Jamaica Gleaner

Judge dismisses lawsuit against Musk, Tesla and Twitter fan

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A FEDERAL judge in California has dismissed a securities fraud and defamation lawsuit filed by a Tesla investor against CEO Elon Musk, one of Musk’s supporters and Tesla.

In an order filed Thursday, Judge James Donato threw out the lawsuit by the investor, Aaron Greenspan, who runs a legal document website. Donato wrote that the lawsuit had failed to make plausible legal claims.

Donato had previously dismissed the case in June, but he offered Greenspan t he opportunit­y t o file another complaint on federal legal issues. The judge wrote that claims such as defamation that were made under California law would be taken up later as warranted. In Thursday’s order, Donato dismissed all of Greenspan’s case, which was originally filed in 2020.

Among other things, the lawsuit alleged that Omar Qazi, a Musk fan, defamed Greenspan in a series of tweets that made baseless accusation­s against him. Greenspan asserted that the tweets were part of a campaign of 80,000 coordinate­d tweets that praised Tesla and attacked critics.

Donato ruled that Greenspan failed to provide facts to support his allegation­s that Qazi acted as an agent of Tesla or Musk. Qazi had previously called the allegation­s “absurd,” and Tesla’s lawyers had disputed Greenspan’s allegation­s as conspiracy theories.

In other legal news connected to Musk, a Delaware judge agreed Friday t o expedite a Twitter shareholde­r lawsuit challengin­g his proposed buyout of the social media giant, while neverthele­ss saying she was “extremely sceptical” of the plaintiff’s claims.

In granting a motion to expedite requested by the Orlando Police Pension Fund, Chancellor Kathaleen St Jude McCormick noted that the threshold for granting such a request was relatively low.

“While I’m sceptical of the plaintiff’s theories, and extremely sceptical at that, on a motion to expedite the strike zone is far larger for the plaintiff,” the judge said. “It’s like the strike zone applied when Little League players start pitching their own games.”

McCormick said the pension fund could pursue “extremely limited discovery” regarding its allegation­s that the deal must be delayed for at least three years under an anti-takeover provision in Delaware corporatio­n law.

The judge neverthele­ss said she was “dubious” that the proposed Twitter buyout is the sort of deal the provision is intended to address. The provision prevents any shareholde­r who owns 15 per cent or more of a company’s stock from buying out other shareholde­rs for a period of three years after reaching the 15 per cent threshold unless certain conditions are met. One such condition is approval of the deal by at least two-thirds of the outstandin­g voting stock not owned by that “interested stockholde­r.”

While Musk owned only about 9.6 per cent of Twitter’s stock when the company’s board approved his proposed $44 billion acquisitio­n, the complaint alleges that he is an interested stockholde­r because he had an “agreement, arrangemen­t or understand­ing” with Morgan Stanley and Twitter co-founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey.

The plaintiffs allege that Dorsey, who owns about 2.4 per cent of Twitter’s stock, and Morgan Stanley, which owns about 8.8 per cent, worked with and encouraged Musk to take the company private.

The defendants, who have filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, say there was no “meeting of the minds,” and that the notion that Musk is an interested stockholde­r under Delaware law is “wholly speculativ­e and conclusory.”

They note, among other things, that the Morgan Stanley entity serving as Musk’s financial adviser, and a separate Morgan Stanley unit that has offered to help finance the buyout, are not among the entities that own Twitter stock. They also argue that Morgan Stanley Investment Management, which owns most of the Twitter shares in question, is a registered investment advisor prohibited from voting for a business transactio­n for any reason other than its clients’ best interests.

 ?? AP ?? Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.
AP Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.

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