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Tesla Criminal Probe Into Musk Tweet Seen Opening Pandora’s Box

The initial scrutiny surrounds Musk’s tweet on Aug. 7 that he had money lined up to take the company private.

Tesla Criminal Probe Into Musk Tweet Seen Opening Pandora’s Box
Elon Musk, chief executive officer for Tesla Motors, speaks during an event in Hawthorne, California, U.S. (Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- All it took to draw the U.S. Justice Department into investigating Tesla Inc. was a single tweet by Chairman Elon Musk. But now that prosecutors have a toehold, they can look for other signs of misconduct at the electric-car maker.

The criminal investigation is in its very early stages, and it’s too soon to see where it may lead. Securities regulators, though, were already looking into the company’s car-production projections before Musk tweeted about possibly taking the company private.

Many securities fraud probes over the years have started with a bang like the one that knocked as much as 6.6 percent off Tesla’s shares with Bloomberg’s report of the probe on Tuesday. Some were flash news reports that faded without charges. Few crescendo dramatically like Theranos Inc., which regulators called a “massive fraud” for making false promises about its blood-testing products, leading to criminal charges against its founder and another senior executive.

Unlike Theranos, Tesla has a highly rated consumer product, and its cars are beloved by their owners. Even so, the upstart may now have to reveal more about its controls and processes as it has mapped out rapid growth under one charismatic leader.

“Criminal investigations are never good if you’re a public company because they open up a Pandora’s box and prosecutors will follow threads wherever they lead,” said Paul Pelletier, a former Justice Department prosecutor.

The New York Times on Tuesday reported that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and private equity firm Silver Lake both received subpoenas from the Securities and Exchange Commission quickly seeking materials about the companies’ interactions with Tesla, citing people briefed on the subpoenas. Goldman Sachs and Silver Lake declined to comment.

Tesla Cooperating

Tesla said it’s cooperating with the Justice Department, noting that it received queries but no subpoena.

The initial scrutiny surrounds Musk’s tweet on Aug. 7 that he had money lined up to take the company private. Shares jumped. Later, he and his board said there was no formal proposal for the funding and they abandoned the plan.

The SEC quickly opened a civil investigation into the tweet and issued a subpoena for information, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg. That was followed by the Justice Department probe. Neither the SEC nor federal prosecutors have accused Musk of any wrongdoing.

Tesla Securities Fraud Suits: Bloomberg Intelligence Litigation Watch

To prove criminal securities fraud, prosecutors would have to show not only that Musk’s statements were false, but that they were made willfully. That would require establishing that Musk purposely planned to inappropriately drive the shares higher or prevent them from going lower.

One area investigators would look for such evidence is in emails or other internal documents, according to former federal prosecutors.

Musk has often vented his frustrations with short sellers on social media. In May, Musk tweeted that he was expecting the “short burn of the century” and suggested that investors who were betting against the company start “tiptoeing quietly to the exit …”

The “funding secured” tweet did in fact trip up bearish sellers when the company’s shares rallied more than 10 percent. Government investigators will be trying to determine whether there was any connection to that statement and his desire to hurt short sellers.

Once federal prosecutors begin looking into Musk’s comments, they may also examine other things, including why the company’s new chief accountant picked up and left after just a month on the job -- though he said at the time he had “no disagreements with Tesla’s leadership or its financial reporting.” Under securities fraud laws, prosecutors could go back five years and more if they find evidence of a conspiracy.

Very often what starts out as an investigation of one subject takes a completely different turn, said Michael Koenig, who prosecuted former Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio for insider trading.

‘Wait a Minute’

“When we were investigating Qwest, we initially thought there were accounting fraud and revenue recognition type issues,” said Koenig, now a partner at Hinckley, Allen & Snyder. “As we started digging into it, however, we realized, ‘Wait a minute. Joe Nacchio is selling large amounts of his stock at the same time he’s telling the general public that the company is doing great, when he knew it was not.’”

Nacchio served four years and five months in prison after his 2007 conviction in the case.

A more recent example, according to Koenig, is the Hillary Clinton email investigation, which was reopened by the FBI after agents came across possible undiscovered evidence while investigating former New York congressman Anthony Weiner for sexting with a minor.

While the company says it hasn’t been subpoenaed by the Justice Department, that doesn’t mean the federal criminal investigation is limited, according to Pelletier. Prosecutors can piggyback on the SEC’s subpoena to get a hold of whatever information Tesla discloses, obviating the need to issue a grand jury subpoena of its own, he said. 

“That’s the normal course of action when the SEC has already issued a subpoena,” Pelletier said.

The SEC already was investigating whether Musk’s vehicle production forecasts misled investors before the regulator started scrutinizing whether he had secured funding for a Tesla buyout, Bloomberg News reported on Aug. 9.

Some of Musk’s predictions have been way off. Musk said during a May 2016 earnings call that, during the second half of 2017, he expected Tesla would produce 100,000 to 200,000 Model 3 sedans -- the lower-priced car that’s pivotal to the company generating profit. Tesla ended up building fewer than 3,000 Model 3s in last year’s second half.

The Justice Department’s interest in Tesla isn’t good for investors, who saw the company’s share price drop just after the investigation was revealed. But the probe doesn’t mean that Palo Alto, California-based Tesla will go the way of Theranos.

The nature and depth of any exaggerations by Tesla will ultimately determine how the company is treated. If Musk’s conduct at Tesla is deemed to be a case where the CEO’s unregulated passion led him to hyperbolic claims, the resulting penalties are likely to be serious, but measured. Penalties could be more severe should any evidence emerge that a win-at-all-costs mentality from the top led some executives to cook the books. In even such an extreme scenario, government officials would probably be hesitant to inflict a critical blow on a company that employs more than 35,000 people globally.

--With assistance from Dana Hull.

To contact the reporters on this story: Tom Schoenberg in Washington at tschoenberg@bloomberg.net;Greg Farrell in New York at gregfarrell@bloomberg.net;Matt Robinson in New York at mrobinson55@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeffrey D Grocott at jgrocott2@bloomberg.net;Jesse Westbrook at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.