ms Roberts said that 'it was Ms Heard who was the most violent' and described seeing Depp with a 'red, swelling gash' on the bridge of his nose after Heard had apparently thrown a can of lacquer thinner at his face.

She also claimed that Heard hurled insults at Depp, calling him 'washed up' and 'fat', and was aggressive towards the actor during a Christmas visit to the Bahamas in 2015. 

Stylist saw 'non visible injuries' the day after Depp allegedly attacked Heard 

Samantha McMillen, Depp's stylist since 2002 who also worked for Heard during the couple's relationship, gave evidence that she saw 'no visible' injuries the day after Depp allegedly attacked Heard in December 2015.

She said Heard said to her after taping James Corden's The Late Late Show on December 16 2015: 'Can you believe I just did that show with two black eyes?'

Ms McMillen said in her witness statement: 'Ms Heard did not have any black eyes, and had been visibly uninjured throughout the day and at that moment.'

The stylist gave evidence of seeing Ms Heard in a 'chance encounter' on May 24, 2016, three days after the Pirates Of The Caribbean star is alleged to have thrown his ex-wife's own mobile phone at her and hit her in the eye.

She said that on that occasion: 'Ms Heard was not wearing make-up. There were no visible marks, bruises, cuts, or injuries to her face or any other part of her body.'

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star is suing NGN and Mr Wootton over the publication of an article 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?'

His lawyers say the article bore the meaning there was 'overwhelming evidence' Depp assaulted Heard on a number of occasions and left her 'in fear for her life'.

Heard claims that, during the incident in Australia, she was subjected to a 'three-day hostage situation' during which Depp drank to excess and took pills.

NGN is defending the article as true, and says Depp was 'controlling and verbally and physically abusive towards Ms Heard, particularly when he was under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs'.

 

DAY SIX: Amber Heard claims Johnny Depp gave her 'two black eyes' day before she posed for selfies on the Late, Late Show with James Corden - but make-up artist who styled her on set says she didn't see a single injury

Amber Heard claimed Johnny Depp gave her 'two black eyes' the day before she appeared on The Late, Late Show with James Corden - but the stylist who did her make-up told a court yesterday that she had 'no visible' injuries.

Samantha McMillen said she spent 'much of the afternoon and early evening' with Heard on December 16, 2015 as she prepared to appear on James Corden's show - and could 'see clearly' that Heard had no marks, cuts or bruises.

Depp is alleged to have been violent towards Heard in an argument at their Los Angeles penthouse the day before, which he denies. The Hollywood star is suing The Sun over an April 2018 article which labelled him a 'wife beater'.

Ms McMillen said she saw Heard 'in good light, at close range, wearing no makeup' on December 16, and that she 'could see clearly that Ms Heard did not have any visible marks, bruises, cuts, or injuries' to any part of her body.

In a witness statement to the High Court in London revealed yesterday, Ms McMillen claimed that after the actress's appearance on the US programme, Heard said to her: 'Can you believe I just did that show with two black eyes?'

The stylist, who has worked for Depp since 2002 and was Heard's stylist during the couple's relationship, said: 'Ms Heard did not have any black eyes, and had been visibly uninjured throughout the day and at that moment.'

Ms McMillen, who has also styled Brie Larson and Ryan Gosling, added: 'I later learned that Ms Heard had accused Mr Depp, in court filings and the media, of violently abusing her the previous night, December 15, 2015.'

As Ms McMillen was leaving Heard's company on December 16 she claimed to have overheard her say to her friend Raquel Pennington, who came to the show with her, 'make sure to get those pictures onto my computer'.

But the stylist added that she 'did not know to what photos she was referring'. Photographs were later issued by Heard's legal team of her with injuries to her face around the time of the alleged attack, but they are undated. 

It comes amid another day of bombshell evidence at the Royal Courts of Justice yesterday, with claims including:

  • Depp alleged Heard 'acquired him for fame' but 'hammered him' for 'being a sad old man' in explosive texts;
  • Depp claimed Heard had put a cigarette out on his face while in Australia, a month into their marriage in 2015;
  • The actor was 'in emotional distress and panicking' after his finger was severed, according to his bodyguard;
  • Heard took off her wedding ring and threw it during another row with Depp in 2015, but it was later found;
  • Heard's stylist said she had 'no visible' injuries the day after the actress alleges Depp was violent towards her;
  • Depp's head of security Jerry Judge previously warned the actor was 'not well' and 'we need to help him out'.

Meanwhile, in a separate alleged incident the following year in May 2016, Ms McMillen also claimed Heard did not have any injuries on her face despite the actress claiming Depp had attacked her three days before.  

Amber Heard claimed that Johnny Depp physically abused her one day before she was on The Late, Late Show with James Corden on on December 16, 2015 (above) - and said after her appearance that she 'just did that show with two black eyes'

Amber Heard claimed that Johnny Depp physically abused her one day before she was on The Late, Late Show with James Corden on on December 16, 2015 (above) - and said after her appearance that she 'just did that show with two black eyes'

Heard is pictured while appearing on the US chat programme The Late, Late Show on December 16, 2015

Heard is pictured while appearing on the US chat programme The Late, Late Show on December 16, 2015

Heard poses with guests Luke Bracey and Wanda Skyes on the Late, Late Show with James Corden on December 16, 2015

Heard poses with guests Luke Bracey and Wanda Skyes on the Late, Late Show with James Corden on December 16, 2015

Heard is pictured in a publicity photograph for the Late, Late Show on December 16, 2015, issued as part of legal proceedings

Heard is pictured in a publicity photograph for the Late, Late Show on December 16, 2015, issued as part of legal proceedings

Ms McMillen said she met a tearful Heard at Depp's house in West Hollywood on May 24, 2016 but could not see any 'marks, bruises, cuts, or injuries' to any part of her body.

Three days later Ms McMillen read in the media that Heard had gone to court with 'prominent injuries visible on her face', claiming that Depp had inflicted them on her.

But the stylist said Depp had left Los Angeles on May 22 and therefore 'could not have caused those marks that Ms Heard appeared with in court on May 27, 2016'. 

Ms McMillen was called to give evidence from the US by videolink in Depp's libel claim against The Sun newspaper over an April 2018 article which labelled him a 'wife beater'.

Sasha Wass, for the The Sun's publishers News Group Newspapers (NGN), said Ms McMillen had been asked to give evidence about two dates - December 16, 2015 and May 24, 2016 - when she saw Ms Heard.

The barrister showed Ms McMillen a number of photos from around the time of December 16, 2015 which are said to show Ms Heard with marks and 'bruising' on her face.

After being shown a photo taken on December 15, which apparently shows Heard with a mark on her face, Ms McMillen said: 'That's not how I remember her looking on that day.'

Photographs show bruising across the bridge of Heard's nose and under her eyes after Depp allegedly headbutted her in 2015
Bruising across the bridge of Heard's nose and beneath her eyes

Photographs were issued by Heard's legal team of her with injuries to her face around the time of the alleged attack on December 15, 2015, showing bruising across the bridge of her nose and under her eyes after Depp allegedly headbutted her. Depp is believed to have been shown these pictures in court last week while he was giving evidence

Photos after the incident in December 2015 show bruising to Heard's face after Depp allegedly headbutted her
Bruising to Heard's face after Depp allegedly headbutted her

Photographs after the alleged incident in December 2015 show bruising to Heard's face after Depp is claimed to have headbutted her. These two pictures above were also released by Heard's legal team

Samantha McMillen (left) and Amber Heard (right) pose together at an event in Los Angeles on December 10, 2015

Samantha McMillen (left) and Amber Heard (right) pose together at an event in Los Angeles on December 10, 2015

Ms Wass asked: 'Would you agree that shows that she has got bruising coming up underneath both eyes?' Ms McMillen replied: 'It's not a clear picture, but it does look like there is dark around her eyes.'

Johnny Depp's housekeeper was left 'disgusted' to find faeces in the bed the actor shared with Amber Heard

Johnny Depp's housekeeper has said she was 'horrified and disgusted' to find 'a large pile of faeces' in the bed the actor shared with ex-wife Amber Heard.

In a witness statement submitted to the High Court in the Hollywood actor's libel action against The Sun newspaper, Hilda Vargas claimed it was 'clear' that the excrement was human, saying she knew they could not have come from the couple's two small dogs.

The court has previously heard that faeces were found in the bed at the couple's Los Angeles penthouse at the Eastern Columbia Building the day after Ms Heard's 30th birthday party in April 2016.

Heard, 34, claims that one of the two small Yorkshire terriers, Pistol and Boo, were responsible.

Depp, 57, has told the court it was 'a mystery' who defecated in the bed, adding he was 'convinced' Ms Heard 'or one of her cohort' was involved in the so-called 'defecation incident'.

In her written statement, Ms Vargas, who has worked for Mr Depp for more than 30 years, said she arrived at the apartment at around 3pm on April 22, 2016, and had just finishing washing dishes and vacuuming when she heard another cleaning lady call out and she joined her in the master bedroom.

'She was pointing to the bed and told me that she couldn't believe what she had found,' Ms Vargas said.

'I pulled back the top sheet on the bed and saw a large pile of faeces. I was horrified and disgusted. It was clear to me that this was human faeces. I knew that the faeces could not have come from either of Mr Depp's or Ms Heard's two small dogs.

'I have cleaned up after those dogs many times and their faeces are much smaller. Further, I have never known those dogs to defecate in the bed.'

Ms Vargas said in her statement that she took photos of the faeces in the bed, before washing and changing the sheets.

She later told Mr Depp's estate manager, Kevin Murphy what she had found because she was 'so angry'.

Ms Vargas said that on May 24, 2016, she was working at Depp's West Hollywood home when Heard arrived with her friend Raquel Pennington.

The housekeeper claimed Heard called her over and told her the photos she had taken of the faeces in the bed 'had destroyed her marriage'.

Ms Vargas said: 'I was very nervous and so I apologised, even I did not believe that their marital problems were my fault or that I had done anything wrong.

'I also told Ms Heard that the faeces were there, that there was nothing I could do. Ms Heard argued with me saying that there were no faeces in the bed.

'I, again, said that the faeces were there, that they were large and smelled awful. Ms Heard continued to disagree with me, but I wanted to end the conversation as quickly as possible.'

In her statement, Ms Vargas also said she had 'often' heard Ms Heard 'yell at Mr Depp and at other people'.

She alleged: 'She has a bad temper in my opinion, and I did not want her to yell at me.

'On the contrary, in the over 30 years I have worked for Mr Depp, I have never seen Mr Depp be physical with or yell at anyone.'

A spokesman for Ms Heard issued a statement in relation to Depp's contention that she or one of her friends was responsible for defecating in the couple's bed, saying: 'This accusation is completely untrue and has been designed purely to humiliate Ms Heard.

'As the evidence in court showed, Mr Depp discussed committing such a prank for years beforehand and it plays to his lavatorial and abusive sense of humour.

'Mr Depp's team is trying to grab headlines - at the expense of the truth - and distract from the serious, central issue of this case: the perpetration of domestic violence.'

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Ms Wass said: 'Your evidence is that you never saw any of these injuries on the afternoon or the night of December 16 when you were with Ms Heard.' Ms McMillen said: 'That's correct.'

Ms Wass continued: 'Ms Heard told a number of people on the 15th and 16th about these injuries. How close would you say you were to Ms Heard?' Ms McMillen replied: 'We had a good working relationship.'

Asked if Heard would 'confide' in her, Ms McMillen said: 'I wouldn't say so, no. I wouldn't be on her speed dial.'

Ms Wass referred to a message sent by Heard in December 2015, which read: 'Johnny did a number on me tonight.' The barrister asked: 'Did Ms Heard ever say to you that Johnny 'did a number on her'?'

Ms McMillen said: 'She never said anything about that to me.'

Ms Wass then asked: 'Do you consider that your loyalties are more with Mr Depp than with Ms Heard? You have a long-standing relationship with Mr Depp ... he's a big figure in Hollywood. 

'If there was a conflict of loyalties between Mr Depp, your loyalties to Mr Depp on the one hand, and any loyalty you might have to Ms Heard ... who would take priority?'

Ms McMillen said: 'I was close with her at the time. I don't know what you are insinuating but I would not perjure myself for anyone. I'm obviously loyal because he's kind and loyal back, but without any other reason than that.'

Ms Wass asked why Ms Heard would make allegations of domestic violence against Mr Depp 'unless it was true'.

Ms McMillen replied: 'I don't know the answer to that.'

Ms McMillen told the court that Ms Heard said to her after taping the James Corden show on December 16 2015: 'Can you believe I just did that show with two black eyes?'

The witness was asked: 'As far as you could see, did Ms Heard have two black eyes?'

Ms McMillen replied: 'I never noticed anything like that when I saw her. I never noticed her having two black eyes.'

Ms Wass asked: 'If you didn't see any black eyes, did you not ask her what on earth she was talking about?'

Ms McMillen said: 'I didn't. We were leaving at the end of the show and we were going our separate ways. We were saying goodbye.

'I was confused by it and I think I said something like, 'I don't know what to say'.

'I didn't see the black eyes, but also I don't want to, you know, raise any sort of - I just wanted to go home.'

Ms McMillen was then asked about an email sent by Ms Heard to her publicist, Jodi Gottlieb, in the early hours of December 16 which said: 'I'm really bruised or might have a black eye or two tomorrow ... I might not be fit for tomorrow but I won't know how bad the bruise is until the morning.'

Ms Wass asked if there was 'any reason' Ms Heard would send that email 'unless she actually had what she thought might develop into two black eyes'. Ms McMillen replied: 'I can't think of why she would do that.'

Ms Wass asked: 'After she said to you, 'can you believe I just did that show with two black eyes?', did not you not think to offer her some sort of support or make some sort of inquiry rather than just quickly leave?' Ms McMillen said: 'I gave her a hug.'

Ms Wass suggested Ms Heard's make-up artist, Melanie Inglessis, said she was 'going to put a really bright red lipstick on Ms Heard to try and cover the mark on her lip'. Ms McMillen said: 'I don't remember that conversation.'

Ms Wass asked: 'Do you remember Ms Inglessis putting particularly heavy make-up on Ms Heard that night to cover the injuries?' Ms McMillen replied: 'I didn't notice it being any heavier than usual.'

Ms Wass asked Ms McMillen if, having seen photos of Heard apparently with marks, 'do you still maintain that there is nothing on her face on the 24th?' Ms McMillen replied: 'When I saw her on the 24th (of May 2016) I noticed nothing but her beautiful skin.'

Ms Wass suggested: 'You are being less than frank with the court ... and you have come to this court to help Johnny Depp, who is a person who is very important to your career.' Ms McMillen said: 'I'm telling the truth.' 

Mr Depp's barrister David Sherborne referred Ms McMillen to what she said in her witness statement about when she saw Ms Heard on December 16 2015, asking: 'If you had seen Ms Heard's face looking like it did in the photos you were shown, would you have given the evidence that you gave?' Ms McMillen replied: 'No, I would not.'

Mr Sherborne referred to a visit to Ms Heard by her nurse Erin Boerum, who later noted: 'The client also states her head is bruised and she lost clumps of hair in the altercation. The registered nurse (Ms Boerum) briefly looked at Ms Heard's scalp but was unable to visualise the hematomas (bruises) that the client had described.'

He asked Ms McMillen: 'Can you think of any reason why Nurse Boerum, who says she didn't see these bruises, would lie about not seeing those bruises?' She replied: 'I can't think of any reason why she would do that.'

Mr Sherborne then asked about when Ms McMillen saw Ms Heard at Mr Depp's house in LA on May 24, 2016. Ms McMillen said she met her 'by chance' and had been at the house before Ms Heard arrived.

Mr Sherborne said: 'You are in Mr Depp's house in West Hollywood and Ms Heard turns up. She doesn't know you are going to be there ... and you say that when she turned up, not knowing you were going to be there, she was not wearing make-up.' Ms McMillen said: 'That's correct.'

Amber Heard leaves Los Angeles Superior Court on May 27, 2016 with visible facial injuries

Amber Heard leaves Los Angeles Superior Court on May 27, 2016 with visible facial injuries

Heard leaves the court in Los Angeles on May 27, 2016, with an apparent bruise on her cheek

Heard leaves the court in Los Angeles on May 27, 2016, with an apparent bruise on her cheek

Heard claimed at the court in LA on May 27, 2016 that Depp had inflicted the injuries on her

Heard claimed at the court in LA on May 27, 2016 that Depp had inflicted the injuries on her

Mr Sherborne asked: 'And, without the benefit of make-up, you said that she had her usual beautiful skin?' Ms McMillen said: 'That's correct.'

Mr Sherborne asked: 'Did she (Ms Heard) tell you that she had been beaten up by Mr Depp?' Ms McMillen replied: 'She said nothing like that.'

Ms McMillen was asked by Mr Mr Sherborne how Ms Heard's face appeared in a photograph taken shortly before the filming of the James Corden show.

The stylist said Ms Heard's skin looked 'beautiful', adding: 'That is how I remember her looking once her make-up had been done.' 

Mr Sherborne said: 'You were asked (by Ms Wass)... if you had a conflict between your loyalty to Mr Depp or your loyalty to Ms Heard, which would win. But can I ask you a different question?

'Where there was a conflict between your loyalty to Mr Depp and you having to lie to this court, which would win?' Ms McMillen replied: 'I would not commit perjury for any reason, for anyone - friends or family or anyone.'

Also yesterday, the court heard Depp said Heard was 'as full of s**t as a Christmas goose' and blasted her 'constant insults' after claiming his wife smashed his hand with a vodka bottle and 'cut my f***ing finger off'.

Ms McMillen in New York on September 24, 2015
Ms McMillen in West Hollywood on April 2, 2017

Ms McMillen in New York on September 24, 2015 (left) and Hollywood on April 2, 2017 (right)

The Pirates of the Caribbean star sent a series of texts slamming Heard to his doctor after his finger was severed in Australia in March 2015, and accused her of marrying him because she was 'so desperate for success and fame'.

He told Dr David Kipper that Heard had said he was a 'sad old man' and 'has been' and blasted her 'hideously and purposely hurtful tirades and her goddamn shocking treatment of the man she was meant to love'.

The actor's libel trial also heard yesterday from the property manager at his Bahamas home, who said Heard had told Depp during a row in December 2015 that his 'career is over', he would die a lonely man' and called him 'fat'. 

In the texts to Dr Kipper, Depp wrote: 'I just cannot live like this... She is as full of s**t as a Christmas goose. I'm done. NO MORE...!!! The constant insults, the demeaning, belittling, most heartbreaking spew that is only released from a malicious, evil and vindictive c**t!!!!! But, you know what... ?? 

'FAR MORE hurtful than her venomous and degrading, endless 'educational' ranting...??? Is her hideously and purposely hurtful tirades and her goddam shocking treatment of the man she was meant to love, above all...

'Here's the real deal, mate... Her obsession with herself..?? Is far more important... She is SO F***IN' AMBITIOUS!!! She's so desperate for success and fame... That's probably why I was acquired, mate...!! Although, she has hammered me with what a sad old man, has been I am... 

'Cowan (Dr Connell Cowan, another doctor) has done me the most cruel of favors... I'm so very sad... I cut the top of my middle finger off... What should I do!?? Except, of course, go to a hospital... I'm so embarrassed for jumping into anything with her...' 

A mock-up of the text messages sent by Depp to his private doctor Dr David Kipper after the Australia incident in 2015
A mock-up of the text messages sent by Depp to his private doctor Dr David Kipper after the Australia incident in 2015

A mock-up of the text messages sent by Depp to his private doctor Dr David Kipper after the Australia incident in 2015

Johnny Depp pictured outside the High Court yesterday
Amber Heard pictured outside the High Court yesterday

Johnny Depp (left) and Amber Heard (right) arrive separately at the Royal Courts of Justice in London yesterday morning

Amber Heard leaves Ham Yard Hotel in London yesterday
Amber Heard leaves Ham Yard Hotel in London yesterday

Heard leaves Ham Yard Hotel in London's Soho yesterday ahead of legal proceedings continuing at the High Court

Tara Roberts, Depp's estate manager on his island in the Bahamas, was also called to give evidence in the libel case against The Sun newspaper yesterday.

Sasha Wass QC, for the Sun owner's News Group Newspapers, suggested Ms Roberts was 'totally dependent on Mr Depp for your livelihood', to which she replied: 'No... I have other sources of income.'

The barrister asked about a passage in her witness statement in which Ms Roberts said: 'I never saw Johnny, who is an unusually kind man, be violent or aggressive with Amber or anyone else.'

'You're fat and you'll die a lonely man': Amber Heard screamed abuse at Johnny Depp after confronting him at his estate manager's office in the Bahamas - where she asked for help finding her wedding ring after taking it of and throwing it away 

Amber Heard told Johnny Depp that his 'career is over' and he will 'die a lonely man' during a blazing row, according to the property manager at Depp's Bahamas home.

Tara Roberts said she overheard Heard 'insulting' the star, calling him names including 'fat' and saying 'no one is going to hire you' and 'you're washed up'.

Ms Roberts said the incident happened on December 29, 2015 when Depp drove to her office alone and said he 'just needed to get away from Amber', before the actress then showed up.

She said Heard was pleading with Depp to return to their home, but he started his car and she started screaming at him while stood in front of it.

Ms Roberts said Heard was 'apparently not letting him get away by blocking his path', and she called Depp's sister Christi Dembrowski because she was 'unsure how far this would go'.

Ms Roberts wrote in her court statement: While I could not hear what caused the fight, Amber repeatedly berated him with increasing ferocity.

'She was insulting him, calling him names, and in the middle of this onslaught I heard her say specifically 'your career is over,' 'no one is going to hire you,' 'you're washed up,' 'fat,' 'you will die a lonely man,' and also screaming things that were incomprehensible.'

Depp responded to the abuse by telling Heard to 'go away' and 'just leave me alone', but Heard's rage 'continued to escalate', according to Ms Roberts.

She continued: 'I saw Amber lunge at Johnny, clawing, tugging and aggressively pulling him. He continued to stand there yelling at her to stop and leave him alone. 

'When he stepped back to leave, her onslaught would start again. During this entire incident, I never saw Johnny hit Amber, or push her back, nor did he physically react to the attacks. 

'She would calm down and hug and apologize. Then he would say he needs to leave and it would start again.

'Finally, I stepped between them. She continued to reach for him but maybe my presence stopped it.'

Ms Roberts added that Heard had 'removed her wedding ring and thrown it and had asked for help finding it as they were leaving that afternoon'. 

The ring was found and returned to her.

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Depp is seen pacing around a room, swearing and kicking a cabinet

Ms Wass then played a video of Depp, which has previously been played to the court, which shows the actor pacing around a room, swearing and kicking a cabinet.

The barrister asked Ms Roberts: 'Would you agree it shows a different side of his character from the one you speak of in your witness statement?' To which Ms Roberts replied: 'No'.

Responding to questions from Ms Wass about a detox trip to Depp's private island in the Bahamas in August 2014, Ms Roberts confirmed that she had spoken to the actor's doctor Dr Kipper and nurse Debbie Lloyd.

She told the court that neither of them had a discussion with her about the actor's medical affairs.

Ms Wass then read out part of the actor's medical records from September 2014, which said Depp was 'sitting in the kitchen with scraped and bloodied knuckles' and said he had punched a whiteboard in the kitchen after a fight.

The barrister said: 'It would appear that Dr Kipper saw a different aspect of Mr Depp than you did, would you agree?' Ms Roberts replied: 'Yes.'

Ms Wass then asked Ms Roberts about the former couple's stay in the Bahamas for Christmas 2015, and the estate manager confirmed that she was not aware Depp and Heard's relationship was very difficult at that point.

Heard was 'the most violent' in their relationship, says Depp's estate manager 

The barrister said: 'As far as you were concerned, you have suggested that it was Ms Heard who was the most violent, is that right?' Ms Roberts replied: 'Correct.'

She then described seeing Depp with a 'gash' on the bridge of his nose, which she said wasn't bleeding, and confirmed the actor had never suggested that she should photograph it.

Ms Wass then put it to Ms Roberts that Heard had the remains of a bruise or a mark on her right cheek, to which Roberts responded: 'It wasn't visible to me.'

The estate manager confirmed the fight between the couple took place on December 29 and she was then shown a photograph from around that time of Heard with bruising on her face.

However, she again said she had not seen this bruising when she saw the couple after the argument.

During an exchange with Depp's barrister David Sherborne, Ms Roberts confirmed that she had never seen the video clip before it was played in court and that she did not see the actor be violent to Heard in that clip.

She also said that she 'never saw' Mr Depp being violent or aggressive towards Ms Heard on the island, and never saw him hit her.

Mr Sherborne then said Ms Roberts explained in her witness statement that Ms Heard wasn't wearing make-up on the island, which the estate manager said was 'correct'.

The barrister asked: 'Did you ever see that bruising on her when she was on the island?' To which Ms Roberts replied: 'No.'

He then asked if Ms Roberts would have seen if Ms Heard had bruising to her face at that time, to which she answered: 'If she had then I would have seen it.'

Mr Sherborne said it was suggested by Ms Wass that Ms Roberts depended on Depp for her livelihood, and she told the court her additional income came from a family business in the Bahamas, which includes a law firm and a car dealership.

The barrister said: 'Ms Wass is suggesting to you that you are not telling the truth because you are scared of losing a job that you love, livelihood, you need your home on the island.

Depp's former bodyguard Malcolm Connolly
Depp's former bodyguard Malcolm Connolly arrives at court yesterday

Depp's former bodyguard Malcolm Connolly (pictured yesterday), who has worked for Depp and his family for about 16 years, said the actor was 'in emotional distress and panicking' after his finger was severed in Australia

'Are you lying because you are worried about those things Ms Roberts?' The estate manager replied: 'No I'm not lying. I'm not lying.'

'I'm done. No more!': Texts sent by Johnny Depp to private doctor

Texts sent by Johnny Depp to his private doctor, Dr David Kipper, after he claimed Amber Heard cut off part of his finger in Australia in March 2015:

'F***ed, man... Had another one... I just cannot live like this... She is as full of s**t as a Christmas goose. I'm done. NO MORE...!!!

'The constant insults, the demeaning, belittling, most heartbreaking spew that is only released from a malicious, evil and vindictive c**t!!!!! But, you know what... ?? FAR MORE hurtful than her venomous and degrading, endless 'educational' ranting...???

'Is her hideously and purposely hurtful tirades and her goddam shocking treatment of the man she was meant to love, above all... Here's the real deal, mate... Her obsession with herself..?? Is far more important...

'She is SO F***IN' AMBITIOUS!!! She's so desperate for success and fame... That's probably why I was acquired, mate...!! Although, she has hammered me with what a sad old man, has been I am...

'Cowan has done me the most cruel of favors... I'm so very sad... I cut the top of my middle finger off... What should I do!?? Except, of course, go to a hospital... I'm so embarrassed for jumping into anything with her...'

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Calls for Depp's accountant to give more evidence about actor's accounts amid claims Heard was a 'gold digger' 

Shortly before lunch, the court heard legal argument about whether Depp's accountant, Edward White - who gave evidence by video link from the US on Monday - could be asked to provide further information about Depp's accounts during the period of his marriage to Heard.

Ms Wass QC, said that 'one of the criticisms that has been made of Ms Heard... is that she is a gold digger'. Ms Wass said it had been suggested that that was the 'motivation' for her 'elaborate hoax in order to trick, somehow trick Mr Depp'.

She added: 'The position is that Ms Heard was given a settlement of $7million (£5.5million) when the divorce came through on August 15 2016.'

Ms Wass continued that if it was true that Heard was 'entitled to half the income accrued by Mr Depp during the course of their marriage... and the settlement was considerably less than what she was entitled to, which we say is the position, it considerably emasculates the claimant's case.'

She told the court that Depp's income between February 2015 and May 2016 was 'quite considerable' and that the information NGN wanted Mr White to give 'strikes at the heart of the claimant's case'. 

Depp's barrister David Sherborne said that 'it was not suggested by Mr Depp that it had anything to do with being a gold digger'.

But Ms Wass referred to Depp's witness statement in which he said that he eventually believed that Ms Heard had 'an agenda, namely to get married to me in order to progress her own career and/or to benefit financially'.

She also referred to a text sent by Depp shortly after the couple split which referred to Heard as 'gold-digging, low-level (and) dime-a-dozen', adding: 'Gold-digging is top of the list.'

Ms Wass said she was 'asking Mr White to confirm the accounts for the relevant year, the year of the marriage, which he is in a position to do.' 

Heard arrives wearing a face covering at the Royal Courts of Justice this morning as legal proceedings continue

Heard arrives wearing a face covering at the Royal Courts of Justice this morning as legal proceedings continue

Amber Heard at court yesterday
Johnny Depp arrives at the High Court yesterday

Heard (left) arrives at the High Court yesterday for her ex-husband Depp's (right, also yesterday) libel case to continue

Mr Justice Nicol said: 'I'm not inclined to ask Mr White to give us further information about the income that Mr Depp earned during the course of the marriage and their relationship.'

But the judge added: 'Mr White should be asked to give whatever information he is able to give about the settlement that was reach with Ms Heard as part of the divorce agreement.'

Depp was 'in emotional distress' after his finger was severed in Australia and allegedly had a cigarette stubbed on his face

Earlier, Depp's former bodyguard claimed in court yesterday that Depp said Heard had 'cut my f***ing finger off' after smashing his hand with a vodka bottle and stubbing a cigarette on his face during a blazing row.

Malcolm Connolly, who has worked for Depp and his family for about 16 years, said the actor was 'in emotional distress and panicking' after his finger was severed in Australia.

The incident is one of 14 allegations of violent behaviour Heard has made against her former husband which are at the centre of his libel claim against The Sun newspaper being heard at the High Court in London. 

Mr Connolly said in a witness statement that when he and another security guard arrived at the property, Depp told him: 'Look at my finger. She's cut my f***ing finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle.' 

Following the Australia incident, Mr Connolly said the actor also told him Heard had put a cigarette out on his face, and he saw a mark. It took place just one month after Heard and Depp had married in Las Vegas in February 2015. 

The security officer said Heard's account of the incident bore 'no resemblance' to his recollection and that when he arrived at the house, the actress 'did not have any marks on her face or arms'. 

He said he got to the property at about 1.30pm after receiving an urgent call from the head of Mr Depp's security team Jerry Judge, now deceased, who told him: 'Malcolm, get in the car, extract the boss from the situation.'

Mr Connolly said: 'I could hear the ruckus inside. I opened the door, which wasn't locked, and saw Johnny in the foyer area of the house. He and Amber were screaming at each other.

'She was wearing a sort of green silk night thing, you might call it a slip. I shouted at Johnny words to the effect of 'Come with me, you are coming with me'.

'I then took his arm trying to move him out, but he broke away. I said again words to the effect of 'Johnny, come with me'. It wasn't easy but I did get him outside.

'I had the car door open and when we were outside Johnny said to me words to the effect of 'Look at my finger. She's cut my f***ing finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle'. I saw his finger and it was a mess.' 

Mr Connolly's statement continued: 'Amber appeared at the door and then came close to the car, screaming and crying, calling out words along the lines of 'Are you just going to leave it like this, you f***ing coward?'

'Then she was saying 'I love you, I love you. Is this how you are going to end this?'. She was not making a lot of sense - one second she was begging Johnny not to leave the house and then she was screaming at him for running away.

'She was absolutely hysterical. I was worried that she might start throwing objects at Johnny, or at myself, as I had seen her throw objects before.

'For example, I had seen her lob a fork in Johnny's general direction once; another time I recall she threw a lighter at him, another time a can of coke. I knew that we needed to get out of there as soon as possible.'

Depp's bodyguard claims Heard 'did not have any marks on her face or arms'

Mr Connolly said he could see Heard's face 'very clearly', adding: 'She did not have any marks on her face or arms. She didn't look in any physical distress.

'I was much more concerned about Johnny. He was obviously in emotional distress and panicking. He wasn't that drunk or out of it though and was easily standing on his own and having a conversation.'

The security guard said the team knew the true cause of Depp's injury would 'create extremely bad publicity' and that Mr Judge suggested they should say at hospital that the actor had injured his finger while slicing onions. 

Mr Connolly said: 'I thought it was fairly obvious that this was not true given the severity of the injury and suggested we say he jammed it into a car door. However we went with the onion cover story. The specialist didn't believe us for one second.'

He said Depp did not go back to the house over the next few days and stayed at Mr Connolly's apartment with him instead.

Frantic response saw Depp's security team say they 'have got to get over to his house urgently'

Sasha Wass QC, representing The Sun's publisher News Group Newspapers, asked Mr Connolly about the incident in Australia.

She said Mr Connolly was told by Jerry Judge, then Depp's head of security, that they 'have got to get over to Mr Depp's house urgently'. Mr Connolly said that when he arrived at the house 'there was an argument ongoing'.

Ms Wass asked if Mr Connolly could 'understand what Mr Depp was saying during the course of that argument'.

He replied: 'No, because I was outside... I could hear a ruckus, but I couldn't understand the actual words being said.' Ms Wass asked: 'Was there a time when you did get inside the house?' Mr Connolly replied: 'Yes.'

Pirates of the Caribbean star Depp is pictured outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London this morning

Pirates of the Caribbean star Depp is pictured outside the Royal Courts of Justice in London this morning

Depp has claimed that allegations of domestic violence made by Heard (pictured yesterday) 'mirrored' her abuse towards him
Amber Heard is pictured yesterday

Depp has claimed that allegations of domestic violence made by Heard (pictured yesterday) 'mirrored' her abuse towards him=

Ms Wass asked 'what sort of state' Depp was in, to which Mr Connolly said the actor was 'distraught'. She then asked if Depp was 'coherent' or if he 'appeared as if he had been drinking'.

Johnny Depp's security guard recalls actor's 'distress' after his finger was severed 

One of Johnny Depp's security team has told the High Court the actor was 'in emotional distress and panicking' after his finger was severed during an incident in Australia.

The episode, in March 2015, is one of 14 allegations of violent behaviour Amber Heard has made against her former husband which are at the centre of his libel claim against The Sun newspaper.

Malcolm Connolly, who has worked for Mr Depp and his family for about 16 years, said in a witness statement that when he and another security guard arrived at the property, the Hollywood star told him: 'Look at my finger.

'She's cut my f***ing finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle.'

Mr Connolly said the actor also told him Ms Heard had put a cigarette out on his face, and he saw a mark.

The security officer said Ms Heard's account of the incident bore 'no resemblance' to his recollection and that when he arrived at the house, the actress 'did not have any marks on her face or arms'.

He said he got to the property at about 1.30pm after receiving an urgent call from the head of Mr Depp's security team Jerry Judge, now deceased, who told him: 'Malcolm, get in the car, extract the boss from the situation.'

Mr Connolly said: 'I could hear the ruckus inside. I opened the door, which wasn't locked, and saw Johnny in the foyer area of the house.

'He and Amber were screaming at each other. She was wearing a sort of green silk night thing, you might call it a slip.

'I shouted at Johnny words to the effect of 'Come with me, you are coming with me'.

'I then took his arm trying to move him out, but he broke away. I said again words to the effect of 'Johnny, come with me'. It wasn't easy but I did get him outside.

'I had the car door open and when we were outside Johnny said to me words to the effect of 'Look at my finger. She's cut my f***ing finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle'. I saw his finger and it was a mess.'

Mr Connolly's statement continued: 'Amber appeared at the door and then came close to the car, screaming and crying, calling out words along the lines of 'Are you just going to leave it like this, you f***ing coward?'

'Then she was saying 'I love you, I love you. Is this how you are going to end this?'.

'She was not making a lot of sense - one second she was begging Johnny not to leave the house and then she was screaming at him for running away.

'She was absolutely hysterical. I was worried that she might start throwing objects at Johnny, or at myself, as I had seen her throw objects before.

'For example, I had seen her lob a fork in Johnny's general direction once; another time I recall she threw a lighter at him, another time a can of coke.

'I knew that we needed to get out of there as soon as possible.'

Mr Connolly said he could see Ms Heard's face 'very clearly', adding: 'She did not have any marks on her face or arms. She didn't look in any physical distress.

'I was much more concerned about Johnny. He was obviously in emotional distress and panicking. He wasn't that drunk or out of it though and was easily standing on his own and having a conversation.'

The security guard said the team knew the true cause of Mr Depp's injury would 'create extremely bad publicity' and that Mr Judge suggested they should say at hospital that the actor had injured his finger while slicing onions.

Mr Connolly said: 'I thought it was fairly obvious that this was not true given the severity of the injury and suggested we say he jammed it into a car door.

'However we went with the onion cover story. The specialist didn't believe us for one second.'

He said Mr Depp did not go back to the house over the next few days and stayed at Mr Connolly's apartment with him instead. 

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Mr Connolly said: 'It's hard to tell with Johnny because it takes some amount of volume of alcohol.' He added: 'He didn't appear that drunk to me.'

Mr Connolly said that after he arrived at the house in Australia in March 2015, Depp was 'having a conversation with me, straight as a die'.

Ms Wass asked if Depp appeared to be rational, to which the personal security guard said: 'I don't know about rational because he was in shock.' 

The barrister then asked if Depp appeared to have taken drugs, and whether Mr Connolly was 'familiar with what he was like when he took drugs'. Mr Connolly said: 'I'm never privy to that sort of behaviour... I have never seen it.'

Bodyguard denies claims that Depp was 'covered in blood and paint and dirt and he was dishevelled'

Ms Wass suggested: 'He was absolutely filthy, wasn't he? Untidy... covered in blood and paint and dirt and he was dishevelled and didn't appear as if he had washed. He was properly filthy?' Mr Connolly said that was not the case.

Ms Wass suggested to Mr Connolly that his evidence in his witness statement - that Mr Depp told him, 'she's cut my f****** finger off. She's smashed my hand with a vodka bottle' - was not true. Mr Connolly replied: 'I can only say I was there, I witnessed it.'

Ms Wass said Depp had 'come up with a variety of potential explanations to give to other people about how his finger was damaged'. Mr Connolly said that those explanations were 'only to protect Amber'.

He added that the story that Depp had trapped the finger in the 'accordion doors' in the house was 'my story'.

Ms Wass asked: 'You cooked up that lie, did you?' Mr Connolly said: 'Yes.'

Ms Wass then took Mr Connolly to a text sent by Depp to his private doctor, David Kipper, shortly after he lost the tip of his finger which read: 'F*****, man. Had another one. I just cannot live like this. She is as full of s**t as a Christmas goose!!!

'I'm done. NO MORE!!! The constant insults, the demeaning, belittling, most heartbreaking spew that is only released from a malicious, evil and vindictive c***!!!!!'

The message added: 'I cut the top of my middle finger off... What should I do!?? Except, of course, go to a hospital...' 

Ms Wass asked: 'Would you agree it appears that Mr Depp was accepting that he cut the top of his finger off in that text?'

Mr Connolly said: 'Yes, it's how it's worded.'

Depp asked his assistant for 'more whitey stuff'

Ms Wass then read out a text sent by Depp to his assistant Nathan Holmes, just five minutes later, which read: 'Need more whitey stuff ASAP, brotherman. And the E business.'

Mr Connolly said the reference to 'whitey stuff' was 'probably cocaine' and that 'E business' was a reference to ecstasy.

Ms Wass then suggested that the house was 'completely wrecked', but Mr Connolly said: 'I never saw the house completely wrecked. I only got as far as the front foyer.'

The barrister asked: 'You couldn't see paint that had been graffitied all over the house? You couldn't see damage?' Mr Connolly said: 'No.'

He also said he did not see any broken windows at the property. Ms Wass then said: 'As far as you were concerned, Ms Heard was uninjured.' Mr Connolly replied: 'That's correct, yes.'

Ms Wass asked: 'What opportunity did you have to look at Ms Heard to say that?' Mr Connolly said that when he was 'trying to get Johnny in the car, Amber came to the front door screaming and shouting'.

Ms Wass asked if he was 'absolutely sure' he did not see any scratches on Heard's arms, to which Mr Connolly said he was.

She also asked if Mr Connolly saw a 'bruise on her (Heard's) face', to which he said he had not.

Ms Wass asked Mr Connolly about an audio recording, part of which was played to the court, which was made during the incident in Australia in March 2015.

The court heard a male voice, which Mr Connolly said he recognised as Depp's voice, shouting unintelligibly, and the security guard said the actor was 'in shock' at that point.

Ms Wass said the recording was made over five hours and included various conversations, with Depp, his doctor and Mr Judge, all heard on the full audio.

Mr Connolly told the court: 'It appeared to me at the time that Amber was completely unharmed.' Ms Wass asked if it was possible, given the circumstances of the situation, that he must have missed something, to which Mr Connolly responded 'no'.

She said: 'And you are trying to be fair to both parties - it's not a question of you simply coming here to support your boss?' Mr Connolly replied: 'Not at all, no.'

Security team told how Depp was 'not well' and needed help 

Ms Wass said that, during part of the recorded conversation, Mr Judge could be heard to say: 'He is not well, we need to help him out in every way we possibly can.'

Mr Connolly confirmed he agreed with Mr Judge's remark that the actor was not well.

Ms Wass said Mr Judge could also be heard to say: 'He basically completely cut the top of his finger off on a broken bottle and we found the piece and we had to put it on ice.'

Mr Connolly said he didn't remember that and his recollection was Depp telling him that Heard had cut his finger off with a broken bottle.

Ms Wass then asked Mr Connolly about a train trip in South East Asia, which was Depp and Heard's honeymoon in July 2015.

She read out a diary note written by Heard which said: 'We finally fell asleep with one another smashed together in desperate, childlike anger, fear and love.'

Heard recounted 'terrible' fight in a diary note

The note continued: 'Our fight was terrible. Johnny... at one point found himself with his shirt wrapped around my neck. Amazing to think about (the) precision, co-ordination that required considering the close circumstances...

'I don't even know how I wound up with this huge, rather annoying knot on the back of my head. F***, I hate that.' The note concluded: 'Where are my lines, do I have any left?'

Ms Wass asked where Mr Connolly was on the train, and he said he was 'about three or four doors down' from the couple.

The barrister asked: 'So, if a fight had taken place at 3.30 in the morning, do you think you would necessarily have known about it?'

Mr Connolly replied: 'I would never have known about it.'

David Sherborne, representing Depp, then asked Mr Connolly: 'Did you ever see any injuries to Ms Heard on the trip on the South East Asia train?'

The security guard said, 'no, never', before confirming that Ms Heard had not told him she had received any injuries, nor that Mr Depp had hit her.

Mr Sherborne then asked: 'If she had suffered injuries, would you or would you not have seen them?'

Mr Connolly replied: 'I would have seen them.' 

Depp was 'in a lot of pain, a lot of distress and shock' after the finger incident

Mr Sherborne then asked about the incident in Australia in March 2015, and referred to the recording Mr Connolly had been played which the barrister said was taped by Heard. Mr Connolly said Depp was 'in a lot of pain, a lot of distress and shock'.

He said the first thing Depp said to him when he tried to remove him from the house was 'give me a f****** minute'. Mr Connolly said the actor then 'stood in the driveway holding his hand and he said 'she just cut my f****** finger off''. 

Mr Sherborne said Mr Connolly was 'dealing with a difficult situation', and asked what experience he had of similar situations. Mr Connolly said: 'I'm an ex-prison officer for HMP Pentonville.'

He explained that he was 'trained in extraction, I'm trained in pacifying... spotting bruising patterns'. Mr Connolly added that he was trained 'by the establishment, by the Home Office'.

Mr Sherborne referred to the 'other explanations' for how Depp lost the top of his finger and asked Mr Connolly why they were devised.

Mr Connolly said they were 'to protect the production' Depp was involved in at the time, as well as Heard.

He added that he had 'seen it in prison' that 'the usual victim pattern is to protect the abuser for some reason, you know the psychological bullying... they fit the same criteria, they never come forward with the information'.

Mr Sherborne asked about the 'cigarette burn' on Depp's cheek after the incident, which Mr Connolly said he saw on the actor's face.

The barrister then turned to the transcript of the recording Heard apparently made, on which Mr Judge can be heard to say 'she hit him, she slapped him yesterday'.

Mr Sherborne asked: 'Ms Heard hitting or slapping Mr Depp, is that something you have heard before?' Mr Connolly replied: 'I've heard it before, yes.'

Mr Sherborne asked if it was a 'one-off', to which Mr Connolly said it had happened 'in Australia and in Los Angeles'.

He also asked Mr Connolly about a text message, which was sent on an unknown date, sent to him by Mr Depp which read: 'Please get me out of this room now, she struck me about 10 times. Can't take anymore.'

Mr Sherborne asked: 'In your experience, Mr Connolly, of dealing with Ms Heard and Mr Depp over a number of years, was this a one-off type of text or conversation with Mr Depp?' Mr Connolly said: 'No.'

Mr Sherborne asked Mr Connolly: 'Did you ever witness Mr Depp physically attack or hit Ms Heard at any time?'

Mr Connolly said: 'No - and I wouldn't tolerate any man striking a woman. No matter who he was, I just wouldn't tolerate that.' Mr Sherborne asked: 'Not even if it was your boss?'

Mr Connolly replied: 'Not even if he's my boss. I don't care if he's the Pope.' Mr Sherborne then asked: 'Not even if your livelihood depended on it?'

Mr Connolly said: 'I work for Johnny ... only three days ago, I was offered a job in Peru. I don't depend on Johnny for my income.'

Mr Sherborne asked him about the suggestion that 'you had been pressured to lie and come on Johnny's side', and whether that was true. Mr Connolly said: 'Absolutely untrue.'

Mr Connolly's evidence came on day six of the trial of the actor's libel claim against The Sun newspaper over an April 2018 article which labelled him a 'wife beater'. 

Yesterday's evidence comes one day after Depp finally finished giving evidence and claimed that allegations of domestic violence made by Heard, 34, 'mirrored' her abuse towards him.

On the final day of his evidence at the Royal Courts of Justice in London on Monday during his libel case against The Sun, Depp said: 'It seemed like everything she would accuse me of was something she had done to me.'

The actor also accused Heard of throwing a 'haymaker' punch at him during a row after her 30th birthday party, just hours after he had learned during a 'bad' business meeting that he had lost $650million (£514million).

On Monday, the High Court also heard that Depp has a 'remarkable' ability to not get drunk despite drinking 'a lot of alcohol', that cocaine simply 'brought him to a normal level which normal people might operate at'.  

Depp is suing The Sun's publisher News Group Newspapers (NGN) and its executive editor Dan Wootton over an article in April 2018 which labelled him a 'wife beater'.

His barrister David Sherborne referred on Monday to a 'secret recording' of the former couple in San Francisco in July 2016, after they had split and Heard had obtained a restraining order against the actor.

In the recording, Heard can be heard to say it was 'unbelievable to imagine' that she had either been 'in a secret fight club' or 'plotting to do this for three years ... just saving it up for the right time' when she was not asking for any money, adding 'no-one is going to believe that'.

Depp described Heard's words as 'a reverse confession', adding: 'It seemed like everything she would accuse me of was something that she had done to me, so I started to see this kind of pattern, a mirroring, and when she said that, I was real taken aback, for sure.'

Mr Sherborne said Depp can also be heard to say 'you f****** haymakered me, man' in the recording - which is said to refer to an incident after Heard's 30th birthday party at the couple's LA penthouse on April 21 2016.

The actor is accused of throwing a bottle of champagne at Heard, grabbing her by the hair, and pushing her during a row, after he arrived home late for the party. Depp denies the allegations. 

The actor said that, at a business meeting on the day of Heard's party, he was 'in the early stages' of finding out from a new business manager that 'the former business managers had (taken) quite a lot of my money'.

Amber Heard photographed Johnny Depp with ice cream spilled on his legs during a private flight from Boston to Los Angeles in May 2014 before showing it to him the next day and saying: 'Look at what you've become', the court heard earlier this week

Amber Heard photographed Johnny Depp with ice cream spilled on his legs during a private flight from Boston to Los Angeles in May 2014 before showing it to him the next day and saying: 'Look at what you've become', the court heard

Depp admitted to leaving graffiti on a bathroom mirror after a fight with Heard
Depp admitted to leaving graffiti on a bathroom mirror after a fight with Heard

Depp admitted to leaving graffiti on a bathroom mirror after a fight with Heard

Depp's island in the Bahamas is pictured. Depp's trial heard yesterday from the property manager at his Bahamas home, who said Heard had told Depp during a row in December 2015 that his 'career is over', he would die a lonely man' and called him 'fat'

Depp's island in the Bahamas is pictured. Depp's trial heard yesterday from the property manager at his Bahamas home, who said Heard had told Depp during a row in December 2015 that his 'career is over', he would die a lonely man' and called him 'fat'

Asked how much had been taken, Depp said: 'It was put to me this way, because I had no idea about money or amounts of money.

'Since Pirates (Of The Caribbean) 2 and 3, I had - and this is ludicrous to have to state, it's quite embarrassing - apparently I had made $650million and when I sacked them, for the right reasons, I had not only lost $650million, but I was $100million (£79 million) in the hole because they (the previous business managers) had not paid the government my taxes for 17 years.'

Depp was also shown a photograph, apparently taken by his ex-wife, which showed him in August 2014 with 'ice cream spilled all over my leg' shortly before he was due to go to the Bahamas for a detox.

The actor said the picture was taken at a time when he had been working 17-hour days and was 'very tired, falling asleep'.

The court also heard evidence from Depp's former personal assistant, Stephen Deuters, who alleged Heard 'was the abuser in the relationship'.

Mr Deuters, who is now European president of Depp's production company, Infinitum Nihil, said that during the period in which Depp is alleged to have been abusive towards Heard, he saw her 'on many occasions' and 'at no point' did she 'ever mention any physical abuse'.

He told that court that he was 'extremely surprised and outraged' when it became public that Heard had filed for a restraining order.

Mr Deuters described the couple's tempestuous relationship as 'not great', saying: 'I think they were two people that were in love with each other that shouldn't have been together.'

The front desk supervisor at Depp's LA penthouse building also gave evidence that she saw 'no visible injuries whatsoever to Heard's face' three days after Mr Depp allegedly hit his ex-wife in the face with her own mobile phone on May 21 2016.

Trinity Esparza said the first time she saw any marks on Heard's face that week was on May 27, the day the Aquaman actress appeared in court to obtain a restraining order against Depp, which 'disturbed' Ms Esparza.

Ms Esparza, who owns the company that provided concierge services at the Eastern Columbia building where Depp previously owned five apartments, said in her witness statement that she 'saw and interacted with Heard on May 23, May 24 and May 25 with a clear and unmarked face'.

Sasha Wass QC, representing NGN, said to Ms Esparza: 'Isn't it more accurate to say you saw her earlier in the week and you didn't notice it?' Ms Esparza replied: 'That is not accurate, I saw her very clearly.'

Ms Esparza also told the court that she saw 'a number of marks on Ms Heard's body' - including bruises on her neck, plasters on her arm and a mark below her left eye - on a day in June or July 2016, shortly after Tesla founder Elon Musk left the building at around 9am looking 'like he had just woken up with messy hair'.

Depp is suing NGN and Mr Wootton over the publication of an article 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?'NGN is defending the article as true, and says Depp was 'controlling and verbally and physically abusive towards Heard, particularly when he was under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs'.

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