Tesla CEO Elon Musk Wins Defamation Trial Over ‘Pedo Guy’ Tweet

Tesla CEO Elon Musk Wins Defamation Trial Over ‘Pedo Guy’ Tweet
Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks before unveiling the Model Y at Tesla's design studio in Hawthorne, Calif. on March 14, 2019. AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Reuters
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A federal court jury in Los Angeles on Friday found in favor of Tesla CEO Elon Musk in the defamation lawsuit brought against him by a British cave explorer who Musk had branded a “pedo guy” on Twitter.

The verdict was delivered on the fourth day of the trial a short time after the case was handed to the jury of five women and three men. The plaintiff, Vernon Unsworth, was seeking $190 million damages against Musk, who during the trial estimated his net worth at $20 billion.

British cave diver Vernon Unsworth arrives at US District Court in Los Angeles, California on December 3, 2019, with his attorney L.Lin Wood (R) during the defamation trial in the case of Tesla's co-founder and CEO Elon Musk. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images)
British cave diver Vernon Unsworth arrives at US District Court in Los Angeles, California on December 3, 2019, with his attorney L.Lin Wood (R) during the defamation trial in the case of Tesla's co-founder and CEO Elon Musk. Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

Musk, who testified during the first two days of the trial in his own defense and returned to court on Friday to hear closing arguments from the two sides, exited the courtroom after the verdict and said: “My faith in humanity is restored.”

The case is believed to be the first major defamation lawsuit by a private individual to go to trial over tweets.

Unsworth’s attorney L. Lin Wood summed up his case against Musk by calling the high-tech entrepreneur a “billionaire bully” who had “dropped a nuclear bomb” on Unsworth in a series of tweets suggesting he was a pedophile.

Wood said Musk’s “pedo guy” remark was a slur that would overshadow Unsworth’s relationships and job prospects for years to come and urged jurors to teach the Tesla chief executive and SpaceX founder a lesson.

But the jury, in its unanimous decision, was apparently swayed by the arguments put forth by Musk’s attorney, Alex Spiro, who said the Twitter message in question arose from an argument between two men and amounted to an off-hand insult that no one could be expected to take seriously.

“In arguments you insult people,” he said. “There is no bomb. No bomb went off.”

By Nichola Groom and Rachel Parsons