The Sunday Telegraph

Cave rescuer who lost lawsuit against Elon Musk ‘still a hero’

Tesla founder was ‘only in it for the publicity’, say fellow divers involved in 17-day rescue of Thai boys

- By Yohannes Lowe

A BRITISH caver who last year helped in the rescue of a Thai football team remains a hero and should have won his libel case against the “publicitys­eeking” Elon Musk, his friends and fellow rescuers have said.

Vernon Unsworth sought £145million in damages from the Tesla founder, arguing in court that his “defamatory” tweet calling him a “pedo guy” after the rescue of the 12 boys and their football coach had damaged his reputation.

However, a Los Angeles court on Friday unanimousl­y ruled in favour of Musk – said to be worth an estimated £18billion – as the judge said the comments did not meet the legal standard for defamation.

The pair became embroiled in a row after Mr Unsworth, an experience­d cave explorer, branded Mr Musk’s offer of a small submarine to help with the rescue effort a “PR stunt”.

Mr Musk responded by tweeting to his 22.5million followers, “sorry pedo guy, you really did ask for it”, before deleting it off his account.

Tim Acton, part of the British diving supply team who brought oxygen tanks to the football team in June 2018, yesterday said that Mr Musk’s proposal did in fact amount to a “publicity stunt”.

“Musk was trying to send a glorified scuba tank that probably would not have been able to go through the ceiling anyway,” he said.

“The feeling among many of the rescuers and volunteers was that he was getting involved as part of a publicity stunt.”

Tim’s father, John Acton, from Essex, said that Mr Unsworth will always remain a “hero” because of his vital contributi­on to the 17-day rescue effort, which relied on his intricate knowledge of the Tham Luang cave system.

Mr Unsworth was instrument­al in the dangerous final three-day mission, in which retired Thai navy seal Sgt Major Saman Gunan, 38, died as he tried to save the children trapped below ground by rapidly rising floodwater­s.

Mr Acton, 72, said: “I think the comments were the wrong thing to say. Unless you have evidence of something like that you should just keep your mouth shut. Vernon knew that cave inside out – and that a submarine would not work with the bends. He was just telling the truth and Musk got the hump and called him names. I thought that Vernon would have won the case because it is an insult. In the UK he probably stood a better chance of winning. I think the comments were damaging to his reputation and he had all the right to sue him.

“It was Vernon’s knowledge of the cave that meant the divers were able to rescue the children. Without this, the rescue would not have happened. He is definitely a hero in my eyes, along with the rest of the divers. Elon Musk was only in it for the publicity and the ego.”

Following the verdict, which took under an hour to decide, Mr Musk, 48, told reporters in the hallways of the federal courtroom in California that his “faith in humanity” was “restored”.

Alex Spiro, his lawyer, successful­ly argued that no reasonable person ever believed that his client had actually accused Mr Unsworth, 64, of “a sexual act with a child”, adding that the contentiou­s tweet had been a “jape”.

After the verdict, Mr Unsworth said: “I came here for a verdict, unfortunat­ely it has not gone the way I expected but I respect the jury’s decision.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Elon Musk, above, and Vernon Unsworth, right, following the verdict that the Tesla founder had not defamed the cave rescuer
Elon Musk, above, and Vernon Unsworth, right, following the verdict that the Tesla founder had not defamed the cave rescuer

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom