San Diego Union-Tribune

TWITTER SHAREHOLDE­R VOTE ON MUSK BUYOUT SEPT. 13

Recommends completion of deal he wants to abandon

- BY RANDALL CHASE & BARBARA ORTUTAY Chase and Ortutay write for The Associated Press.

Twitter has set Sept. 13 as the date for its shareholde­rs to vote on the company’s pending buyout by Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

The company said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that it is recommendi­ng shareholde­rs vote for the $44 billion deal to be completed.

The date is ahead of the yet-to-be specified start date of the October trial in the dispute between the billionair­e, who is seeking to abandon the deal, and the San Francisco company. Twitter has sued Musk in Delaware after he said wanted to walk away from the deal.

“We are committed to closing the merger on the price and terms agreed upon with Mr. Musk. Your vote at the special meeting is critical to our ability to complete the merger,” Twitter said in a letter to its shareholde­rs.

Earlier Tuesday, attorneys for Musk accused Twitter of slow-walking document production in advance of the trial to decide whether the Tesla CEO should be forced to complete the deal.

Musk’s lawyers also said in a court filing that Twitter Inc. attorneys have refused to consent to a proposed Oct. 17 trial date and are insisting on an Oct. 10 trial start, using the uncertaint­y over a trial date to delay other scheduling discussion­s.

Attorneys for Musk claimed that Twitter’s proposed case schedule is “an obvious attempt to squeeze defendants” after a Delaware Chancery Court judge agreed last week to hold an expedited trial in a lawsuit filed by Twitter.

“Given the compressed timeframe, guidance from the court is necessary to break the impasse to allow things to move forward promptly,” attorney Edward

Micheletti wrote in asking Chancellor Kathaleen St. Jude McCormick to grant Musk’s proposed case schedule.

A spokespers­on for Twitter said the company had no comment on Tuesday’s court filing.

Musk agreed in April to buy Twitter and take it private, offering $54.20 a share and vowing to loosen the company’s policing of content

and to root out fake accounts. As part of the deal, Musk and Twitter had agreed to pay each other a $1 billion breakup fee if either was responsibl­e for the deal collapsing.

Twitter shares closed Tuesday at $39.34, well off their 52-week high of $71.92.

Musk indicated earlier this month that he wants to back away from the deal, prompting Twitter to file a lawsuit to hold him to what it describes as a “sellerfrie­ndly” agreement.

With an October trial looming, Micheletti told the judge Tuesday that Twitter has refused to begin producing certain categories of documents that are “plainly relevant” and “easily collected and produced.” He said Twitter lawyers have claimed that several categories of documents are not relevant, without identifyin­g them.

The documents sought by Musk’s attorneys include Twitter board minutes and related materials, advertisin­g sales and metrics, and manuals and policies regarding “Monetizabl­e Daily Active Usage or Users,” or mDAU. That is a metric that Twitter uses to measure the number of people or organizati­ons using its platform.

Musk has claimed that Twitter has failed to provide him enough informatio­n about the number of fake accounts on its service, but the company has estimated for the past several years that fewer than 5 percent of mDAU are spam or fake accounts.

Musk’s attorneys also contend that Twitter has refused to provide them with raw data that it maintains in the ordinary course of business, and which require significan­t “machine time” and software developmen­t to be processed and analyzed by expert witnesses by a proposed Monday deadline.

Twitter said last month that it was making a “fire hose” of raw data on hundreds of millions of daily tweets available to Musk.

Attorneys for Musk are asking McCormick to approve the Oct. 17 trial date, and to order Twitter to immediatel­y produce “core documents” and to produce all raw data by Monday.

“Given the timeline until trial, every day counts,” Micheletti wrote.

Tuesday’s court filing suggests that Musk plans to file his answer to Twitter’s complaint later this week.

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI AP ?? Lawyers for Elon Musk accused Twitter of slow-walking document production in advance of a trial.
EVAN AGOSTINI AP Lawyers for Elon Musk accused Twitter of slow-walking document production in advance of a trial.

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