
Dentist used lewd affair email to have chemical used to poison his wife fast-tracked delivered, murder trial hears
James Craig, 47, is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the March 2023 death of his wife, Angela, who'd repeatedly visited the hospital with mystery symptoms in the weeks before she died.
Prosecutors say Craig used poisons - including cyanide, arsenic and a chemical found in eyedrops - to taint protein shakes he prepared for her, even administering a fatal dose in her hospital room.
Cassie Rodriquez, a customer service representative for Midland Scientific, told jurors on Thursday how she first began dealing with Craig's order via email on March 9, 2023.
He wrote to her from the same personal address he'd used for extramarital relationships – jimandwaffles@gmail.com – and such Gmail accounts usually raise a flag at her employer, Rodriquez testified.
Craig filled out and returned a 'usage statement,' she said, 'saying he was using it for some type of seminar he was presenting.'
The dentist had originally noted he wanted the order for 'pick up,' but that wasn't allowed for such chemicals, she said.
She worked on 'trying to get the product to him as soon as possible … he wanted it overnighted.'
Craig was so desperate to get his hands on the chemical that he attempted to call Rodriquez, though they were never connected and continued correspondence via email, she testified.
He repeated his urgency and kept checking on delayed delivery, writing on March 11: 'Wow - it's 7.30 at night and I've been waiting at my office all day for the shipment.
'Looks like it didn't come. I wish they would've just told me they wouldn't be able to get it to me overnight,' Craig wrote to Rodriquez.
He later followed that with: 'It's not your fault I was just feeling frustrated and needed somebody to vent to.'
Craig listed his billing address for the order as the Aurora home he shared with Angela and their children – but listed his dental practice as the shipping address. Craig also marked the order 'personal.'
Craig physically turned up at Midland Scientific's Aurora location, the warehouse supervisor testified on Thursday, asking about a storefront customers could use - but it closed during COVID.
Witness Ashley Donohue testified that Craig turned up on the afternoon of March 13 in 'blue scrubs' in the parking lot - something he'd never seen happen during his five years of working there.
Donohue alerted the company's HR department 11 days later after recognizing Craig on the news, he testified.
Earlier on Thursday, jurors heard testimony from the lead detective in Craig's case - whom he allegedly tried to arrange a hit on from behind bars.
Aurora Police Det. Bobbi Jo Olson told the court that she and other officers served a search warrant at 8.30am the day after first hearing allegations of Craig's cyanide purchase.
Olson will be recalled to testify further later in the trial, the court heard.
A forensics digital expert also testified on Thursday about the process used to extract data from the Craigs' devices.
Upon cross examination on Thursday and since the beginning of the trial, defense lawyers questioned witnesses' credentials and repeatedly noted that receipts, texts and emails did not prove who, in fact, had used the cards and addresses.
Correspondence may have come from Craig's number and jimandwaffles@gmail.com, they argued, but witnesses couldn't verify he'd personally written it, they argued.
Defense lawyers have tried to paint Angela as 'manipulative' and suicidal. They have explained away Craig's behavior from behind bars as 'not great.' After his arrest, Craig allegedly tried to arrange assassinations and get his daughter to plant evidence, in addition to offering free dental work in exchange for fabricating cover stories to clear him, prosecutors have argued.
'He just lost his wife because law enforcement looks at this case with blinders,' defense attorney Ashley Witham said during opening arguments.
'He's been arrested, which means he's also lost his children ... he's anxious and he does some not great things from jail.'
Jurors also heard testimony this week from the office manager at Craig's dental practice - who told the court how she'd seen him mysteriously using an exam room computer in the dark late at night. After that, she said, he texted her that he'd be receiving a personal package at work, and she should put it on his desk and not open it.
A front desk employee opened the package when it arrived a week later, however - the same day Craig emailed Rodriquez to say the cyanide was out for delivery, he'd noted by tracking it.
Romero saw the invoice listing the package's contents as 'potassium cyanide' before she re-boxed it up and put the delivery on his desk as instructed.
She googled potassium cyanide, however - and, after learning its symptoms, comparing them with Angela's mystery illness and noting two unusual statements Craig made to her that his wife might not 'make it through the night - alerted her bosses.
The wife of Craig's dental partner, Michelle Redfearn - a longtime friend of Angela's with a PhD in nursing - testified on Wednesday how she and her husband confronted Craig about the cyanide.
They did so on a phone call on March 15 as the Redfearns sat in their car outside the hospital after learning that Angela had been declared brain dead.
First Craig claimed the package had contained a ring for his wife; when the Redfearns countered that they knew he was lying, he said Angela had asked him to buy the cyanide for her.
He said she was suicidal and lacked the necessary credentials to purchase the chemical.
When Ryan Redfearn pressed him as to why, still, Craig would agree to order the cyanide, he said it was like 'a game of chicken.'
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His reputation had taken a hit, but JK Rowling was still in his corner (he was playing Gellert Grindelwald in the Harry Potter spin-off, Fantastic Beasts), he was still working on new films and his nearly $22.5million (£16.7million) pay cheque for Pirates Of The Caribbean 6 was on the horizon. Then, on April 27, 2018, the tabloid newspaper The Sun printed a story with the headline 'Gone Potty: How can JK Rowling be 'genuinely happy' casting wife beater Johnny Depp in the new Fantastic Beasts Film?' The article challenged JK Rowling on her decision to keep Johnny in the cast, and The Sun ran the same photo of Amber's bruised face that had appeared on TMZ. Something shifted for Johnny with this article. Seeing his name in print, attached to the word 'wife beater', in a major news publication was a bridge too far. He sued for libel. In the months that followed, Johnny was photographed looking unrecognisable. Headlines described him as 'gaunt', 'pale' and 'shockingly thin'. He took to wearing a black fitted cap that said 'FUGLY' in large block letters across the front. In November 2018, the ACLU approached Amber to write an article asserting that survivors of gender-based violence had been made less safe under the first Trump administration. It would debut Amber's new role with the ACLU and conveniently coincide with the US release of her new movie, Aquaman. The film, which had already been released in the UK, was shaping up to be a huge hit at the box office. The ACLU suggested the piece should 'interweave her own personal story, saying how painful it is as a survivor to witness these setbacks' and helped by ghost-writing it for her. The piece was published by the Washington Post on December 18, 2018 under the headline: 'Amber Heard: I spoke up against sexual violence and faced our culture's wrath. That has to change.' Again, she did not mention Johnny's name, but the media was quick to fill in the blanks. 'Amber claims accusing Johnny Depp of domestic abuse lost her jobs,' ran a headline in Elle magazine, while People magazine ran with: 'Amber Heard says she was dropped from jobs after making Johnny Depp allegations.' The blowback came swiftly for Johnny. Two days after the article was published, he was dropped from the forthcoming instalment of Pirates Of The Caribbean. In January 2019, Amber graced the cover of Glamour's final print issue, wearing a low-cut, baby-blue satin suit and leaning against a shiny red convertible. The headline: 'Amber Heard: Silence Is Complacency.' Two months later, she was served with papers. Johnny was suing her for $50million (£37million) for defaming him in the Washington Post. Johnny's lawsuit categorically denied that he ever abused Amber, claiming that her allegations were part of an 'elaborate hoax to generate positive publicity.' He stated that her story had been 'refuted' by two police officers (who had seen no injury to Amber the night they were called to her apartment), multiple third-party witnesses, and 87 surveillance camera tapes. But the lawsuit was also a plot twist in the wider #MeToo movement: Johnny was turning the tables on his accuser. 'Ms Heard is not a victim of domestic abuse; she is a perpetrator,' he claimed. 'She hit, punched and kicked me. She also repeatedly and frequently threw objects into my body and head, including heavy bottles, soda cans, burning candles, television remote controls and paint thinner cans, which severely injured me.' He added that she committed these acts 'while mixing prescription amphetamines and non-prescription drugs with alcohol.' Here was a powerful male celebrity, who had been publicly accused of domestic violence, not only asserting that the allegations were false, but claiming he was the true victim, and that his much younger wife, a #MeToo advocate, was a systematic abuser. 'I have denied Ms Heard's allegations vehemently since she first made them in May 2016 when she walked into court to obtain a temporary restraining order with painted-on bruises that witnesses and surveillance footage show she did not possess each day of the preceding week,' his filing continued. 'I will continue to deny them for the rest of my life.' The following month, Amber hit back: she was now claiming 13 incidents of domestic violence, described in painstaking detail over 14 pages. Her version of what happened behind closed doors was distressing and graphic. Amber described bloody gashes, being dragged through broken glass, bruised and swollen noses, black eyes, hair pulled from her scalp, being held against the wall by her neck, being suffocated on their marital bed, clothes torn clean off her body, repeated punches to her head, and being dragged up sets of stairs by her hair. Johnny's lawyer called the document listing the incidents a 'public firebomb'. Unless a settlement could be reached, Amber and Johnny would be headed to court in Virginia. But first, they would square off at the Royal Courts of Justice in London for Johnny's defamation case against The Sun. Amber had a trove of pictures, videos, audio recordings and witnesses to support her claims of abuse before the judge. But Johnny's lawyers had unearthed new evidence of their own. In January 2020, two months before the trial was due to begin, Johnny's old friend and colleague Stephen Deuters was on his work computer when a file popped up labelled 'AVM' (for 'Amber voice messages'). He opened the folder and scrolled through the audio recordings, all more than five years old, and totalling more than six hours. 'Holy s***!' he said. He knew he'd found gold. Hours of recordings (consensually recorded on Amber's phone) capturing their bitter fights were now in Team Depp's possession. A Daily Mail headline dropped: 'Exclusive: 'I can't promise I won't get physical again, I get so mad I lose it.' Listen as Amber Heard admits to 'hitting' ex-husband Johnny Depp and pelting him with pots, pans and vases in explosive audio confession.' #JusticeForJohnnyDepp started trending across Twitter and TikTok, and would continue to grow through the forthcoming trials. Amber's Instagram comments, meanwhile, were mobbed by angry Johnny supporters. The internet was starting to take Johnny's side, with Amber becoming the poster child of #MeToo's overreach. More lurid evidence about the couple's life together surfaced in court – including the accusation that Amber had once defecated in their bed (she insisted it was their dogs) – but Johnny lost his case in London. His lawyers accidentally disclosed some appalling texts he had sent to actor Paul Bettany ('Let's burn Amber', 'Let's drown her before we burn her!!! I will f*** her burnt corpse afterward to make sure she is dead'). The judge found Johnny guilty of 12 of the 14 violent incidents to which Amber had testified: therefore The Sun had not libelled him when it called him a 'wife beater'. In November 2020, Johnny began his pre-trial deposition for Depp vs Heard in front of Amber's lawyer, who asked him if he would have felt vindicated if the UK ruling had come down in his favour. Johnny replied that it didn't matter. He lost when Amber made the accusations, the damage was done. 'My continuing to demand the truth is not for me to win,' he explained, 'but it's for the people out there, the women, the victims of this type of thing who are not believed, who are being lied to by your client pretending to be some new messiah of the women's movement. She is a fraud.' The trial would not get under way for a year: originally scheduled to begin in May 2021, it was delayed due to the Covid pandemic. While he and Amber waited in limbo, they both went through big life changes. In April 2021, Amber's daughter Oonagh was born by surrogate. She posted branded content for L'Oreal on Instagram, along with videos chronicling her intensive diet and exercise regimen for Aquaman And The Lost Kingdom, which she'd film over four months in the latter half of 2021. Johnny, meanwhile, unveiled a new vocation as an artist. In January 2022, his artwork entered the world in the form of a digital collection of Warhol-like portraits, entitled Never Fear Truth. As anticipation mounted ahead of the trial, legal experts opined that the odds weren't in Johnny's favour. This time around, he was suing Amber directly, not a tabloid. In order to prove that Amber knowingly made defamatory statements about him, he had to prove a negative – that he never committed domestic violence. It would be a much tougher legal challenge than in the UK, where defamation law should have favoured his case, and yet he'd still lost. Celebrity trials have always captured the public's imagination, playing out like soap operas in the media – and this one was no different, being fully televised. Scores of 'Deppheads' turned the suburban Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse into a freaky festival: there was a pair of stinky alpacas wearing rainbow pom-pom necklaces and countless Jack Sparrow impersonators. Someone even managed to get a truck converted to look like a pirate ship into the courthouse grounds. The sheriff's office tracked the IDs of every spectator who waited in line to get a wristband for entry to the courtroom; they logged driving licences from 41 different states and passports from 15 different countries. During the trial, Johnny gained 9.56million new followers on Instagram, 100 times more than Amber, who gained 91,511. By now, 13 years had passed since Johnny and Amber had met, when she was 23 and he 46, and five years since #MeToo had sparked a global reckoning. But the world had changed since the zealous, hardline early days of the #MeToo movement. The refrains of 'Believe Women' were no longer at a fever pitch. Now almost everyone knew someone who'd been cancelled or de-platformed. To some, distinctions between inappropriate comments, harassment and assault no longer seemed clear or even relevant. To others, frustrations with 'cancel culture', the erosion of due process and #MeToo's perceived excesses simmered. People seemed more willing to acknowledge the grey areas: a relationship simply not working out isn't the same as an abusive one. This time Johnny won his case. The jury found unanimously that he had proved defamation and that Amber had defamed him with 'actual malice'. They awarded him $10million (£7.5million) in compensatory damages and $5million (£3.7million) in punitive damages. The punitive damages would later be reduced to $350,000 (£261,000) due to a limit imposed by Virginia state law. Ruling on Amber's defamation counterclaim for $100million (£74.5million), the jury found just one statement, made by Adam Waldman, Johnny's lawyer, to be defamatory and false and made with 'actual malice'. She was awarded $2million (£1.49million) in compensatory damages from Johnny but no punitive damages. Before, during and after the trial, it was clear that Depp vs Heard had become a vehicle for myriad divergent political and personal causes. The world wanted a black-and-white story: villain vs hero, abuser vs victim, liar vs truth-teller. It had never been that simple. © Kelly Loudenberg and Makiko Wholey, 2025