Johnny Depp's wife Amber Heard will go on trial in Australia in April for allegedly smuggling her two pet dogs into the country in May.
The case was dubbed the "war on terrier" after the actress was accused of failing to declare the animals and put them in quarantine.
The incident hit the headlines when the animals, Pistol and Boo, were threatened with death by Australia's agriculture minister Barnaby Joyce unless they "buggered off back to the United States".
Heard faces two counts of knowingly importing a prohibited product in breach of the Quarantine Act.
The trial was set down for 18 April at Southport Magistrates Court on the Gold Coast in Queensland with a court official telling AFP the actress was required to appear at the hearing.
After the incident, Heard vowed never to return to Australia, although reports earlier this month said she "respected Australia's laws" and was looking forward to "attending the hearing of these matters".
Twelve witnesses are listed to give evidence but it is not known whether Depp is one of them.
The animals, which had allegedly travelled by private jet to Queensland, where Depp was filming Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, were quickly whisked out of the country as the story hit the headlines.
Under strict Australian laws designed to keep disease at bay, dogs entering from the US must be declared and have to spend 10 days in quarantine.
Penalties for contravening the Quarantine Act range from fines to a maximum of 10 years in prison for the worst cases.
Heard is currently promoting The Danish Girl which she stars in with Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander.
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