David Copperfield testifies in Las Vegas tourist injury case

David Copperfield has told a court he didn’t know until he was sued that a British tourist claimed to have been seriously injured while taking part in an illusion during a performance on the Las Vegas Strip in 2013.

Although Copperfield said it might be his fault if an audience volunteer who was participating in an illusion got hurt, the celebrated magician didn’t acknowledge responsibility for injuries Gavin Cox claims to have suffered when he fell.

While not going into great detail, the court has heard elements of how the trick, ‘Lucky #13’, is performed.

Copperfield chooses 13 participants and asks them to stand on a platform which is then covered with a curtain. He talks to the audience for a few minutes before the curtain is lifted to reveal they have ‘vanished’.

He then points to the back of the hall where the participants reappear.

The court has heard how practiced stagehands with flashlights hurried randomly chosen participants through dark curtains, down unfamiliar passageways, around corners, outdoors, indoors and through an MGM Grand resort kitchen in time to re-enter the back of the theater for their ‘reappearance’ during the show finale, the court heard.

A court in Nevada has heard some of the secrets behind one of David Copperfield’s signature illusions

Although Copperfield (pictured in court yesterday) said it might be his fault if an audience volunteer who was participating in an illusion got hurt, the celebrated magician didn't acknowledge responsibility for injuries Gavin Cox claims to have suffered when he fell

Although Copperfield said it might be his fault if an audience volunteer who was participating in an illusion got hurt, the celebrated magician didn't acknowledge responsibility for injuries Gavin Cox (pictured) claims to have suffered when he fell

Although Copperfield (left in court yesterday) said it might be his fault if an audience volunteer who was participating in an illusion got hurt, the celebrated magician didn’t acknowledge responsibility for injuries Gavin Cox (right) claims to have suffered when he fell

Cox, from Kent, claims lasting brain and body injuries and more than $400,000 in medical expenses. 

‘It depends on what happened. If I did something wrong, it would be my fault,’ Copperfield said during questioning by Cox’s lawyer, Benedict Morelli.

‘Your defense in this case is … if they participate and someone gets hurt, it’s their fault, not yours. Is that accurate?’ Morelli asked. ‘Yes or no?’

‘It’s not a simple yes-or-no answer,’ Copperfield responded in a barely audible voice.

Morelli contends that before Cox fell, the group of audience volunteers participating in the illusion was hustled through an alley coated with what he called construction dust. 

Copperfield said he didn't know whether there as a powdery residue near a trash bin in an MGM Grand alley

Copperfield said he didn’t know whether there as a powdery residue near a trash bin in an MGM Grand alley

The illusionist (pictured in court on Wednesday) said he passed through the same outdoor alley alone while performing another illusion about 10 minutes earlier, and didn't notice any debris

The illusionist (pictured in court on Wednesday) said he passed through the same outdoor alley alone while performing another illusion about 10 minutes earlier, and didn’t notice any debris

The 61-year-old performer is due to return to the witness stand next Tuesday for more testimony in Clark County District Court 

The 61-year-old performer is due to return to the witness stand next Tuesday for more testimony in Clark County District Court 

The people were taking part in a signature illusion that appeared to make them vanish onstage and appear a few moments later in the back of the theater.

Copperfield said he didn’t know whether there as a powdery residue near a trash bin in an MGM Grand alley. 

He said he passed through the same outdoor alley alone while performing another illusion about 10 minutes earlier, and didn’t notice any debris.

‘If in fact there was construction dust, could that be your fault if someone fell and got hurt?’ Morelli asked.

Copperfield responded that he couldn’t answer a hypothetical question before proceedings ended for the day.

The 61-year-old performer is due to return to the witness stand next Tuesday for more testimony in Clark County District Court. 

Copperfield's lawyers lost pretrial bids to close proceedings to the public to avoid disclosing performance secrets, although Judge Mark Denton has said some portions of Copperfield's testimony might still be conducted behind closed doors 

Copperfield’s lawyers lost pretrial bids to close proceedings to the public to avoid disclosing performance secrets, although Judge Mark Denton has said some portions of Copperfield’s testimony might still be conducted behind closed doors 

Cox and his wife, Minh-Hahn Cox, are seeking unspecified damages in their lawsuit, which also names as defendants the MGM Grand, show producer Backstage Employment and Referral, and construction firm Team Construction Management.

Copperfield’s lawyers lost pretrial bids to close proceedings to the public to avoid disclosing performance secrets, although Judge Mark Denton has said some portions of Copperfield’s testimony might still be conducted behind closed doors.

Cox claims negligence led to his fall while he and about a dozen other audience members who seemed to have vanished onstage were hustled outdoors and back indoors to reappear in the theater.



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