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Judge deemed Elon Musk's Tesla tweet 'false and misleading', claim investors

Elon Musk paid a $US20 million fine and stepped down as Tesla chairman over the tweets. (Reuters: James Glover II, file)

A 2018 tweet posted by Elon Musk in which he claimed to have secured the funding to take Tesla private was deemed "false and misleading" by a judge, according to documents filed by investors suing his electric car company.

The shareholders have accused Tesla of securities fraud over their stock market losses in the wake of the August 7, 2018 tweet, which caused the share price to fluctuate wildly for several days.

In a court filing late on Friday, plaintiffs asked the federal judge in charge of the case, Edward Chen, to order Musk to stop saying publicly that he "secured" funding to take Tesla private at $US420 ($567) a share, as he again stated on Thursday.

In the past, the billionaire entrepreneur has said he was in talks at the time with Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund and that he was confident he would reach a deal.

But no agreement was ever announced.

According to the filing, Judge Chen recently concluded in an order not made public that Mr Musk's statements were "false and misleading", and made "recklessly and with full awareness of the facts that he misrepresented in his tweets".

Plaintiffs accused Mr Musk of engaging in "a high-profile public campaign to present a contradictory and false narrative regarding his August 7, 2018 tweets" — which could influence eventual jurors assigned to the trial set for later this year.

The Securities and Exchange Commission, the US market regulator, also charged him with fraud in the wake of the tweets.

He eventually agreed to a deal to settle the charges, which required Tesla's lawyers to review any social media posts with information deemed "material" to shareholders.

He also paid a $US20 million fine and stepped down as Tesla's chairman.

Musk, who has unveiled a $US43 billion hostile takeover bid for Twitter, said on Thursday he felt forced into the deal with the SEC to save Tesla.

AFP

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