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Amber Heard settlement 'enshrines' Johnny Depp's victory, expert says

Amber Heard's $1 million payout to settle Johnny Depp's defamation claim against her is a major concession that solidifies her ex-husband's victory, experts told Fox News Digital.

Amber Heard has agreed to pay Johnny Depp $1 million to settle his defamation claim against her – a deal that "enshrines his win" and is a "smart PR move" for the "Pirates of the Caribbean" star, experts told Fox News Digital.

"It's resignation," civil and criminal attorney Tim Parlatore said of Heard's decision to drop her appeal. "This enshrines his win. She's solidifying his victory."

A blockbuster six-week defamation trial in June ended in defeat for Heard.

A Virginia jury awarded Depp $15 million after finding that his ex-wife had defamed him by casting herself as a victim of domestic abuse in a 2018 op-ed. Judge Penney Azcarate reduced the judgment to $10.35 million.

AMBER HEARD SETTLES DEFAMATION CASE WITH JOHNNY DEPP FOR $1M

The jury handed Heard just $2 million in her countersuit. The $1 million settlement will be paid out by one of Heard's insurance policies.

In a lengthy statement on Instagram on Monday, Heard wrote "I defended my truth and in doing so my life as I knew it was destroyed."

Heard added that the deal imposes no restrictions on her ability to talk about the case or her allegations of abuse.

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"I have made no admission, this is not an act of concession," she wrote. But Parlatore noted that if she published another op-ed making the same allegations that the jury found were defamatory, "She could absolutely be sued again, and he would win because he already has a finding."

Her Instagram statement was clearly vetted – if not written – by a lawyer, Parlatore said.

"Everything is couched in terms of ‘I spoke my truth in court,' but she doesn't come out and say he did this or that to me," he said.

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New York-based attorney Todd Spodek called the settlement a "generous gesture" on Depp's part.

"The verdict accomplished his main goal, which was public vindication," he said. "You can't get blood from a stone, and if Amber does not have the money, she doesn't have it."

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He added that Depp pledging the $1 million to charity had a rich irony after it was revealed that Heard only donated a small fraction of her $7 million divorce payout that she'd promised to turn over in full to the ACLU and Children's Hospital Los Angeles.

Eric Schiffer, chairman of Los Angeles-based Reputation Management Consultants, called the settlement an "incredibly smart PR move for Depp."

"It shows compassion and avoids Amber potentially having to file for bankruptcy with a young child with him having been the cause," Schiffer told Fox News Digital.

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Depp's lawyers, Benjamin Chew and Camille Vasquez, said the case was never about money for their client.

"We are pleased to formally close the door on this painful chapter for Mr. Depp, who made clear throughout this process that his priority was about bringing the truth to light," they said in a statement.

Spodek added that a little foresight may have gone a long way for the former couple, who have been battling publicly since their split in 2016.

"They should have taken writer Nora Ephron's sound advice: 'Never marry someone you wouldn't want to be divorced from,'" he said.

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