Amber Heard: 'I did not choose this fight and now place my faith in British justice'

Amber Heard has declared that she “did not choose this fight” and now places her “faith in British justice” as Johnny Depp’s libel trial against The Sun drew to a close today.

Speaking on the steps of the High Court after the final hearing, Ms Heard said she “would have preferred not to have been in court” for the past three weeks as part of a legal dispute between Mr Depp, her ex-husband, and the tabloid newspaper which described him as a “wife-beater”.

“It has been incredibly painful to relive the break-up of my relationship, have my motives and my truth questioned, and the most traumatic details of my life with Johnny shared in court and broadcast around the world,” Ms Heard said.

Amber Heard delivers a statement as she leaves the High Court in London - SIMON DAWSON/REUTERS
Amber Heard delivers a statement as she leaves the High Court in London - SIMON DAWSON/REUTERS

“I stand by my testimony in court and I now place my faith in British justice.”

Her statement came hours after Mr Depp’s legal team described her in court as a “compulsive liar” who “gratuitously and totally invented” an incident in which she alleged the American actor threw Kate Moss down the stairs.

Mr Depp's lawyers argued that Ms Heard made up the "baseless" claim that he was physical towards the British supermodel, his former girlfriend in the 1990s, when she gave evidence last week.

Ms Heard made the allegation on the second day that she took the stand, telling the High Court: "[Johnny] was about to push [my sister] down the stairs and, the moment before that happened, I remembered information I had heard [that] he pushed a former girlfriend – I believe it was Kate Moss – down the stairs."

David Sherborne, Mr Depp's lawyer, said the claim was "another moment of scripted malevolence" by Ms Heard when she gave evidence and called on Mr Justice Nicol to conclude that she is an unreliable witness.

"We say that Ms Heard doesn't know what the truth means," Mr Sherborne told the court. "Our position is quite simple. We say, from the big points to the small ones, Ms Heard has proven herself to be an unreliable witness and, quite frankly, a compulsive liar."

Mr Sherborne said the Hollywood actress had "changed dates", "added further details" and "invented whole events" during her "performance" in the witness box.

The barrister said the court had heard "astonishingly self-serving and fictionalised accounts" of what Ms Heard was thinking at the time of the alleged violence, and also referred to her "secret feelings book that reads more like a novella than anything which matches reality".

The Pirates of the Caribbean actor sued the newspaper for describing him as a 'wife-beater' - Eddie Mulholland
The Pirates of the Caribbean actor sued the newspaper for describing him as a 'wife-beater' - Eddie Mulholland

On Tuesday, the 12-day legal battle between Mr Depp and The Sun concluded. The Pirates of the Caribbean actor has sued the newspaper for describing him as a "wife-beater".

Mr Sherborne refuted the "exceptionally serious" allegation of domestic abuse levelled at his client, saying that Mr Depp is "no wife beater" and that his traditional "Southern gentleman" attitude meant he has never hit a woman in his life.

Rather, it was Ms Heard who was the "abuser" in the relationship, he argued, as she had a "propensity to violence".

The court heard how Ms Heard's father, David Heard, had previously sent a text to Mr Depp saying his daughter "needs help with her temper".

Mr Depp's legal team also criticised Ms Heard's dishonest account of when she had taken illegal drugs.

"I have never come across, in any case, such deeply unreliable medical notes," Mr Sherborne said. "They were right when it suited her and they were always wrong when it didn't.

"Sometimes notes, even in the course of her giving evidence, could be both right and wrong at the same time. How convenient.

"Doctors were lying, nurses were lying, police officers are lying. Only Ms Heard – who was at pains to repeat the well-rehearsed mantra that she was not here to call anyone a liar – only Ms Heard was correct at all times, no matter what."