Twitter summons investors and banks to investigate Musk’s intentions to undermine the acquisition deal

Legal experts said that Twitter is seeking to prove that Elon Musk tried to abandon the financing of his $44 billion acquisition of the social media company, and the company is currently investigating his motives to back out of the deal.

Twitter sent dozens of civil subpoenas this week to global banks such as Morgan Stanley, to investors involved in the deal, including a unit of Brookfield Asset Management, and to Musk’s advisers, according to court filings. Justice in Delaware for the past two days.

The subpoenas seek access to documents and communications related to the deal and its financing, and any information on fake Twitter accounts, as well as information regarding possible impact on the deal from changes in the share price of electric car maker Tesla (TESLA), of which Musk is chairman. Executive.

The subpoenas are part of Twitter’s lawsuit once morest Musk, seeking to get him to keep the deal at an agreed-upon price of $54.20 per share.

A five-day trial is scheduled to begin October 17, in the Delaware Court of Justice.

Experts say the subpoenas indicate that Twitter is seeking to find out what lenders, investors and advisors were telling each other regarding Musk’s behavior following he sealed the deal in late April.

They suspect Musk is plotting behind the scenes to get the whole thing down, said Minor Myers, a professor at the University of Connecticut Law School.

Musk said on July 8 that he would back out of the deal because Twitter violated the agreement by withholding data from fake accounts on the platform.

Twitter said the fake accounts were a distraction from the only important issue, the terms of the agreement.

While Musk also said he would abandon the deal because Twitter had fired two high-ranking executives, along with a third of its talent acquisition team, a backsliding from the company’s commitment to “keep the hardware of the existing ecosystem largely intact”.

Legal experts say that Musk cannot be asked to close the deal if the financing fails, provided he is not the reason for it.


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