Australian agriculture minister Barnaby Joyce sets 50-hour deadline for Pistol and Boo to be sent back to US after star flies in dogs without ‘proper permits’

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

Hollywood heart-throb Johnny Depp has been given an ultimatum by Australia: send your pet dogs back home to the United States or face having them put down.

Depp is in hot water with the Department of Agriculture after failing to declare his two Yorkshire terriers when he flew into Australia on his private jet last month for the filming of the fifth instalment of the Pirates of the Caribbean movie franchise.

“He has decided to bring to our nation two dogs without actually getting proper certification and the proper permits required. Basically, it looks like he snuck them in,” agriculture minister Barnaby Joyce told reporters on Thursday. “We found out he snuck them in because we saw him taking them to a poodle groomer.”

The penalties for breaching Australia’s biosecurity laws are severe, according to the agriculture minister.

“Mr Depp has to either take his dogs back to California or we are going to have to euthanise them. He’s now got about 50 hours left to remove the dogs.”

Australia’s strict biosecurity measures are in place in order to keep out canine diseases such as the bacterial infection leptospirosis and rabies.

Dog groomers Lianne and Ellie Kent in Queensland with Pistol (left) and Boo who belong to Johnny Depp and his wife Amber Heard. Photograph: Happy Dogz

The agriculture minister said no one should be able to bypass biosecurity rules, even if they had been voted the world’s sexiest man twice.

“It’s time that Pistol and Boo buggered off back to the United States,” Joyce said. “He [Depp] can put them on the same chartered jet he flew out on to fly them back out of our nation.”

Labor’s agriculture spokesman, Joel Fitzgibbon, said Joyce was making Boo and Pistol “walk the plank”.

“How was the breach of our border security allowed to occur in the first place?,” he asked.

“Instead of grandstanding before the media, Barnaby Joyce should be answering the hard questions about the breach and what role his biosecurity funding cuts may have played.”

The immigration minister, Peter Dutton, admitted there had been an error somewhere in the customs process in letting the dogs in.



“They should be screened like everyone else,” Dutton told 2GB radio on Thursday morning. “We’re having a look at this at the moment.”



Speaking earlier to ABC local radio in Brisbane, Joyce said keeping diseases such as rabies out of Australia was no trivial matter.

“The reason you can walk through a park in Brisbane and not sort of have in the back of your mind – what happens if a rabid dog comes out and bites me or bites my kid – is because we’ve kept that disease out.

“I’ll tell you how close it is, it’s in Bali, it’s just next door, so this is not fanciful stuff and therefore we’re very diligent about what comes into our nation.”

Within hours, Depp’s Gold Coast residence was surrounded by media waiting for a sight of the dogs.

Tom Forbes (@tomforbesGC) Media camped outside Johnny Depps GC mansion waiting for his dogs to be destroyed or deported. @abcgoldcoast pic.twitter.com/h6xn93rgVJ

An online petition calling on the minister to save the dogs was signed by more than 600 people in its first hour.

The author of the petition, 27-year old Sydney woman Namita Sopal, told Guardian Australia she hoped it would start an online movement to put pressure on the government to withdraw its “cruel” threat.

“I love dogs and I thought it was crazy, so that was my motivation,” she said.

The United States embassy in Canberra released a statement warning citizens of Australia’s strict customs and quarantine regulations and advising potential travellers with specific concerns to contact the Australian embassy in Washington DC for more details.

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Lianne Kent, the owner of Happy Dogz, the grooming service where Depp and his wife Amber Heard had taken Pistol and Boo at the weekend, posted on the business’s Facebook page that it had been “an honour” to attend to the pets.

“Their hair was really long and they needed a trim. She [the celebrities’ handler] desperately wanted them trimmed back and their faces styled,” she told the Gold Coast Bulletin. “They wanted the dogs groomed somewhere that’s a bit more private and we’re right near the set anyway.”

Kent did not return Guardian Australia’s calls.

Joyce acknowledged that his tough stance on the issue would come with consequences.

“After that, I don’t expect to be invited to the opening of Pirates of the Caribbean,” he said.

Earlier this month, animal welfare groups called on the environment minister, Greg Hunt, to deny film-makers permits for two capuchin monkeys who were due to perform in the new Depp movie, which is in production on the Gold Coast.

The activists said importing the animals from the US to Australia would cause them significant physical and psychological distress.