Amber's Demand for New Johnny Depp Defamation Trial Rejected
Amber Heard's lawyers had asked Judge Penney Azcarate to set aside the verdict awarding $10 million to the "Pirates of the Caribbean" star and declare a mistrial, but the judge denied the request.
Washington: A Virginia judge on Wednesday rejected actress Amber Heard's demand for a new trial in the defamation case she lost to her former husband Johnny Depp.
Heard's lawyers had asked Judge Penney Azcarate to set aside the verdict awarding $10 million to Depp and declare a mistrial, but the judge denied the request.
Heard had asked for a new trial because one of the seven jurors was not the man summoned for jury service but his son in a case of mistaken identity.
"There is no evidence of fraud or wrongdoing," Azcarate said, and the juror "met the statutory requirements for service."
The jury in June found Depp and Heard liable for defamation -- but sided more strongly with the "Pirates of the Caribbean" star following an intense six-week trial riding on bitterly contested allegations of domestic abuse.
The seven-member jury awarded damages to Depp after finding that a 2018 newspaper article penned by Heard on her experience of "sexual violence" was defamatory.
Original News: World | Agence France-Presse
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