A day after Johnny Depp's friend wrote an online column slamming his estranged wife Amber Heard as a "manipulative (expletive)" intent on spreading lies about Depp, the actress' lawyers have released a statement Tuesday saying she "suffered through years of physical and psychological abuse" from the actor, and blasted the "vicious false and malicious allegations that have infected the media."
Heard, 30, who filed for divorce from Depp last week, accused the 52-year-old actor of repeated domestic violence. The filing was apparently fueled by an alleged incident on May 21 at Depp's home, in which the Los Angeles police were called to a domestic dispute. Heard declined to press charges, and according to the Associated Press, the cops determined "a crime did not occur."
Less than a week later, Heard filed a restraining order against Depp, appearing at the Los Angeles courthouse with a visible bruise and said in court documents that Depp threw a cell phone at her face. A judge granted her request, ordering Depp to stay 100 yards away until the next court hearing.
The ugly fallout from the public split was evident over Memorial Day weekend as several Hollywood figures stepped up to defend Depp, including the column in TheWrap from Depp's friend, comedian Doug Stanhope. Titled "Johnny Depp Is Being Blackmailed by Amber Heard - Here's How I Know," Stanhope wrote he was at Depp's house on the night of the alleged violence. Hours before the cops were called, he wrote, Depp said Heard was planning to leave him and tell lies about him if she didn't get what she wanted.
On Tuesday, Heard's lawyers accused Depp's team of "viciously attacking Amber's character" and released a long statement clarifying why Heard initially didn't give a statement to the police, which has been a point of evidence for Depp defenders.