Elon Musk is under federal investigations
Elon Musk is being investigated by federal authorities over
his conduct in his $44 billion takeover deal for Twitter Inc, the social media
company said in a court filing released on Thursday.
While the filing said he was under investigations, it did
not say what the exact focus of the probes was and which federal authorities
are conducting them.
Twitter, which sued Musk in July to force him to close the
deal, said attorneys for the Tesla Inc CEO had claimed "investigative
privilege" when refusing to hand over documents it had sought.
In late September, Musk's attorneys had provided a
"privilege log" identifying documents to be withheld, Twitter said.
The log referenced drafts of a May 13 email to the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and a slide presentation to the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC).
"This game of 'hide the ball' must end," the
company said in the court filing.
The court filing, which asked Delaware judge Kathaleen
McCormick to order Musk's attorneys to provide the documents, was made on Oct.
6 - the same day that McCormick paused litigation between the two sides after
Musk reversed course and said he would proceed with the deal.
Alex Spiro, an attorney for Musk, told Reuters that
Twitter's court filing was a "misdirection" and asserted: "It is
Twitter's executives that are under federal investigation."
Twitter declined to comment on Spiro's statement. It also
declined comment when asked by Reuters about its understanding of any
investigation into Musk.
The SEC did not immediately respond to a request for comment
and the FTC declined to comment.
The SEC has questioned Musk's comments about the Twitter
acquisition, including whether a 9% stake he had built up before announcing his
bid had been disclosed late and why it indicated that he intended to be a
passive shareholder. Musk later refiled the disclosure to indicate he was an
active investor.
In June, the SEC asked Musk in a letter whether he should
have amended his public filing to reflect his intention to suspend or abandon
the deal.
The Information, a tech news site, reported in April that
the FTC was scrutinizing whether Musk failed to comply with the antitrust
reporting requirement relating to an investor's intentions of being a passive
or active shareholder.
Twitter said in June, however, that the takeover deal with
Musk had cleared an antitrust waiting period for review by the FTC and U.S.
Justice Department.
McCormick has given Musk until Oct. 28 to close the acquisition.
If the deal does not get done by then, a trial date will be set for November.
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