In
a late Wednesday night filing in Manhattan federal court, Musk
called it implausible to believe he wanted to defraud
shareholders who didn't know he had taken a 9.2% Twitter stake,
and missed out on big gains because they sold their own stock.
Investors in the proposed class action said Musk and his wealth
manager Jared Birchall knew a U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission rule required Musk to disclose by March 24, 2022 he
had bought 5% of Twitter, yet waited another 11 days.
The investors said this let Musk buy more shares at cheap
prices, saving more than $200 million. Twitter, now known as X,
rose 27% on April 4, 2022 after Musk revealed his 9.2% stake.
Musk is the world's richest person according to Forbes magazine,
and runs other companies including electric car maker Tesla
In his filing, Musk said he had intended to reveal his Twitter
stake at the end of 2022, but disclosed it promptly after
realizing he misunderstood the SEC disclosure rule.
"This is not a scheme to defraud," Musk said. "All
indications--including those in the pleadings--point to
mistake."
Musk also denied the investors' claim that an unnamed Morgan
Stanley banker helped devise a trading strategy to amass Twitter
shares without alerting the broader market.
Lawyers for the investors, who are led by an Oklahoma public
pension fund, did not immediately respond to requests for
comment on Friday.
Musk eventually bought San Francisco-based Twitter for $44
billion in October 2022. The SEC has also probed his Twitter
stock purchases.
Last September, U.S. District Judge Andrew Carter refused to
dismiss an earlier version of the lawsuit, finding evidence that
Musk understood the SEC disclosure and testified about it under
oath.
The case is Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System
v Musk et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New
York, No. 22-03026.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama)
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