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Sky News
'Crying, red eyed and was not making eye-contact'
Officer Melissa Saenz is being asked what VINE is, and she explains that it's an automated computer programme offered for domestic violence crime victims in Los Angeles and Los Angeles County.
She is asked why she did not offer this to Amber Heard when she attended the incident, and officer Saenz says it's because "we only offer it to victims of domestic abuse".
Heard's lawyer now takes us through a transcript of the initial radio calls concerning the calls to the station from Heard's friend reporting an incident. Officer Saenze says when she arrived, along with another officer called Officer Hadden, they saw Heard who said she had had an argument with her husband, who wasn't present, but "would give no further information".
Officer Saenze says they gave her a "business card" so she could "call them if she changed her mind" and then left the apartment.
The officer's list of incidents which they attended that day includes the visit to the penthouse, which includes codes for domestic violence and battery.
Officer Saenze has previously said she believed she was at the incident for around an hour, but Heard's lawyer says CCTV footage shows the officers getting to the apartment at 9.04pm and leaving at 9.19 minutes - making their stay 15 minutes.
Officer Saenze agrees that she "took no notes, or photos, or recorded anything" during the visit. She agrees that "Heard was crying, red eyed and was not making eye-contact" when they talked to her. She says she "does not recall" what Heard was wearing or how she was wearing her hair on that night.
She also testifies that she "saw nothing out of the ordinary" at the apartment on that night, and didn't see anything broken or damaged.
'Crying, red eyed and was not making eye-contact'
Officer Melissa Saenz is being asked what VINE is, and she explains that it's an automated computer programme offered for domestic violence crime victims in Los Angeles and Los Angeles County.
She is asked why she did not offer this to Amber Heard when she attended the incident, and officer Saenz says it's because "we only offer it to victims of domestic abuse".
Heard's lawyer now takes us through a transcript of the initial radio calls concerning the calls to the station from Heard's friend reporting an incident. Officer Saenze says when she arrived, along with another officer called Officer Hadden, they saw Heard who said she had had an argument with her husband, who wasn't present, but "would give no further information".
Officer Saenze says they gave her a "business card" so she could "call them if she changed her mind" and then left the apartment.
The officer's list of incidents which they attended that day includes the visit to the penthouse, which includes codes for domestic violence and battery.
Officer Saenze has previously said she believed she was at the incident for around an hour, but Heard's lawyer says CCTV footage shows the officers getting to the apartment at 9.04pm and leaving at 9.19 minutes - making their stay 15 minutes.
Officer Saenze agrees that she "took no notes, or photos, or recorded anything" during the visit. She agrees that "Heard was crying, red eyed and was not making eye-contact" when they talked to her. She says she "does not recall" what Heard was wearing or how she was wearing her hair on that night.
She also testifies that she "saw nothing out of the ordinary" at the apartment on that night, and didn't see anything broken or damaged.