Jurors expected to begin deliberating in Elon Musk defamation trial
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[December 06, 2019]
By Nichola Groom and Rachel Parsons
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Jurors were
expected to begin deliberating in Los Angeles on Friday in the lawsuit
brought against Elon Musk by a British cave explorer who says the Tesla
<TSLA.O> founder defamed him with tweets suggesting he is a pedophile.
The three-man, five-woman U.S. District Court jury will likely get the
case before noon on Friday, after a federal judge instructs them on the
law and attorneys for both men deliver closing statements.
The jurors will be asked to decide by unanimous vote if Musk, 48,
defamed Vernon Unsworth with three July 15, 2018 tweets, and if so how
much he must pay in damages.
Legal experts are closely watching the proceedings, which is believed to
be the first major defamation lawsuit brought by a private individual to
go to trial over a tweet.
Unsworth, 64, on Thursday declined to apologize for a July 13, 2018, CNN
interview in which he said Musk's offer of a mini-submarine to help
rescue a boys' soccer team from a flooded Thailand cave was a "PR stunt"
and the wealthy entrepreneur could "stick his submarine where it hurts."
Unsworth said his insult was "not to Mr Musk personally".
"I'm not sure how I need to apologize. It was my opinion at the time and
I stand by that opinion," he said, when cross-examined by one of Musk's
lawyers.
It was that interview which Musk has said prompted his "off-the-cuff"
tweets, in which he questioned Unsworth's role in the cave rescue and
called him a "pedo guy," with no evidence.
Unsworth has testified the tweets harmed his reputation by branding him
a pedophile and a liar, leaving him "humiliated, ashamed, dirtied."
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Elon Musk walks with his face turned away from cameras as he arrives
at court for trial in a defamation case filed by British cave diver
Vernon Unsworth who is suing the Tesla Inc chief executive for
calling him a "pedo guy" in one of a series of tweets, as the case
begins in Los Angeles, California, U.S., December 4, 2019.
REUTERS/David McNew
He seeks unspecified damages from Musk, who told the court this week
his net worth is around $20 billion.
The trial has revived discussion of Musk’s erratic behavior during
2018, when he used Twitter to float a leveraged buyout proposal for
Tesla that was scuttled, ultimately paying $20 million to settle a
Securities and Exchange Commission complaint.
For most of 2019, Musk, who has nearly 30 million Twitter followers,
has largely kept his public comments focused on Tesla’s new models
and improved profitability and on the technical progress of his
aerospace company, SpaceX.
To win the case, Unsworth must prove Musk was negligent in
publishing a falsehood that clearly identified him and caused him
harm. He does not need to show Musk acted with "actual malice,"
which is much tougher to prove.
(Additional reporting by Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb; Writing by
Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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