During a California court appearance Monday, when questioned about a 420 tweet, Elon Musk suddenly forgot the significance of the number in pot culture. The tech billionaire responded after being cornered by a prosecutor representing Tesla employees for a class action lawsuit alleging he tweeted and misled shareholders about the price of Tesla shares.
The fiasco began several years ago. In 2018, Musk rounded up Tesla shares from $419 to $420, announcing his plan to go private in a tweet. âAm considering taking Tesla private at $420,â Musk tweeted on Aug. 7, 2018. âFunding secured.ââsending officials from The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) into a tailspin.
Musk said he tweeted the share price based on what he said was a âfirm commitmentâ from Saudi Arabiaâs Public Investment Fund (PIF) to take Tesla private. But about 10 days later, Musk admitted that the Tesla buyout he had envisioned wasnât going to materialize.
After an investigation, the SEC fined Musk $40 million, forcing the billionaire to step down as chair of Teslaâs board. The SEC said that Musk misled investors. In the SECâs complaint, Musk was accused of rounding up the share price to $420 from $419 âbecause he had recently learned about the numberâs significance in marijuana culture.âÂ
Musk caused instantaneous uproar about a month later, sparking a blunt with Joe Rogan on his show âThe Joe Rogan Experienceâ on Sept. 3, 2018, shocking Tesla investors and officials across the board. His troubles didnât end there. High Times asked if it was âthe most expensive blunt of all timeâ due to the fallout, with NASA- and SpaceX-associated officials reviewing his security clearance.
The Verge reports that Nicholas Porritt is an attorney for a class of Tesla investors suing Musk for millions of dollars that they say resulted from his failure to take Tesla private.Â
The courtroom got tense: âYou rounded up to 420 because you thought that would be a joke that your girlfriend will enjoy, isnât that correct?â Porritt asked. âNo,â Musk said, adding, âthere is some, I think, karma around 420. I should question whether that is good or bad karma at this point.â
Musk said that 420 wasnât a weed joke, but a roughly 20% premium on the $419 stock price at the time. â420 was not chosen because of a joke,â Musk testified. âIt was chosen because there was a 20 percent premium over the stock price.â Musk also claimed that it was a âcoincidence.â
The jury will decide if Musk should have to pay out up to billions of dollars in damages to Tesla shareholders for the money they lost due to his tweets.
Judge Edward Chen ruled that the jury should be aware that Muskâs 2018 tweets are false. Jurors will now need to decide whether Musk deceived Tesla shareholders because of his tweets.
Musk said that he was not relying on a commitment for the Saudi PIF when he tweeted âfunding secured,â adding that his shares in SpaceX would also help fund the deal to take Tesla private. âJust as I sold stock in Tesla to buy Twitter⌠I didnât want to sell Tesla stock, but I did sell Tesla stock,â Musk said. âMy SpaceX shares alone would have meant that funding was secured.â
Musk has also been sued by a group of former Twitter employees after a mass firing. Musk recently became the CEO of Twitter after buying the platform for $44 billion in October 2022. Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdulaziz is Twitterâs second-largest shareholder after Musk.Â


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