Los Angeles Times

Justice Dept. looks into Musk tweet

Investigat­ion of Tesla chief ’s going-private comments could hurt firm’s ability to lure capital and top talent.

- By Russ Mitchell

Elon Musk is often called a visionary, an innovator, a genius. A U.S. Justice Department investigat­ion will determine whether he also committed a crime.

The Justice Department is investigat­ing whether public statements made by Musk and Tesla — the electric car company he runs as chief executive — were misleading enough to constitute criminal fraud, the company confirmed Tuesday. Bloomberg had earlier reported the investigat­ion.

The inquiry began after Musk’s infamous Aug. 7 tweet, in which he said he had “funding secured” for a plan to take Tesla private. Tesla stock shot up on the news, then fell as no source of the funding was revealed. Musk pulled the plug on the plan three weeks later.

A criminal investigat­ion usually takes months to complete, and litigation, if it comes to that, could take years. Tesla shares initially plunged on Tuesday’s news but recovered enough to finish down 3.4% at $284.96 — not that unusual of a daily swing for the volatile stock, which is down 11% this year.

Because the Securities and Exchange Commission is also investigat­ing Tesla, the market may have already absorbed any potential fallout, said Jay Dubow, a former SEC investigat­or who’s now a securities lawyer at law firm Pepper Hamilton. “When the SEC is looking at a company or an individual, I assume it’s likely the DOJ is looking too,” he said. “Many investigat­ions the SEC is involved in these days have a criminal component to them.”

The news, however, could affect the company’s ability to attract new capital and to lure new talent. Tesla has been burning cash and bleeding top executive talent.

“On the debt side, they would definitely be raising money at far higher costs than they did last year. That was true even before the DOJ probe,” said David Whiston, stock analyst at Morningsta­r. In August 2017, Tesla sold $1.8 billion in bonds rated high risk and carrying an interest rate of 5.3%. Investors have bid those bonds down to an 8% yield, Whiston noted.

Meanwhile, more than 18 senior executives have departed Tesla this year, in-

cluding Dave Morton, who started as chief accounting officer the day before Musk’s go-private tweet and left within a month. Investigat­ors will probably look into the circumstan­ces of the former Seagate chief financial officer’s quick departure.

Some Tesla investors have been pushing the company’s board of directors to bring in a new chief executive or a chief operating officer to help Musk, who is dealing with a range of personal issues, including a defamation suit filed against him Monday by a participan­t in the rescue of Thai children from a f looded cave this year. Musk had accused the man, via Twitter, of pedophilia and child rape. Musk is also dealing with the fallout from a recent YouTube webcast in which he accepted a marijuana cigarette from the show’s host and smoked it.

“From a talent perspectiv­e, it would take a special executive to take on a company with this much headline risk and Elon Musk as your boss,” Whiston said. A fresh executive “would want autonomy,” he said. “What would be the point of walking away from something lucrative if Musk is going to be breathing down your neck?”

The extent of the SEC and Justice Department investigat­ions is unclear. In its official statement Tuesday, Tesla said: “Last month, following Elon’s announceme­nt that he was considerin­g taking the company private, Tesla received a voluntary request for documents from the DOJ and has been cooperativ­e in responding to it. We have not received a subpoena, a request for testimony, or any other formal process. We respect the DOJ’s desire to get informatio­n about this and believe that the matter should be quickly resolved as they review the informatio­n they have received.”

The company did not immediatel­y respond to questions about whether it has received a subpoena from the SEC, whether Musk personally received a subpoena from the Justice Department, and whether the company’s statement covers both Tesla and Musk or just Tesla alone.

The SEC and Justice Department could find no wrongdoing and drop their cases. If the inquiry results in an indictment, prosecutor­s might try to reach a plea deal, while defendants could take any case to trial, Dubow said. A guilty finding could result in a prison sentence, he said. Securities fraud carries a maximum sentence of 25 years, and wire fraud (which includes internet communicat­ions) 20 years.

“This goes back decades,” Dubow said. “Ivan Boesky, Mike Milken, they both faced SEC and criminal cases. They both went to jail.”

In March, Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes settled with the SEC for defrauding investors in the blood-testing company. In June, the Justice Department charged her with criminal fraud.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? TESLA confirmed that the Justice Department is investigat­ing whether statements by CEO Elon Musk were misleading enough to constitute criminal fraud.
Christina House Los Angeles Times TESLA confirmed that the Justice Department is investigat­ing whether statements by CEO Elon Musk were misleading enough to constitute criminal fraud.
 ?? Tesla Motors ?? THE EXTENT of the securities and justice investigat­ions is unclear. Above, a Tesla Semi in Hawthorne.
Tesla Motors THE EXTENT of the securities and justice investigat­ions is unclear. Above, a Tesla Semi in Hawthorne.

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