Lawsuit alleging Elon Musk rigged dogecoin is dropped

A lawsuit accusing Elon Musk of rigging dogecoin is ending.

Investors in the cryptocurrency who said the world’s richest person and his electric car company Tesla committed fraud and insider trading are withdrawing their appeal from an Aug. 29 dismissal of their case.

They are also withdrawing a bid to sanction Musk’s lawyers for allegedly interfering with the appeal, including by demanding payment of their hefty legal fees.

Musk and Tesla, meanwhile, withdrew their motion to sanction the investors’ lawyer for allegedly pursuing a “frivolous” case with ever-changing legal theories to “extort a quick handout.”

A stipulation dismissing the appeal and both sides’ motions was filed on Thursday night in federal court in Manhattan. It requires approval by U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein.

Lawyers for the investors and Musk did not immediately respond on Friday to requests for comment.

Investors accused Musk of using Twitter posts, an appearance on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” and other stunts to trade dogecoin at their expense, including by timing trades to Musk’s public statements and activities.

In the Aug. 29 dismissal, Hellerstein said reasonable investors could not prove securities fraud from relying on Musk’s tweets, including that dogecoin was the future currency of Earth and could be flown to the moon by his company SpaceX.

The judge also said he did not understand the investors’ related market manipulation and insider trading claims.

Investors originally sought $258 billion, and amended their complaint four times in two years.

Musk bought Twitter in 2022 and rebranded it X.

On Tuesday, President-elect Donald Trump picked Musk and biotechnology company founder Vivek Ramaswany to lead a new Department of Government Efficiency, whose acronym echoes dogecoin’s name.

The case is Gorog et al v. Musk et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 22-05037.

—Jonathan Stempel, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91229876/elon-musk-lawsuit-dogecoin-dropped?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 3mo | 15 nov. 2024 à 21:40:03


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

EV Winter is here. Carmakers are betting on a thaw

The move to electric vehicles is the auto industry’s biggest transformation since cars replaced horses early last century. Just about every traditional automaker is going through its own reckoning

9 févr. 2025 à 23:20:04 | Fast company - tech
This app sends faxes for free from your iPhone, Android device, Mac, or PC

Nowadays, when you hear someone talk about faxing, there’s a decent chance it’s the punchline to a groan-inducing dad joke. (Not that I would ever be guilty of such silliness, of course.

8 févr. 2025 à 07:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Amazon to pay nearly $4 million for allegedly taking drivers’ tips

Amazon has agreed to pay nearly $4 million to settle charges that the e-commerce company subsidized its labor costs by taking tips its&nbsp

7 févr. 2025 à 22:30:08 | Fast company - tech
‘It just didn’t go the way I planned’: Hawk Tuah girl breaks silence after crypto scandal

Following a cryptocurrency scandal in December 2024, Haliey Welch (aka Hawk Tuah girl) seemed to

7 févr. 2025 à 22:30:07 | Fast company - tech
Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses are having their Super Bowl moment

It’s game time for Meta’s wearables: The tech giant has bought two ad spots for its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses during Sunday’s Super Bowl broadcast, including one that has Chris Hemsworth and Chri

7 févr. 2025 à 20:20:05 | Fast company - tech
‘A true victim of the Snapchat era’: Parents are resurfacing hilariously filtered baby photos from the 2010s

If you scroll through your old photos from the mid-2010s—the golden era of Snapchat—chances are a fai

7 févr. 2025 à 20:20:04 | Fast company - tech