unilad homepage
unilad homepage
    • News
      • UK News
      • US News
      • World News
      • Crime
      • Health
      • Money
      • Sport
      • Travel
    • Music
    • Technology
    • Film and TV
      • News
      • DC Comics
      • Disney
      • Marvel
      • Netflix
    • Celebrity
    • Politics
    • Advertise
    • Terms
    • Privacy & Cookies
    • LADbible Group
    • LADbible
    • SPORTbible
    • GAMINGbible
    • Tyla
    • UNILAD Tech
    • FOODbible
    • License Our Content
    • About Us & Contact
    • Jobs
    • Latest
    • Archive
    • Topics A-Z
    • Authors
    Facebook
    Instagram
    X
    Threads
    TikTok
    YouTube
    Submit Your Content
    Man who was lost at sea for 438 days was sued for $1,000,000 by family of crewmate for horrifying reason

    Home> News

    Updated 16:26 17 Dec 2025 GMTPublished 15:30 17 Dec 2025 GMT

    Man who was lost at sea for 438 days was sued for $1,000,000 by family of crewmate for horrifying reason

    A two-day fishing trip went dramatically wrong

    Niamh Shackleton

    Niamh Shackleton

    google discoverFollow us on Google Discover
    Featured Image Credit: AFP/Getty

    Topics: News, World News

    Niamh Shackleton
    Niamh Shackleton

    Niamh Shackleton is an experienced journalist for UNILAD, specialising in topics including mental health and showbiz, as well as anything Henry Cavill and cat related. She has previously worked for OK! Magazine, Caters and Kennedy.

    X

    @niamhshackleton

    Advert

    Advert

    Advert

    Two friends' fishing trip ended in disaster — and only one of them made it back to shore.

    Jose Salvador Alvarenga and Ezequiel Cordoba embarked on what was supposed to be a two-day trip back in November 2012, but little did they know they'd end up being out at sea for much, much longer than they had planned for.

    Alvarenga and Cordoba's trip ended up going on for 15 months after a violent storm knocked them off their intended course. The storm also ruined their communications systems meaning they were unable to call for help when they needed it most.

    Reportedly, the last thing said on their radio was Alvarenga telling the owner of the 25-foot boat: "Come now, I am really getting f****d out here."

    Advert

    José Salvador Alvarenga ended up being out at sea for more than 400 days (GIFF JOHNSON/AFP via Getty Images)
    José Salvador Alvarenga ended up being out at sea for more than 400 days (GIFF JOHNSON/AFP via Getty Images)

    Tragically, Alvarenga was the only one who survived the 400+ days at sea, and 22-year-old Cordoba died several months into their drastically prolonged trip.

    The pair had survived for some time by eating birds and fish, but Cordoba fell unwell after allegedly eating a bird that had a poisonous snake in its stomach.

    Before his death, Alveranga promised his friend that he wouldn't eat his body. Instead, he says he kept his friend's dead body with him for six days before deciding to throw the corpse into the sea.

    Ultimately, Alveranga washed up in the Marshall Islands, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, in January 2014.

    While Alveranga always denied eating Cordoba, the young man's grieving family believed he did, in fact, eat him, and proceeded to sue Alveranga for $1,000,000 for alleged cannibalism.

    Alvarenga pictured just three months after making it back to shore (JOSE CABEZAS/AFP via Getty Images)
    Alvarenga pictured just three months after making it back to shore (JOSE CABEZAS/AFP via Getty Images)

    Benedicto Perlera, Alvarenga’s lawyer in 2014, said that his client believed Cordoba may have died in the month of March.

    "In the middle of the ocean he had no way of knowing the day, and did not have a calendar, but he believes it was around March and so that is how we shall remember him," Perlera said, as per The Telegraph.

    As well as the large sum of money, the Cordoba family demanded 50 percent of the proceeds of Alvarenga's book, called 438 Days: An Extraordinary True Story of Survival at Sea, which was published in October 2015.

    The reason for this filing was that the family of the deceased belied they should be entitled to a share of royalties made from the book, as they claimed that if their relative were alive, he and Alvarenga's story would be worth a great deal of money. Despite this, the Telegraph reported at the time that the book earnings were not as high as the family claimed.

    The $1,000,000 suit from the Cordobas wasn't the only filing Alveranga had to face; his lawyer Perlera went on to sue him for $1,000,000 as well, because his client signed a book deal and switched law firms.

    Choose your content:

    4 hours ago
    5 hours ago
    • Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
      4 hours ago

      Scientists make new prediction 'Super El Niño’ could cause hottest summer ever with scorching temperatures

      The phenomenon could cause a scorching summer this year

      News
    • Charles A Fazio/Bloomberg via Getty Images
      4 hours ago

      Scientists discover impact of data centers creating 'heat islands' warming the Earth by 16 degrees

      Centers powering AI could well be contributing towards AI

      News
    • TikTok/@millennialdad
      4 hours ago

      Man diagnosed with autism at 42 explains how he was misdiagnosed by doctors for years

      Tyler Barnett opened up about how he had been mislabelled for years before being diagnosed with autism as an adult

      News
    • Getty Stock Images
      5 hours ago

      Health experts issues 'AI addiction' warning after discovering serious health impact

      Some addicts report feeling 'chest pains, anxiety, and grief' when separated from their AI chatbot

      News
    • Viral luggage brand slashes designer suitcases to half price in massive Black Friday sale
    • World's richest beggar has a net worth of $1,000,000 for a bizarre reason
    • Liam Payne's dad being sued for $10,000,000 by friend who was charged over his death
    • Major update in case of food influencer Michael Duarte who was shot by officer while traveling with family