Heard has escaped conviction in the case which was dubbed ‘the war on terrier’.
Actress Amber Heard has escaped a conviction in Australia, after pleading guilty to providing a false immigration document when she entered the country last year with her pet Yorkshire terriers, Pistol and Boo. Heard and her husband Johnny Depp have since issued a public apology video, in which they warn others to ‘declare everything when you enter Australia’.
Amber Heard and Johnny Depp have apologised for bringing their dogs into Australia.
On Monday (April 18th) the superstar couple appeared in a Queensland court where Heard was placed on a Aus$1,000 one-month good behaviour bond and two more serious charges of illegally importing the dogs were dropped.
In the courtroom an awkward filmed apology from the couple was played, which has since been likened to hostage video. "Australia is a wonderful island with a treasure trove of unique plants, animals and people," Heard said in the video. "It has to be protected," Depp adds.
More: Johnny Depp Makes Unusual Cameo Appearance In 'The Walking Dead'
"Australia is free of many pests and diseases that are commonplace around the world. That is why Australia has to have such strong biosecurity laws," Heard continued. Depp then added: "And Australians are just as unique, both warm and direct. When you disrespect Australian law they will tell you firmly.”
Watch Johnny Depp and Amber Heard's apology video:
“I am truly sorry that Pistol and Boo were not declared, protecting Australia is important,” Heard concludes, before her husband adds, “declare everything when you enter Australia.” In court, Magistrate Bernadette Callaghan described the video as 'of far more benefit to this country' as a warning to would-be illegal importers than a conviction against Heard.
More: Johnny Depp Transforms Into Donald Trump For Funny Or Die Parody
The case made international headlines last May, after agriculture minister, Barnaby Joyce threatened to have the dogs put down if they were not flown out of the country. The two dogs eventually made it back to the US on time, but the spat between the actor and the Australian minister was dubbed the ‘the war on terrier’ by the press.
During a press conference in Venice last September Depp poked fun at the scandal when a journalist asked him if he intended to take his dogs on a gondola tour of the city. ”No. I killed my dogs and ate them,” the actor replied. “Under direct orders from some kind of, I don't know, sweaty, big-gutted man from Australia."
What do you do when you feel like your garden ornaments are in grave danger?...
The latest adaptation of Agatha Christie's 83-year-old classic whodunit, this lavish, star-studded film is old-style...
It's the 1930s and a group of strangers from different walks of life board a...
Subtitled Salazar's Revenge in the UK, this fifth film in the long-running series never quite...
It seems Captain Jack Sparrow has been sailing the seas as a pirate for many,...
Forget Davy Jones' Locker and the Fountain of Youth, Captain Jack Sparrow is on an...
It's been five years since the last Harry Potter movie, and J.K. Rowling has been...
Jack Sparrow finds himself in constant trouble with the law; not only is his name...
This much more light-hearted sequel reinvigorates the franchise after Disney's quirky but murky 2010 reboot...
As Alice is once again taken into the magical and mysterious world that she's somehow...
For a biopic of a real-life person, this feels like an oddly standard mob thriller....
Alice once again returns to Wonderland and meets a lot of familiar faces. This time...
Edward Scissorhands is no ordinary boy, as his name may tell. Created by a genius...