New York Post

CNBC’s Faber: Elon could be a jailbird

- By THOMAS BARRABI

CNBC’s David Faber surprised his fellow panelists Monday by asserting that Elon Musk’s upcoming legal battle with Twitter over their nixed $44 billion takeover agreement could result in jail time for the eccentric billionair­e.

Faber made the bold claim during a discussion with fellow CNBC personalit­ies Jim Cramer and Carl Quintanill­a regarding Musk’s decision to walk away from the agreement due to concerns about spam bots within Twitter’s user base.

Cramer quipped that Twitter’s board was “in trouble” if their lawsuit only resulted in the company recouping a $1 billion breakup fee from Musk.

“There’s no way they’re going to take the walkaway fee,” Faber said. “They have specific performanc­e in the contract. They are going to have a Delaware judge enforce that contract and say these are the reasons why.”

“Then the question is, OK, you are forcing Mr. Musk to buy the company, does he actually agree to do it?” Faber added. “There is this argument being said lately that, well, maybe he won’t comply with that. Then we would have a situation where they could put him in jail.”

Faber’s remark, first reported on by Mediaite, drew surprised laughter from Quintanill­a, who called the idea of Musk going to jail over the nixed deal “funny.”

“I know you laugh, but that’s where we could end up,” Faber said. “This is a man who doesn’t play by the rules.”

Neverthele­ss, it’s not the first time experts have speculated over the prospect of Musk landing in the slammer over the Twitter mess. In May, Columbia law professor John Coffee told Fox Business News’ Charlie Gasparino that even in a civil suit, Musk could be slapped with contempt-of-court charges that could lead to jail.

Musk has yet to respond to Faber’s comments. CNBC and Musk’s office didn’t respond to requests for comment.

 ?? ?? CNBC personalit­y David Faber claims that Elon Musk, who walked away from a $44 billion deal to take over Twitter, could end up serving time if the case goes to court and he defies a judge’s orders to complete the purchase.
CNBC personalit­y David Faber claims that Elon Musk, who walked away from a $44 billion deal to take over Twitter, could end up serving time if the case goes to court and he defies a judge’s orders to complete the purchase.

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