Current:Home > NewsAmber Heard avoids jail time for alleged dog smuggling in Australia after charges dropped -WealthMap Solutions
Amber Heard avoids jail time for alleged dog smuggling in Australia after charges dropped
View
Date:2025-04-17 15:59:35
CANBERRA, Australia — Australian prosecutors dropped a potential criminal case against American actor Amber Heard over allegations that she lied to a court about how her Yorkshire terriers Pistol and Boo came to be smuggled into Australia eight years ago, the government said Wednesday.
Heard and her then-husband Johnny Depp became embroiled in a high-profile biosecurity controversy in 2015 when she brought her pets to Australia’s Gold Coast, where Depp was filming the fifth movie in the “Pirates of the Caribbean” series.
Australia’s Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, a biosecurity watchdog, said the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions decided against prosecuting 37-year-old Heard for allegedly feigning ignorance about the nation’s strict quarantine regulations.
“Prosecution action will not be taken against … Heard over allegations related to her sentencing for the illegal import of two dogs,” the department said in a statement.
The department had investigated discrepancies between what her lawyer told an Australian court in 2016 — when she admitted smuggling the dogs — and testimony given in a London court in 2020 when Depp, now 60, was suing The Sun newspaper for libel over allegations of domestic violence against his former wife.
Heard had pleaded guilty in 2016 at the Southport Magistrates Court in Australia to providing a false immigration document when the couple brought their dogs into Australia in a chartered jet a year earlier.
Prosecutors dropped more serious charges that Heard illegally imported the dogs — a potential 10-year prison sentence.
The false documentation charge carried a maximum penalty of a year in jail and a fine of more than 10,000 Australian dollars ($7,650). Magistrate Bernadette Callaghan sentenced Heard instead to a one-month good behavior bond, under which she would only have to pay a fine of AU$1,000 if she committed any offense in Australia over the next month.
Heard’s lawyer, Jeremy Kirk, told the court that his client never meant to lie on her incoming passenger card by failing to declare she had animals with her. In truth, Kirk said, she was simply jetlagged and assumed her assistants had sorted out the paperwork.
But a former Depp employee, Kevin Murphy, told London’s High Court in 2020 that Heard had been repeatedly warned she was not permitted to bring dogs to Australia. But she insisted, and later pressured a staff member to take the blame for breaking quarantine laws.
The department told the AP it collaborated with overseas agencies to investigate whether Heard had provided false testimony about her knowledge of Australia’s biosecurity laws and whether an employee had falsified a statutory declaration under duress of losing their job.
'Depp v. Heard':Answers to your burning questions after watching Netflix's new doc
The department had provided prosecutors with a brief of evidence against Heard, but no charges would be laid.
When the dogs were discovered in May 2015 following a trip from the couple’s rented Gold Coast mansion to a dog grooming business, Depp and Heard complied with a government-imposed 50-hour deadline to fly them back to the United States or have them euthanized.
Pistol and Boo became Heard’s property when the couple divorced in 2017.
Amber Heardmakes 'difficult decision' to settle Johnny Depp defamation case
veryGood! (53343)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- A South Korean religious sect leader has been sentenced to 23 years in prison over sex crimes
- Spain’s bumper Christmas lottery “El Gordo” starts dishing out millions of euros in prizes
- How to watch 'Love Actually' before Christmas: TV airings, streaming info for 2023
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Reducing Methane From Livestock Is Critical for Stabilizing the Climate, but Congress Continues to Block Farms From Reporting Emissions Anyway
- Lone gunman in Czech mass shooting had no record and slipped through cracks despite owning 8 guns
- France to close its embassy in Niger for an ‘indefinite period,’ according to letter to staff
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Humans could have arrived in North America 10,000 years earlier, new research shows
Ranking
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- For more eco-friendly holiday wrapping, some turn to the Japanese art of furoshiki
- Warner Bros. and Paramount might merge. What's it going to cost you to keep streaming?
- China drafts new rules proposing restrictions on online gaming
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Oscars shortlist includes 'I'm Just Ken,' 'Oppenheimer.' See what else made the cut.
- Czechs mourn 14 dead and dozens wounded in the worst mass shooting in the country’s history
- 'Cold moon' coming soon: December 2023 full moon will rise soon after Christmas
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
These now cherished Christmas traditions have a surprising history. It involves paganism.
High stakes for DeSantis in Iowa: He can't come in second and get beat by 30 points. Nobody can, says Iowa GOP operative
AP Week in Pictures: Latin America and Caribbean
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
LeBron James is out with left ankle peroneal tendinopathy. What is that? How to treat it
Apple iPhone users, time to update your iOS software again. This time to fix unspecified bugs
Robert Pattinson and Pregnant Suki Waterhouse Engaged After 5 Years