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Johnny Depp kind, attentive and non-violent, says ex-partner Vanessa Paradis

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star is suing the Sun’s publisher, News Group Newspapers (NGN), and its executive editor, Dan Wootton, for libel.

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Johnny Depp

Johnny Depp’s ex-partner Vanessa Paradis has said he is a “kind, attentive, generous and non-violent person and father”, according to court documents in his libel claim against the Sun newspaper.

The Pirates Of The Caribbean star is suing the tabloid’s publisher, News Group Newspapers (NGN), and its executive editor, Dan Wootton, over an April 2018 article which referred to the 56-year-old as a “wife-beater”.

The article related to allegations made against Mr Depp by his former wife, actress Amber Heard – which the actor strenuously denies.

Lawyers for Mr Depp are seeking to admit evidence from Ms Paradis, who has two children with the star, as part of his case against the publisher – which is due to be tried at the High Court in London in July.

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Johnny Depp and Vanessa Paradis (Ian West/PA)

David Sherborne, representing Mr Depp, said in court documents that his relationship with Ms Paradis ended in 2012, shortly before he and Ms Heard were together, “and when he is first alleged to have been violent”.

In a witness statement, Ms Paradis said: “I have known Johnny for more than 25 years.

“We’ve been partners for 14 years and we raised our two children together.

“Through all these years I’ve known Johnny to be a kind, attentive, generous, and non-violent person and father.”

She added: “He was never violent or abusive to me.”

At a hearing conducted remotely over Skype on Wednesday, Mr Depp’s lawyers also said they wish to adduce evidence from actress Winona Ryder, who was in a relationship with the star in the 1990s.

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Winona Ryder said Johnny Depp was ‘never violent, never abusive’ towards her (Yui Mok/PA)

In her statement, Ms Ryder said: “I cannot wrap my head around (Ms Heard’s) accusations.

“He was never, never violent towards me. He was never, never abusive at all towards me.”

Mr Depp’s lawyers also wish to call evidence from a former personal assistant to Ms Heard, and a mechanic who worked for the couple before their acrimonious divorce.

Mr Sherborne said mechanic David Killackey’s witness statement referred to an incident after Ms Heard “asked for her car to be released without payment”, which Mr Killackey refused.

Mr Killackey quotes Ms Heard as saying: “Johnny isn’t paying my rent, he isn’t paying my bills, f*** him, f*** you,” Mr Sherborne added.

The barrister continued: “These are not the actions of someone who is being controlled and intimidated by some terribly aggressive man.

“This is someone who is more than capable of – and did – abuse Mr Depp.”

Mr Sherborne added Kate James, who was Ms Heard’s personal assistant during the early years of her relationship with Mr Depp, claims that Ms Heard asked her to lie about “the Australian dog episode”.

In 2014, Ms Heard and Mr Depp recorded a now infamous video apologising for bringing their Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo into Australia illegally.

Ms Heard pleaded guilty to falsifying an immigration document to conceal the dogs in a private jet in 2014, and avoided jail under a deal that included appearing in the video warning others against breaking Australia’s strict quarantine laws.

Sasha Wass QC, representing NGN and Mr Wootton, argued that the evidence of Mr Killackey and Ms James was “largely tangential”, describing Ms James as a “disaffected ex-employee” who was giving “contentious and malicious evidence”.

Ms Wass also addressed Mr Sherborne’s contention that Ms Heard’s alleged reaction to Mr Killackey was not the action of “someone who is being controlled and intimidated by some terribly aggressive man”.

She said that argument was “not conducive to the psychological understanding of the way battered women behave”.

Ms Wass added that the suggestion that Ms Heard “would have been incapable of raising her voice to a mechanic or, indeed, to anyone else” was a “false assumption which, in the 21st century, we have all been able to dispel”.

A two-week trial was due to start in London on March 25 at which the actor, Ms Heard and a number of Hollywood figures would have had to give evidence, but it was put on hold due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The trial is now set to take place at the Royal Courts of Justice over three weeks from July 7, with strict social distancing measures in place.

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Amber Heard and Johnny Depp attending the premiere of Black Mass during the 59th BFI London Film Festival in 2015 (Jonathan Brady/PA)

Mr Justice Nicol, hearing the case, previously ruled that parts of Ms Heard’s evidence, relating to allegations of sexual violence, will be heard in private.

He made his ruling following an application by lawyers for NGN, saying the orders sought by the publishers were “necessary and proportionate”.

The exact nature of the allegations was not disclosed to the press or public and remain unknown.

The judge is now being asked to deal with a number of directions ahead of the planned trial date.

Mr Sherborne said Mr Depp denies that he has ever hit any woman, and that he accuses Ms Heard of being “abusive and physically aggressive” – which she vehemently denies.

The libel claim against NGN and Mr Wootton arises out of publication of an article in The Sun in April 2018, under the headline “Gone Potty – How can JK Rowling be ‘genuinely happy’ casting wife-beater Johnny Depp in the new Fantastic Beasts film?”

Mr Depp has brought separate libel proceedings against Ms Heard in the US, which the court has previously heard are “ongoing”.

The pair met on the set of 2011 comedy The Rum Diary and married in Los Angeles in February 2015.

In May 2016, Ms Heard obtained a restraining order against Mr Depp after accusing him of abuse, which he denied.

The couple settled their divorce out of court in 2017, with Ms Heard donating her seven million US dollar (£5.5 million) settlement to charity.

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