ASKING FOR IT —
British cave diver sues Elon Musk for defamation over “pedo guy” tweets
Musk has produced no evidence to back up his accusations.

For weeks, Tesla CEO
Elon Musk has been spoiling for a legal fight with Vernon
Unsworth, the British cave diver who played a key role in
rescuing a dozen teenagers and their coach from a flooded cave
in Thailand.
After Unsworth
criticized the "submarine" Musk built to
help with the rescue effort, Musk responded by calling
Unsworth a pedophile—without a shred of evidence. Unsworth
then threatened to sue Musk for defamation.
Now Musk is getting his
wish: Unsworth has sued Musk for
defamation in
Los Angeles court. He is asking for damages of at least
$75,000—and possibly much more.
“Sorry, pedo guy”
Back in July, engineers
working for Musk built a miniature submarine they hoped would
be helpful to the rescue effort. The device turned out to be
unnecessary; the rescue was nearly complete before Musk could
get the sub to Thailand.
And Unsworth told CNN that
the device had "absolutely no chance of working," even if it
had arrived on time. It was too long and rigid to go around
corners, he said. Unsworth added that Musk could "stick his
submarine where it hurts."
That apparently angered
Musk, who vowed on Twitter to demonstrate that the submarine
could be maneuvered through the cave. "Sorry pedo guy, you
really did ask for it," he tweeted.
When someone asked if he
really meant to suggest Unsworth was a pedophile, Musk
responded with "Bet ya a signed dollar it's true."
Musk apologized for this
tweet a few days later, but his actions in the following weeks
belied his apology. "You don't think it's strange he hasn't
sued me?" heasked on Twitter in
late August.
Days later, Musk responded to a
Buzzfeed News inquiry with
a series of emails that included several more defamatory
claims against Unsworth:
He's an old, single white guy from England who has been traveling to or living in Thailand for 30 or 40 years, mostly Pattaya Beach, until moving to Chiang Rai for a child bride who was about 12 years old at the time. There's only one reason people go to Pattaya Beach. It isn't where you go for caves, but it is where you'd go for something else. Chiang Rai is renowned for child sex-trafficking.
"I fucking hope he sues
me," Musk added. Musk put "off the record" at the top of the
email, but Buzzfeed chose to publish it anyway since the
publication had not actually agreed to treat the email is if
it were off the record.
Unsworth says that
almost every word of Musk's email is false: he first went to
Thailand in 2011, not 30 or 40 years ago. He says he has
never been to Pattaya Beach. Most important, Unsworth says he
has never been involved in child sex-trafficking (or adult
sex-trafficking) and has never taken an under-aged bride. He
met his Thai wife when she was in her 30s.
Musk will now get a
chance to prove his accusations against Unsworth—something he
seemingly hasn't even tried to do yet. If he can't, he could
wind up owing Unsworth a lot of money.
We've asked Tesla's PR
team for comment and will update if we hear back.
Promoted Comments
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Timothy B. Lee / Senior tech policy reportersnoopy.369 wrote:show nested quotes
I'm curious why the suit was in US courts and not in the UK (where defamation suits are easier to win, from what I recall). Twitter is worldwide, right?
He is actually suing both places. The initial lawsuit was filed in LA for damage to his reputation outside the UK, but it said he is also planning to sue separately in UK courts for damage to his reputation inside the UK. -
Timothy B. Lee / Senior tech policy reportercyclingsm wrote:This will be interesting. In US law, the diver must show that he suffered significant loss in order to have status. That typically, based on case law, must be a financial loss of some kind. That said it can be "I was turned down for this job and I think it's because they recognized me" or "I was kicked out of my housing" or anything else.
I doubt the guy can prove what he needs to. That said, yes, Elon was in the wrong and is just upset because he couldn't be the hero. We'll see how it goes...
I don't think this is right. There are a certain set of claims that are considered libelous per se, meaning that the damage to your reputation is so clear that you don't have to prove specific economic damages. Accusing someone of sexual misconduct is on the list.