The Drama Movies | Adult Movies Onlinefollowing bad tweet did not, according to a jury in San Francisco on Friday, constitute fraud:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Elon Musk's famous "funding secured" tweet was, however, thought to constitute fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission back in 2018. That agency charged Musk with fraud, in the months after he tweeted it, saying he knew any such transaction was much less certain than he was letting on, that he "had not discussed specific deal terms, including price, with any potential financing partners."
In short, the SEC thought he was lying, sued him, and Musk settled that fraud lawsuit by stepping down as Tesla's chairman and paying $40 million.
In this latest trial, however, things went his way.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk locked his Twitter account and went private. Here's why.This suit, which also included Tesla and the Tesla board of directors as defendants, had been brought by Tesla Investors, arguing that Musk had injured them financially by giving the false impression that the car company’s stock price would soar to $420 per share in the course of going private.
The market seemingly reacted to the tweet, sending Tesla shares up 11 percent the day he tweeted it, but not to $420 — just $387.46. Then, Tesla stock promptly plunged to around $262 about a month later, around the time Musk went on the Joe Rogan Experience and smoked weed on camera. This drop no doubt resulted in great pain for shareholders, but that pain wasn't the result of fraud on Musk's part, according to the jury.
Over three weeks, Tesla and Musk argued that the "funding secured" tweet was actually true, and, for good measure, that the $420 a share thing wasn’t a weed joke, and just happened to be Musk’s best guess as to how the transaction would shake out.
An anonymous male juror stuck around after the trial and explained why the jury accepted Musk's version of events, telling the New York Times, "There was nothing there to give me an ‘aha’ moment," and that "Elon Musk is a guy who could sneeze and the stock market could react.
One interesting new detail from the latest proceedings is that we now know Musk did at least talk to one potential financing partner about financing the transaction: the Saudi sovereign wealth fund. Lawyers for the plaintiffs said the meeting minutes from Musk's interaction with that group showed they weren't fully on board, and still wanted to know more.
Also, Musk said in order to complete the transaction, he would have done something similar to what he did to buy Twitter: leverage shares of another company he owns a large stake in: in this case, SpaceX.
Topics Tesla Elon Musk
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Final Fantasy XV Mega CPU Battle
Samsung's foldable phone isn't coming very soon, new report claims
6 horror movies with paranormal hauntings reported on set
Trump spokesperson reorganizes U.S. timeline, says Obama led invasion of Afghanistan
I'm a college professor. My advice to young people who feel hooked on tech
Katie Ledecky becomes first woman since '68 to win 200
More ways to get to the polls for free on Election Day
Red Sox have already won the World Series according to Google
The best day to book your flight, according to Google
Andy Murray owns BBC reporter who forgot women's tennis
How to cancel your Kindle Unlimited subscription
Look up which words first appeared in print the year you were born
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。