A Virginia jury decided unanimously in favor of Johnny Depp in his defamation lawsuit against his ex-wife, actress Amber Heard.
Summary
A Virginia jury decided unanimously in favor of Johnny Depp in his defamation lawsuit against his ex-wife, actress Amber Heard.
- Depp was awarded $10 million compensatory damages and $5 million punitive damages, vindicating his claims that Heard had lied about Depp abusing her during and after their marriage.
- The jury also found Heard was defamed by one of Depp’s lawyers and awarded her $2 million compensatory damages.
- Depp sued Heard over a 2018 op-ed she published in the Washington Post (ghost-written by the American Civil Liberties Union) that heavily implied Depp abused her.
- Heard plans to appeal the judgment.
- At various points, the trial featured “graphic allegations of abuse, recordings of vicious fights and airing of nasty text messages.”
- The salacious details revealed in the trial leave both actors’ future career prospects uncertain at this time.
- The New York Times summarized the trial’s major events, including the major claims made by both sides in the trial.
- The Washington Post examined why Depp lost his defamation trial in the U.K. but won in the U.S. The U.S. is typically considered a much more difficult place to win a defamation suit.
- The Root had the heater take to end all heater takes: the verdict in a trial between two uber-wealthy white celebrities “sends a message to black women everywhere.” When the only tool you have is a hammer…
- National Review offered a useful recap of the trial’s twists and turns that led to the unanimous jury verdict in Depp’s favor.
- The Federalist said the real loser from the Depp-Heard trial was “the pathetic journalists” of The Washington Post, which printed the ACLU-ghostwritten op-ed from Amber Heard that kicked off the entire imbroglio.
- Reason called the Depp-Heard trial an example of “how not to handle a #MeToo case” and cautioned against trying to condense a messy and salacious trial between two multimillionaires into a simple story with hero-villain or partisan narratives.
© Dominic Moore, 2022