Johnny Depp case: Lawyer says the Sun's story was 'not researched at all'

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Johnny Depp at the Royal Courts of Justice in LondonImage copyright AFP Image caption Mr Depp waved at fans and supporters as he arrived in court for the final day of his libel case

An article in the Sun describing Johnny Depp as a "wife-beater" was "one-sided" and "not researched at all", the actor's lawyer told the High Court.

In closing submissions for Mr Depp, David Sherborne said the paper acted as "both judge and jury".

Mr Depp is suing the newspaper's publisher and editor for libel, saying the allegation is "completely untrue".

The Sun's lawyers said on Monday there was "no doubt" he had "systematically abused" his former wife Amber Heard.

Around 30 fans of the actor were gathered in the main hall of the Royal Courts of Justice and screamed as the 57-year-old Hollywood star entered the building on the final day of the most high-profile British libel case so far in the 21st Century.

Mr Depp is suing News Group Newspapers (NGN) - publisher of the Sun - and executive editor Dan Wootton over an article published on the Sun's website on 27 April 2018 with the headline: "Gone Potty: How can JK Rowling be 'genuinely happy' casting wife beater Johnny Depp in the new Fantastic Beasts film?"

Mr Sherborne told the court the article meant Mr Depp was "guilty, on overwhelming evidence, of serious domestic violence" against Ms Heard, an actress and model, during their marriage.

He said it meant that the actor was unfit to work in the film industry and had paid £5m to compensate Ms Heard for causing significant injuries and making her fear for her life.

It also suggests Mr Depp had been "tried, convicted and sentenced", his barrister said.

Mr Sherborne referred sarcastically to the "journalistic excellence" the Sun was seeking to defend and said "this court has not heard from a single journalist" about the article.

It was presented in a "deliberately and wholly one-sided manner", although Mr Depp had never faced any criminal charge of violence against Ms Heard, the lawyer said.

He said Mr Depp knows the allegations are "completely untrue", as do the friends and other witnesses who testified during the three-week case.

"Why else would Mr Depp, this private man as he explained, expose all the most intimate details of his personal life?" Mr Sherborne said.

'A complex individual'

The lawyer said that most of the witnesses who gave evidence supporting Mr Depp in the case do not work for him and are not financially dependent on him.

Responding to claims that Mr Depp's drug use made him irrational, Mr Shelborne said his client had been open about using marijuana, MDMA and magic mushrooms.

He said Mr Depp also acknowledged taking cocaine, which did not turn him into "some sort of crazy monster" but countered the effects of the opioid addiction he developed after an injury on the set of Pirates of the Caribbean.

Mr Sherborne said the publisher relied on evidence from Ms Heard, "a complex individual with a complex history".

He said "it is hard to keep up" with the new allegations about domestic violence that have "tumbled out over the years" from Ms Heard.

Despite evidence from medical notes, she had "sought to play down" her own history of addiction to alcohol and cocaine, Mr Sherborne said.

And he said audio recordings revealed Ms Heard making a "straightforward, unambiguous, unequivocal admission of hitting" Mr Depp.

"Her physical violence towards him, her starting physical violence as she admits, make her the domestic abuser, not him," said Mr Sherborne.

Image copyright EPA Image caption Amber Heard (right) arrived at court with her partner Bianca Butti

In a statement outside court after the final hearing, Ms Heard said that despite the "significance" of the case she would have preferred not to have had to be involved in it, adding that, after obtaining a restraining order against Mr Depp in 2016, she had "just wanted to move on with my life".

She added: "It has been incredibly painful to relive the break-up of my relationship, to have my motives and my truth questioned, and the most traumatic, intimate details of my life with Johnny shared in court and broadcast to the entire world," she said.

"I stand by my testimony and I now place my faith in British justice."

'Terrifying behaviour'

On Monday, the legal team for NGN made its closing submissions, defending the Sun's article as true.

Sasha Wass, representing the publisher, said: "Having heard all the evidence in this case and all the supporting evidence of the incidents of violence, we suggest that there is no doubt that Mr Depp regularly and systematically abused his wife.

"The characterisation that he is a wife-beater is entirely truthful."

She said Mr Depp's lifestyle, "surrounded by a clique of ageing, male rabble-rousers with alcohol and drugs shared together", was "destroying his life, his career and his health".

Ms Wass said the actor had sought stability with Ms Heard, but "he grew to hate her for her protectiveness" and resented her telling him how he could end his addiction.

"Mr Depp has spent his entire adult life doing exactly what he wanted, and he was not about to answer to a woman at this stage in his life," she said.

The lawyer for NGN presented the relationship as a generational clash between a "modern and ambitious woman" and a "self-scripted Southern gentleman" who "required a supplicant wife". She said Mr Depp did not expect his wife to continue working with "young and attractive actors".

Ms Wass said the Hollywood star was subject to "irrational mood swings and abnormal behavioural patterns" because of his substance abuse. She told the court he gave these changes in behaviour a nickname - "The Monster".

She also said Mr Depp's memory of his "disgraceful conduct" was "so severely impaired by drug misuse that he may not even have been aware of the extent of his violence and terrifying behaviour".

In more than one incident, Ms Heard was put in fear of her life, the lawyer said.

Mr Justice Nicol has said that his judgement will be reserved for a later date.

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