In April, Musk made a $44 billion offer to buy the micro-blogging site, but he decided in July that he didn't want to do it. That doesn't work when you've already made a legally binding commitment. There are holes in every complaint the CEO has made about the purchase agreement.
According to the lawsuit, Musk was still on the hook to pay all that money. Musk submitted explanations for why he didn't want the social media company anymore, according to a court filing.
In the 127-page filing, there was no mention of calling Musk an idiotic liar. They were not far away.
According to the new court filing, the Counterclaims are a made-for-litigation tale that is contrary to the evidence. His complaints were called irrelevant by the company.
Musk invents representations that are never made and then tries to use the confidential data provided to him by the social network to make a false claim. Yet Musk simultaneously and incoherently asserts that the merger agreement between the two companies was broken by stonewalling his requests.
The legal beatdown continued, eviscerating Musk's claims about the number of active users on the platform.
Musk signed an agreement to purchase the company at a given price and waive any due diligence. It wouldn't change the fact that Musk decided to only have substantive questions after signing the dotted line. He said he wouldn't have to give refunds.
The following images are from Thursday's court filing by the social media company. The fact that Musk failed to attend a meeting about the topic of the number of active users on the site is one of the funnier elements. Musk calculated the number of likely bot on his account.
When you are dealing with the world's wealthiest shitposter, there are lots of funny pieces to go around.
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