Amber Heard shares evidence that 'could have changed' the verdict against Johnny Depp


Amber Heard believes that some key evidence rejected by the court in the defamation lawsuit against ex Johnny Depp could have turned the final verdict in her favor, according to People magazine.


In a new segment of her interview with Savannah Guthrie that aired on Dateline on Friday, Amber said: "From the beginning of my relationship there is a bonding value of notes from the years before 2011 that were taken by my doctor, Reporting the abuse to who I was."

The Aquaman actress explained that those notes contained evidence of 'years of real-time explanation' of alleged abuse at the hands of Johnny during their relationship and marriage.

Notes shared on Dateline and quoted by People magazine reportedly refer to instances of Amber telling her therapist about Johnny 'hit er and threw her on the floor' in January 2012.

In notes taken months from that date, Amber reportedly told her therapist that Johnny 'tearned off his nightgown and threw it on the bed'. She also claimed to her doctor in 2013 that Johnny 'thrown her against a wall and threatened to kill her'.

In a voiceover, Savannah says that the notes were deemed 'inaudible' and therefore 'unacceptable' in court as evidence.

A six-week defamation lawsuit brought against Amber by Johnny in a 2018 op-ed for the Washington Post ended with a seven-person jury siding with the Pirates of the Caribbean actor and Amber found guilty of defamation.

He awarded Johnny more than $10 million in damages.

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