UK Tech Tycoon Missing After Superyacht Sinks Off Sicily In Italy
UK businessman Mike Lynch, who was recently acquitted in the United States of an $11 billion fraud, is among those missing Monday after a superyacht sank off southern Italy, according to the head of the Civil Protection Agency.
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UK businessman Mike Lynch, who was recently acquitted in the United States of an $11 billion fraud, is among those missing Monday after a superyacht sank off southern Italy, according to the head of the Civil Protection Agency.
The 56-metre-long luxury yacht, The Bayesian, had been moored off Porticello, east of Palermo, when the storm swept suddenly up the coast before dawn, tearing through beach clubs and little fishing ports.
Lynch's wife was among 15 people rescued after the luxury yacht sank amid violent winds and rains off the Sicily coast, according to Salvo Cocina of the Civil Protection Agency, leaving six others missing.
Italian authorities have opened a probe into the incident as the emergency response continued Monday.
Lynch, 59, was acquitted on all charges in a San Francisco court in early June after he was accused of the massive fraud linked to the sale of his software firm Autonomy to Hewlett-Packard.
He co-founded Autonomy in Cambridge in 1996.
US prosecutors accused Lynch of wire fraud and securities fraud, and conspiracy to commit offenses involving years of falsified records.
He had been extradited to the US from Britain to stand trial on the criminal charges.
A University of Cambridge graduate from Suffolk in eastern England, Lynch had disputed all charges and denied any wrongdoing. He was facing two decades in jail if convicted of the 17 charges.
A celebrated technology sector entrepreneur and investor, sometimes referred to as the UK's answer to Bill Gates, he had won numerous awards and plaudits in Britain and beyond.
A spokesperson for Invoke Capital, another firm he founded, declined to comment.
Lynch was reportedly on board the boat with colleagues from the company when the storm struck.
Following his US acquittal, he had been critical of his prosecution in the US.
He had told the BBC that the only reason he was free was "because I had enough money not to be swept away by a process that's set up to sweep you away".
"You shouldn't need to have funds to protect yourself as a British citizen", he said in the interview aired earlier this month.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)