Elon Musk Asks Judge to Block SEC Subpoena Over Tweets on Tesla Stock Sale

(Bloomberg) — Tesla Inc. Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk asked a judge to end the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s oversight of his Twitter posts under a 2018 agreement because he claims it is being used to “trample” his free speech rights.

Musk also asked the judge to block an SEC subpoena for documents relating to the review of his tweets and his sale of stock and options, a court filing on Tuesday showed. An SEC spokesperson declined to comment.  

The SEC is investigating whether Musk and his brother Kimbal violated securities laws when selling shares in the company late last year, according to a person familiar with the matter. Last month, Tesla disclosed that it had received an SEC subpoena on Nov. 16 seeking information about its governance processes and compliance with the September 2018 agreement. 

Read More: Tesla’s Many Dockets of Litigation Keep Lawyers and Judges Busy

In that deal, Tesla pledged to institute oversight of his Twitter posts and other communications about the company after the regulator alleged he had committed securities fraud by saying on the social media platform in 2018 that he had secured funding for the company to go private.

Tesla and Musk complained last month to U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan that the SEC is targeting them with “unrelenting investigation” for criticizing the government, while failing to pay Tesla shareholders the $40 million that the agency collected in the 2018 settlement.

Musk said in a court affidavit he was “forced to sign” an agreement with the SEC because the agency’s “unrelenting regulatory pressure” and “collateral consequence” of the government complaint against him “stood to jeopardize” Tesla’s ability to raise money. At the time, “Tesla was a less mature company” than it is today, he said. 

“I never lied to shareholders,” Musk said, adding that his tweets in 2018 were true about him considering taking Tesla private and that the funding had been secured. “I would never lie to shareholders. I entered into the consent decree for the survival of Tesla, for the sake of its shareholders.”

Tesla has had three chief legal officers in the past two years. David Searle, who was hired a little more than a year ago to be head of compliance, was recently promoted to acting head of legal and corporate secretary.

The case is U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Musk, 18-cv-08865, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

(Updates with no comment from SEC and recently hiring of new Tesla legal chief.)

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