Johnny Depp Laughs During Amber Heard's Testimony; Actress Spotted Posing For Camera Mid Cry
The defamation trial between Johnny Depp and his ex-wife Amber Heard has become a social media sensation. Videos from the court often make it to social media giving a glimpse of Amber's and Depp's reactions to each other
The
defamation
trial
between
Johnny
Depp
and
his
ex-wife
Amber
Heard
has
become
a
social
media
sensation.
Videos
from
the
court
often
make
it
to
social
media
giving
a
glimpse
of
Amber's
and
Depp's
reactions
to
each
other's
statements.
A
recent
video
from
Heard's
testimony
shows
Depp
laughing
when
the
actress
told
the
jury
she
allowed
him
to
'take
off
his
own
boots'.
During
his
own
testimony
last
week,
Johnny
has
said,
"When
I
came
home
from
work
I'd
come
in
the
house
and
she'd
sit
me
down
and
give
me
a
glass
of
wine
and
take
my
boots
off," Johnny
said.
He
added
that
when
he
did
it
himself,
Amber
told
him,
"No,
no,
no,
that's
my
job.
You
don't
do
that,
I
do
that".
On
Wednesday,
Amber
opened
up
about
the
boots
in
her
testimony
and
told
the
jury,
"I
suppose
that
I
took
off
his
boots
and
it
made
an
impression
on
him.
I
was
happy
to
you
know,
anything
I
can
do
to
show
love.
It
was
certainly
how
I
felt
about
him,
but
if
he
wanted
to
take
off
his
own
boots
he
certainly
could." Johnny's
laugh
on
hearing
Amber's
statement
was
caught
on
camera
and
has
been
making
the
rounds
on
social
media.
Meanwhile,
another
video
of
Amber
taken
during
her
tearful
testimony
also
made
it
to
social
media.
The
short
clip
shows
Amber
blowing
her
nose
on
a
tissue
when
the
camera
flash
reflects
on
her
face.
The
actress
then
proceeds
to
pause
her
actions
and
pose
as
the
photographer
takes
another
shot.
Take
a
look
at
the
videos,
Johnny
Depp
chuckles
when
Amber
Heard
is
asked
about
taking
off
his
boots.
#JohnnyDepp
testified
that
#AmberHeard
insisted
on
taking
off
his
boots,
Heard
mentions
she
did
it
to
show
love
but
he
could
have
taken
them
off
himself
if
he
wanted.
@LawCrimeNetwork
pic.twitter.com/6BPu1cbKfi
Notably,
Johnny
is
suing
Amber
for
libel
defamation
over
the
op-ed
she
wrote
on
December
2018
for
The
Washington
Post
describing
herself
as
"a
public
figure
representing
domestic
abuse."
While
the
article
never
mentioned
Johnny
by
name,
his
lawyers
have
claimed
that
it
nevertheless
defamed
him
as
the
op-ed
referred
to
accusations
she
made
in
2016,
during
their
divorce
proceedings.