Elon Musk Targets Ex-Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey As Legal Fight Heats Up
Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk is
seeking documents from Twitter Inc co-founder Jack Dorsey as the CEO of Tesla
and SpaceX pursues his legal fight to walk away from his $44 billion deal for
the social media company, according to a court filing.
Dorsey, who resigned as Twitter's chief executive in November
and left the board in May, was asked for documents and communications about
Musk's April agreement to buy the company and about spam accounts on the
platform, according to a copy of the subpoena.
Dorsey,
who is CEO of payments processing company Block Inc, did not immediately
respond to a request for comment. Block was co-founded by Dorsey and changed
its name last year from Square Inc.
Musk,
the world's richest person due to his stake in Tesla Inc, told Twitter in July
he was ending the agreement to buy the company for $54.20 per share because he
alleged Twitter had violated the deal contract. Twitter and Musk have since
sued each other, with Twitter asking a judge on the Delaware Court of Chancery
to order Musk to close the deal. A five-day trial is set to start on Oct. 17.
Twitter
has denied Musk's spam allegations.
Musk
also wanted documents and communications regarding alternative measures of
active users that the company has considered and information about the use of
mDAU in executive pay and annual targets.
Twitter
declined to comment.
Dorsey
had supported Musk's buyout offer for Twitter as the two men have agreed on the
need for more transparency for its algorithm and allowing users more control
over the content they see.
Dorsey
has also tweeted that he believes Twitter is held back by the advertising model
and Musk has said Twitter should rely more on subscription fees and services
such as money transfers between users.
Musk
and Dorsey held discussions in March about Musk joining the Twitter board
before Musk revealed he had acquired a 9.1% stake in Twitter. Musk accepted a
board seat but before he began his term, he changed course and offered to buy
the company.
Shares
of Twitter were down 2.5% at $42.89 in late Monday trade.
References:
BBC News, CNN News, NDTV , The News, Al-Jazeera, CNBC, Economist, Times of
India, Sky sports, New York Time, Sky News,
Indianexpress
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