Johnny Depp told the jury on Monday that he is a "victim of domestic violence" as he wrapped up his final day of testimony.
Depp, 58, is in the middle of a high-profile defamation court case against his ex-wife Amber Heard, 36.
He accuses the Aquaman star of defaming him in an op-ed for The Washington Post, in which she described experiencing domestic abuse. While he was not named in the piece, his attorneys argue that it implies that he abused his former wife, an allegation that he denies.
In addition to denying the allegation, Depp also claims that, in actual fact, it is he who is the victim in this case.
Check out the moment Depp told the court that he is indeed a victim of domestic violence:On Monday, an audio tape of Heard and Depp talking in 2016 about their tumultuous relationship was played to the court, Sky News reports.
In the recording, Depp proposes that he and Heard issue a joint letter saying they loved each other and the media had created a storm around them.
He says: "We write a letter together saying that we’re gonna take this out of the public eye, saying that we’re gonna try to work this out on our own, saying that the media [bleeped out] storm. That it’s sickening.
"That we love each other and that we wanna make sure each other is okay. And we had fights in the past that we—"
"No, it matters,” Heard responds to Depp. “You have no idea. Every ounce in my credibility has been taken from me. I mean, and done so in a dishonest way.”
“The abuse, the abuse thing is—we’ve gotta deal with that. Yeah. We’ve gotta deal with that, Amber,” Depp says.
“It’s my credibility,” she responds.
“Then why did you put that out there?” he says.
“I did not. You forced me. Your team forced me to by going on the offense,” Heard said.
Depp told the court he'd hoped issuing a joint letter would allow them to find a "peaceful settlement," after their acrimonious split.
Heard appeared to be against the idea and challenged him to go public with his claim that he, too, had suffered domestic abuse.
"Tell the world, Johnny," she said in the recording. "Tell them I, Johnny Depp - a man - I'm a victim too of domestic violence."
Back in court, Depp's lawyer Camille Vasquez asked her client what he had responded to Heard's suggestion that he is a victim of domestic violence, and he replied: "Yes, I am."