Audio By Carbonatix
Johnny Depp has said text messages he sent about burning and drowning his former partner Amber Heard were a joke based on a Monty Python sketch.
Testifying before a Virginia court on Monday, the actor said he was "ashamed" of the messages, and that they were an attempt at humour.
Mr Depp, 58, sued Ms Heard, 36, over a story she wrote in which she described herself as a victim of domestic violence. He denies any abuse.
Ms Heard filed a $100m counterclaim.
Taking the stand for a fourth day, Mr Depp responded to questions about a 2013 text exchange with British actor Paul Bettany.
"Let's burn her," Mr Depp had wrote. "Let's drown her before we burn her."
He then made a further obscene suggestion "to make sure she is dead".
Asked about the messages in court, Mr Depp said the messages were "directly" from a Monty Python sketch about burning and drowning witches.
"This is a film we'd all watch when we were 10 - it's just irreverent and abstract humour," he said.
During cross-examination, Mr Depp was pressed on his claims that Ms Heard was wrong to portray him as a domestic abuser.
Jurors heard a series of audio recordings of conversations between the former couple, in which Mr Depp could be heard shouting vulgar insults and obscenities at Ms Heard.
In one exchange, Ms Heard shouts at Mr Depp to put his "cigarettes out on someone else". Mr Depp could be heard insulting Ms Heard about her weight.
He grimaced while the clips were played, while Ms Heard seemed to hold back tears.
And lawyers for Ms Heard focused again on Mr Depp's his history of substance use, claiming he would be violent during alcohol and drug binges.
But Mr Depp said: "If anyone had a problem with my drinking, at any time in my life, it was me. The only person I've ever abused in my life is myself."
At times, Mr Depp appeared visibly agitated by the lines of questioning, occasionally snapping at Ms Heard's lawyer, J Benjamin Rottenborn.
Mr Rottenborn introduced a series of negative articles about Mr Depp, some dating back to 2014, trying to demonstrate that damage to his reputation - and his career - had been done years before Ms Heard publicly accused Mr Depp of abuse.
"These are all hit pieces. These are dreck [rubbish]," Mr Depp said.
At the centre of the case is Ms Heard's 2018 opinion piece in the Washington Post, where she describes herself as a "public figure representing domestic abuse".
Mr Depp says the article - which does not mention him by name - is defamatory and derailed his career.
At the trial - now in its third week - lawyers for Mr Depp have claimed Ms Heard was the aggressor, playing the "role" of victim to benefit her career.
Earlier, the jury heard evidence presented by the celebrity ex-couple's former therapist, who described how Mr Depp and Ms Heard engaged in "mutual abuse", as well as from medical workers who treated Mr Depp as he was detoxing himself from opiates.
Several high profile witnesses, including the entrepreneur Elon Musk and the actors James Franco and Paul Bettany, are to appear later in the trial, which is expected to last at least another month.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Police Service warns public against fake traffic violation messages
10 minutes -
Kwadwo Poku recounts two-hour wait at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital over emergency care
16 minutes -
GOC backs Ghana Sports Fund as game-changer for sports development
22 minutes -
Sefa and Stonebwoy unite on playful Afrobeat anthem ‘Busy Body’
26 minutes -
Cocoa sector crisis poses a national security threat and danger to Ghana’s economy – IERPP to Government
35 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Wednesday, February 25, 2026
1 hour -
What is wrong with us? When Filth Becomes Our Normal
1 hour -
Dome-Kwabenya MP hands over library to boost learning at community SHS
2 hours -
When the School Bell Rings for Violence: A National Wake-Up Call
2 hours -
Who has ever heard of the Department of Community Development?
2 hours -
Debt, dignity and the cocoa farmer: Separating political noise from structural truth in Ghana’s cocoa crisis
2 hours -
NDC and NPP are parties of the elites – Yaw Nsarkoh laments political drift
3 hours -
Talking 2028 in 2026 – Yaw Nsarkoh blasts NDC and NPP ‘party of the elites’ politics
3 hours -
Justice is not for lawyers alone – Yaw Nsarkoh demands broader national conversation
3 hours -
‘The long term is where we will live’ – Yaw Nsarkoh urges future-focused leadership
3 hours
