Hollywood actress Amber Heard has said that she doesn’t blame the jury that awarded her ex-spouse Johnny Depp more than USD 10 million after a contentious six-week libel trial.
“I don’t blame them,” Heard told Today co-host Savannah Guthrie in an interview clip that aired on Monday on NBC. “I actually understand. He’s a beloved character and people feel they know him. He’s a fantastic actor,” she added.
American TV programme Today plans to air more of its interview with Heard on Tuesday and Wednesday. The interview is airing nearly two weeks after the verdict, which also saw Heard awarded USD 2 million over her claim that one of Depp’s attorneys defamed her.
Depp sued Heard for libel in Virginia over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as a public figure representing domestic abuse. His lawyers said he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name.
The verdict brought an end to a televised trial that Depp hoped would help restore his reputation. The televised trial turned into a spectacle that offered a window into a volatile marriage and both actors emerged with unclear prospects for their careers.
Guthrie pressed Heard on her credibility and what it meant to jurors in the clips released on Monday. “There's no polite way to say it. The jury looked at the evidence you presented. They listened to your testimony and they did not believe you," she said. “They thought you were lying.”
Heard responded, “How could they not come to that conclusion? They had sat in those seats and heard over three weeks of non-stop, relentless testimony from paid employees and witnesses the actor described as ‘randos’ or random people.”
Depp, who has not yet done a formal interview about the case, has said, “The verdict gave me my life back.” Heard said in a statement after the verdict that she was heartbroken, while her attorney said in a separate Today interview that her client was demonised on social media and she plans to appeal the judgment.
“I don’t care what one thinks about me or what judgments you want to make about what happened in the privacy of my own home, in my marriage, behind closed doors. I don’t presume the average person should know those things, and so I don’t take it personally,” Heard told Guthrie.
“You still couldn’t look me in the eye and tell me that you think on social media there’s been a fair representation. You cannot tell me that you think that this has been fair,” Heard said during the interview.
Heard’s interview will also be featured in Friday's Dateline episode.