A picture of Elon Musk is seen on a mobile device with the X and Twitter logos within the background on this photo illustration, July 23, 2023.
Jonathan Raa | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has to testify in a probe by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission concerning his 2022 acquisition of Twitter, a federal judge ordered Saturday.
As CNBC previously reported, the SEC is investigating whether Musk or anyone else committed securities fraud in 2022 because the billionaire began buying stock in Twitter and constructing a stake ahead of his leveraged buyout of the social media company.
Musk closed his acquisition of Twitter in October 2022 in a deal value roughly $44 billion and has since rebranded it X.
Within the order dated Feb. 10, 2024, federal magistrate judge Laurel Beeler wrote that although Musk and his legal team argued the SEC’s subpoena on this matter amounted to harassment of the billionaire, the federal financial regulator was “inside its authority” and its subpoena was “definite, and seeks relevant information” to its investigation.
The federal financial regulator and Musk now have one week to set a date and placement for his testimony.
Musk and his attorney Alex Spiro didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment. A spokesperson for the SEC declined to comment “beyond the general public filings for this matter.”
Musk has repeatedly sought to challenge if not strip authority from federal regulatory agencies.
For instance, he has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to undo a settlement agreement that he and Tesla struck with the SEC previously. The settlement required Musk to have a “Twitter sitter” approve his tweets about his electric vehicle business before he posts them. Musk’s attorneys have argued that the agreement set an unconstitutional condition on Musk and amounts to a violation of his free speech rights.
In one other example, Musk-led defense contractor SpaceX sued the National Labor Relations Board after the federal agency filed a criticism against the corporate alleging the rocket maker illegally fired employees who signed an open letter critical of Musk. The letter said, amongst other things, that Musk’s “behavior in the general public sphere is a frequent source of distraction and embarrassment for us.”
SpaceX filed its lawsuit against the NLRB within the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas in Brownsville. Attorneys for SpaceX argued of their suit that the very structure of the federal labor board violates the U.S. Structure. Their suit resembles one brought by a former worker of Starbucks against the NLRB, and seeks to stop the NLRB’s earlier criticism against SpaceX from moving forward.
Read the complete order to compel compliance here.