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Amber Heard gives evidence at defamation trial, accusing Johnny Depp of sexual assault and threatening to kill her during Australia visit

Actor Amber Heard says her ex-husband Johnny Depp sexually assaulted her with a liquor bottle and threatened her life shortly after the pair were married.

WARNING: This article contains disturbing content.

Heard told the widely watched defamation trial she visited Depp in Australia about a month after their wedding in early 2015 when he was filming the fifth Pirates of the Caribbean movie on the Gold Coast.

She said on their first evening together a planned dinner at the house where Depp was staying devolved into an argument.

Depp, who she said was drinking, pushed her against the refrigerator and held her there by her throat.

Heard said she broke free and retreated upstairs, returning later in her nightgown to find Depp still awake.

She said she tried to get him to eat since they had never had dinner, but he was "belligerent" and threw bottles that broke around her.

Heard told the jury that during the assault, Depp repeatedly said "I'll f****** kill you". (Pool via AP: Jim Watson)

Depp ripped off her nightgown, leaving her naked, she said, and threw her on a ping-pong table before sexually assaulting her with a bottle.

She shook her head and sobbed as she described the episode. She said she kept thinking that she hoped the bottle was not one of the ones that was broken.

During the assault, Depp repeatedly said "I'll f****** kill you," she told the jury.

"I had just married him."

Following the revelations from the trial, Queensland Police said it was unaware of the allegations and no complaint was made.

"The Queensland Police Service was unaware of the allegations in 2015 and has not received a complaint in relation to these alleged incidents," a spokesperson said.

A few months later, back home in Los Angeles, Heard said Depp broke her nose and ripped out chunks of her hair in another violent encounter.

Depp, 58, testified earlier in the trial that he never hit Heard and argued that she was the one who was the abuser.

He is suing Heard, 36, for $50 million, saying she defamed him when she claimed she was a victim of domestic abuse.

Heard has counter-sued for $100 million, arguing Depp smeared her by calling her a liar.

Depp offers a different version of events

Depp told jurors that Heard was the person who hurled objects, hitting him with a vodka bottle that severed the top of his right middle finger.

His attorneys showed evidence of his hospital visit to surgically repair the injury.

Depp acknowledged using blood from his finger to write on the wall to remind Heard of "lies" she had told him.

He described her as "bullying" to him throughout their relationship and said she left him "broken."

The legal case hinges on a December 2018 opinion piece Heard authored in the Washington Post.

The article never mentioned Depp by name, but his lawyer told jurors it was clear Heard was referencing him. The couple's divorce was finalised in 2017 after less than two years of marriage.

Depp, once among Hollywood's biggest stars, said Heard's allegations cost him "everything."

A new Pirates of the Caribbean movie was put on hold, and Depp was replaced in the Fantastic Beasts film franchise, a Harry Potter spin-off.

Heard's attorneys have argued that she told the truth and that her opinion was protected free speech under the US Constitution's First Amendment.

A state court judge in Virginia's Fairfax County is overseeing the trial, which is now in recess until May 16. Closing arguments are scheduled for May 27.

Less than two years ago, Depp lost a libel case against the Sun, a British tabloid that labelled him a "wife beater."

A London High Court judge ruled he had repeatedly assaulted Heard.

Depp's lawyers have said they filed the US case in Fairfax County because the Washington Post is printed there. The newspaper is not a defendant.

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