Tesla shareholders try to get Elon Musk to just stop Anchor Muted Background
Elon Musk wants everyone to believe he really did have the money secured to take Tesla (TSLA) private back in 2018. But a group suing him over that claim say he didn’t have it, and that the SEC and a federal judge agree.
Musk is making the claim as he faces a shareholder lawsuit about a now infamous tweet in which he said he had “funding secured.” At the same time, he’s also bidding to take another tech company, Twitter, private, with a source of funds he has yet to disclose.
The Tesla shareholders who are suing Musk for fraud aren’t happy about his comments. In a court filing on Friday they asked the judge in their case to muzzle the tweet-happy CEO.
The shareholders also said a federal judge found that Musk’s 2018 tweets in which he claimed to have the funding to take Tesla private were false and misleading. Musk eventually settled with the US Securities and Exchange Commission over the tweets, stepping down as Tesla chairman and agreeing to oversight of his social media use.
The filing refers to an April 1 order by US District Judge Edward M. Chen that does not appear on the docket.
Friday’s filing by investors is a motion for a temporary restraining order to prohibit Musk from speaking publicly about the case until after the trial. Lawyers claim that Musk’s public comments can influence potential jurors as he makes an “unsubtle attempt to absolve himself in the court of public opinion.”
The motion for the restraining order comes after Musk said publicly at a TED Conference that he did not lie in his 2018 tweet.
The updates to the shareholder’s case come after Musk’s shocking bid for Twitter, in which he currently holds a roughly 9.6% stake. Twitter’s board of directors enacted a “poison pill” plan that could make it harder for Musk to take control of the company.
A lawyer for Musk insisted that the Tesla CEO could have taken the company private.