Musk hired detective to probe caver who sued over ‘pedo guy’ tweet

Musk hired detective to probe caver who sued over ‘pedo guy’ tweet

SpaceX owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk gestures at the E3 gaming convention in Los Angeles on June 13, 2019. (Reuters photo)
SpaceX owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk gestures at the E3 gaming convention in Los Angeles on June 13, 2019. (Reuters photo)

NEW YORK: Elon Musk revealed that he hired a private investigator for US$50,000 (1.5 million baht) to back up his assertion in a 2018 tweet that a British caver was a “pedo guy".

Musk is now asking a judge to forgo a trial and a throw out a lawsuit by the caver, Vernon Unsworth, accusing the chief executive officer of Tesla and Space Exploration Technologies of defamation.

“By referring to Mr Unsworth as ‘pedo guy,’ I did not intend to convey any facts or imply that Unsworth had engaged in acts of pedophilia,” Musk said in a court filing on Monday.

“Pedo guy was a common insult used in South Africa when I was growing up. It is synonymous with ‘creepy old man’ and is used to insult a person’s appearance and demeanor, not accuse a person of pedophila.”

Musk revealed that one of his trusted aides commissioned a private investigator to conduct an investigation of Unsworth on Musk’s behalf. The private investigator reported back that Unsworth had been travelling to Thailand since the 1980s.

“The investigator learned that Mr Unsworth frequented Pattaya beach which is well known for prostitution and sex tourism, and that Mr Unsworth was unpopular at the rescue site because other rescue workers thought that he was ‘creepy", Musk’s lawyers said in the filing.

Musk’s legal team asked the judge to dismiss the case before a scheduled Dec 2 trial, arguing that a BuzzFeed article about his tiff with Unsworth and his tweets don’t meet the legal standard of defamation. They asked the judge to treat Unsworth as a “public figure” for purposes of the case, arguing that Unsworth must meet a higher-than-ordinary level of proof that Musk either knew his statements were false or that he was reckless in making them.

“Mr Unsworth cannot establish a defamation case just because Mr Musk insulted him on Twitter and sent a private email to a reporter,” they wrote in the court filing. “The Constitution does not allow that.”

In April, a federal judge in Los Angeles rejected Musk’s request to dismiss Unsworth’s case.

The spat between the two erupted after Unsworth dismissed the mini-submarine that Musk and employees at SpaceX had built to assist in the rescue of a group of Thai boys who were trapped in Tham Luang flooded cave in Chiang Rai's Mae Sai district last year.

Unsworth said in a television interview that the mini-submarine, which ultimately wasn’t used in the rescue, was a “PR stunt” and that Musk could “stick his submarine where it hurts.”

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