Times-Herald

Musk depicted as liar, visionary in trial

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Elon Musk was depicted Wednesday as either a liar who callously jeopardize­d the savings of "regular people" or a wellintent­ioned visionary as attorneys delivered opening statements at a trial focused on a Tesla buyout that never happened.

Lawyers on opposing sides drew the starkly different portraits of Musk for a nineperson jury that will hear the three-week trial. The case is focused on two August 2018 tweets that the billionair­e posted on Twitter, which he now owns.

The tweets indicated that Musk had lined up the financing to take Tesla private at a time when the automaker's stock was slumping amid production problems.

The prospect of a $72 billion buyout fueled a rally in the company's stock price that abruptly ended a week later after it became apparent that he did not have the funding to pull off the deal after all. Tesla shareholde­rs then sued him, saying that Tesla shares would not have swung so widely in value if he had not dangled the idea of buying the company for $420 per share.

Nicholas Porritt, a lawyer representi­ng Glen Littleton and other Tesla shareholde­rs in the class-action case, promptly vilified Musk as he addressed jurors.

"Why are we here?" Porritt asked. "We are here because Elon Musk, chairman and chief executive of Tesla, lied. His lies caused regular people like Glen Littleton to lose millions and millions of dollars." He also asserted that Musk's tweet also hurt pension funds and other organizati­ons that owned Tesla stock at the time.

Musk's lawyer, Alex Spiro, countered that the run-up in Tesla's stock after the tweet mostly reflected investors' belief in Musk's ability to pull off stunning feats, including building the world's largest electric automaker while also running SpaceX, a maker of rocket ships.

"Mr. Musk tries to do things that have never been done before. Everyone knows that," Spiro told the jury.

Spiro added that Musk had been in advanced talks with representa­tives from Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund to take Tesla private.

"He didn't plan to tweet this," Spiro said of Musk's Aug. 7, 2018, statement at the heart of the trial. "It was a split-second decision" aimed at being as transparen­t as possible about the discussion­s with the Saudi fund about a potential deal.

After saying "funding secured" for the buyout, Musk followed up with another tweet that suggested a deal was imminent.

Littleton, a 71-year-old investor from Kansas City, Missouri, was the first witness called to the stand. He said Musk's claim about the financing alarmed him because he had purchased Tesla investment­s designed to reward him for his belief that the automaker's stock would eventually be worth far more than the $420.

He said he sold most of his holdings to cut his losses but still saw the value of his Tesla portfolio plunge by 75%.

"The damage was done," Littleton lamented. "I was in a state of shock."

Littleton's frustratio­n escalated in October 2018, when he lashed out at Tesla for late deliveries on vehicles for some of his nieces and nephews. That led him to become a lead investor in the lawsuit.

"I still believe in Tesla to this day. I do," Littleton said.

During cross-examinatio­n, a lawyer for Tesla's board of directors repeatedly questioned whether Littleton had legitimate reason to believe a buyout was inevitable, but the investor remained steadfast even while seeming confused at times.

 ?? Submitted Photos ?? The heavy rainfall Wednesday throughout the area caused some flooding on streets in Forrest City. The city’s public works department is reminding residents to not place yard debris in the streets, but instead place it on the curbs in front of their homes for pickup. Debris placed in the streets clogs up drains when it rains.
Submitted Photos The heavy rainfall Wednesday throughout the area caused some flooding on streets in Forrest City. The city’s public works department is reminding residents to not place yard debris in the streets, but instead place it on the curbs in front of their homes for pickup. Debris placed in the streets clogs up drains when it rains.
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