Chicago Sun-Times

Report: FBI conducting criminal probe into Tesla

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A published report Friday said the FBI is conducting a criminal investigat­ion into whether electric-car maker Tesla misled investors by overstatin­g production forecasts for its Model 3 sedan.

The Wall Street Journal reported that FBI agents have contacted former Tesla employees to interview them. The paper cited anonymous people familiar with the matter.

A Tesla spokesman said the company was transparen­t about the difficulty of increasing production of the Model 3. He said the company cooperated with a “voluntary request” for documents from the Justice Department earlier this year and has received no additional requests on the matter for months.

The FBI did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment.

Tesla Inc. shares, which were enjoying a rally on Friday, gave up most of the gain immediatel­y after the Journal posted the report. But they recovered and closed at $330.90, a gain of $16.04, or 5 percent on the day. That capped a week in which the shares jumped 27 percent, helped by strong third-quarter financial results.

The Model 3 is a key part of Tesla’s plan to expand from a niche player in the luxury segment to a car maker with broader appeal. In early 2017, the Palo Alto, California-based company announced plans to produce up to 5,000 Model 3s a week by the end of that year. It fell far short, making just 793 in the last week and 2,700 for all of 2017. It didn’t hit the 5,000-aweek target until June 2018.

The Journal reported that the FBI is investigat­ing whether the company made production estimates that it knew would be impossible to meet. The company defended its forecasts.

Tesla officials “were transparen­t about how difficult it would be” to ramp up Model 3 production, said spokesman Kamran Mumtaz. “Ultimately, given difficulti­es that we did not foresee in this first-of-its-kind production ramp, it took us six months longer than we expected to meet our 5,000 unit per week guidance.”

Last month, Tesla settled a civil lawsuit by the Securities and Exchange Commission over tweets by founder Elon Musk that funding was in place to take the company private. Musk and Tesla agreed to pay a combined $40 million without acknowledg­ing or denying wrongdoing.

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