Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Elon launches legal counter vs Twitter

The Tesla boss wooed Twitter’s board with a $54.20 per-share offer, but then in July announced he was 'terminatin­g' their agreement on accusation­s the firm misled him regarding its tally of fake and spam accounts

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — Elon Musk on Friday filed claims against Twitter as he fights back against the tech firm’s lawsuit demanding he be held to his $44 billion buyout deal.

Musk’s counter-suit was submitted along with a legal defense against Twitter’s claim that the billionair­e is contractua­lly bound to complete the deal he inked in April to buy Twitter, the Chancery Court in the state of Delaware said in a notice.

The 164-page filing was submitted as being “confidenti­al,” meaning the documents were not accessible by the public, the notice indicated.

Rules of the court, however, require Musk to submit a public version of the filing with trade secrets or other sensitive informatio­n redacted.

A judge has ordered a five-day trial over Twitter’s lawsuit against Musk to begin on October 17.

The Tesla boss wooed Twitter’s board with a $54.20 per-share offer, but then in July announced he was “terminatin­g” their agreement on accusation­s the firm misled him regarding its tally of fake and spam accounts.

Twitter, whose stock price closed at $41.61 on Friday, has stuck by its estimates regarding accounts run by software “bots” rather than people, and argued that Musk is contriving excuses to back out of the contract.

The social media platform has urged shareholde­rs to endorse the deal, setting a vote on the merger for 13 September.

“We are committed to closing the merger on the price and terms agreed upon with Mr. Musk,” Twitter chief executive Parag Agrawal and board chairperso­n Bret Taylor said in a copy of a letter to investors.

Billions of dollars are at stake, but so is the future of Twitter, which Musk has said should allow any legal speech — an absolutist position that has sparked fears the network could be used to incite violence.

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? SUPPORTERS of the Iraqi cleric Moqtada Sadr wave national flags and pictures of their leader, as they protest against a rival bloc's nomination for prime minister, along the Al-Jumhuriya (Republic) bridge that leads to the capital Baghdad's high-security Green Zone, on 30 July 2022. The protests are the latest challenge for oil-rich Iraq, which remains mired in a political and a socioecono­mic crisis despite elevated global energy prices.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE SUPPORTERS of the Iraqi cleric Moqtada Sadr wave national flags and pictures of their leader, as they protest against a rival bloc's nomination for prime minister, along the Al-Jumhuriya (Republic) bridge that leads to the capital Baghdad's high-security Green Zone, on 30 July 2022. The protests are the latest challenge for oil-rich Iraq, which remains mired in a political and a socioecono­mic crisis despite elevated global energy prices.

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