Houston Chronicle

Judge sets Musk, Twitter trial for October

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Twitter’s lawsuit against billionair­e Elon Musk over a canceled $44 billion buyout of the social-media platform is set for a five-day trial starting Oct. 17 in Delaware, a judge ruled.

The decision late Thursday by Delaware Chancery Court Judge Kathaleen St. J. McCormick comes after Musk’s lawyers claimed Twitter wanted an Oct. 10 start date “without justificat­ion.” Twitter said it wasn’t opposed to Oct. 17 as long as it was assured of a full five-day trial.

McCormick agreed earlier this month to fast-track the trial over Musk’s failed deal to acquire Twitter for $54.20 a share, which he nixed over claims that usage statistics for the social media platform are inflated by spam and robot accounts.

Twitter claimed Musk, the world’s richest person, was dragging his feet on setting the schedule and lobbed a letter onto the court docket without sharing it with his opponents. McCormick, in her eight-page order, warned both sides that any pre-trial informatio­n exchanges “should not be requested or withheld in an effort to inflict unreasonab­le demands on or extract unreasonab­le benefits from the opposing party.”

Twitter’s lawyers say they’ll need only four days to prove Musk is misusing questions about spam and robot accounts as a pretext to walk away from the deal. The company said it had turned over all its informatio­n about those accounts and it is seeking to force the billionair­e, who co-founded Tesla, to consummate the acquisitio­n.

Musk counters in court filings that Twitter’s handover of the so-called bots material hasn’t been robust and that the company’s mishandlin­g of that data provides a legitimate basis for his cancellati­on of the buyout.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Twitter’s lawyers say they’ll need only four days to prove Elon Musk is misusing questions about spam and robot accounts as a pretext to walk away from the $44 billion acquisitio­n deal.
Associated Press file photo Twitter’s lawyers say they’ll need only four days to prove Elon Musk is misusing questions about spam and robot accounts as a pretext to walk away from the $44 billion acquisitio­n deal.

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