Judge denies Elon Musk’s attempt to delay Twitter trial - The Verge

A Delaware Court of Chancery judge rejected Elon Musk’s attempt to delay his trial over trying to break an agreement to buy Twitter for $44 billion. The judge will allow Musk to add new whistleblower claims to his countersuit.

A Delaware court has denied billionaire Elon Musk’s attempt to push back the October trial over his abortive Twitter acquisition, but it agrees that he can incorporate claims made by former Twitter security chief Peiter “Mudge” Zatko into his case.

The decision follows a hearing yesterday afternoon that saw Musk’s attorneys argue for a “meager” few weeks to review new information before the trial’s October 17th start date. Twitter, meanwhile, accused Musk of trying to drag out the trial and “sow chaos” with more document requests — claiming at one point that its lawyers had been forced to pause responding to international law enforcement requests.

Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick said that Musk should be granted wide latitude to amend claims before the trial starts, overruling Twitter’s objections, although she said she was “reticent to say more concerning the merits of the counterclaims” before the litigation. Musk and Twitter will negotiate on “limited” discovery of new documents related to Zatko’s allegations, which include a variety of claims about poor management at Twitter as well as assertions that executives lied about the number of bots on the platform. In a statement, Musk attorney Alex Spiro lauded the decision. “We are hopeful that winning the motion to amend takes us one step closer to the truth coming out in that courtroom,” said Spiro.

However, McCormick said that Twitter would be unduly harmed by a delay in the trial — which Musk had initially pushed to schedule next year. “The company has been forced for months to manage under the constrains of a repudiated merger agreement,” wrote McCormick. “I am convinced that even four weeks’ delay would risk further harm to Twitter too great to justify.”

The ruling is consistent with McCormick’s earlier push for a fast trial, but the decision to allow the whistleblower’s claims strengthens Musk’s case — albeit in ways that aren’t necessarily fatal to Twitter. Musk initially said he suspended the deal because he’d discovered a far larger number of bots on the platform than he expected, but at the trial, he’s likely to argue that Twitter concealed “material adverse effects” potentially beyond the scope of bots, thanks to Zatko’s disclosures.

https://www.theverge.com/2022/9/7/23339673/musk-twitter-trial-delay-request-denied-whistleblower-claims-granted


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