Musk Lawyer Urges Probe of Jury Conduct in Twitter Deal Verdict
Elon Musk’s attorney Alex Spiro has asked U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer to scrutinize and potentially challenge a recent federal jury verdict that found Musk liable for misleading investors during his 2022 effort to buy Twitter, arguing the jury was biased and "mocked" the process. In a letter to the judge, Spiro points to the jury’s use of a $4.20 damages figure, highlighted in blue ink and larger font on the verdict form, calling it a 'numerical joke' tied to Musk’s well-known "420" persona rather than a neutral application of the law. He also cites juror questionnaires that allegedly showed "deep" negative views of Musk, claims the court could not fully screen out biased panelists, and accuses opposing counsel of 'gamesmanship' that limited his role and introduced prejudicial arguments unrelated to the core stock-price claims. The jury had rejected plaintiffs’ primary allegation that Musk deliberately schemed to manipulate Twitter’s share price but still held him liable on a narrower issue related to statements about the status of the deal, a mixed outcome Spiro says reflects a desire to punish Musk personally rather than evidence-based reasoning. The filing raises broader questions about jury impartiality in high-profile tech and securities cases and sets the stage for possible motions to overturn or modify the verdict, which legal commentators on social media are already debating as a test of how courts handle culturally loaded symbols and celebrity reputations in complex financial trials.
📌 Key Facts
- A federal jury this month found Elon Musk liable on a narrow claim of misleading investors during his 2022 Twitter acquisition effort while rejecting a broader stock-manipulation theory.
- Musk’s attorney Alex Spiro has sent a letter to U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer arguing the verdict was compromised by bias and that jurors used a $4.20 damages figure, highlighted in blue ink and larger font, as a 'numerical joke' aimed at Musk.
- Spiro cites juror questionnaires showing allegedly 'deep' negative views of Musk, claims biased jurors could not be fully screened out, and accuses opposing counsel of 'gamesmanship' and prejudicial arguments.
- The jury’s mixed verdict cleared Musk of orchestrating a deliberate stock-manipulation scheme but still imposed liability based on some statements about the deal’s status.
- Musk’s team is using the alleged jury conduct and trial constraints to argue he was denied a fair trial, laying groundwork for post-verdict challenges.
📊 Relevant Data
Elon Musk has a 73% favorable rating among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, compared to only 12% among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, as of a 2025 survey.
How Americans view Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg — Pew Research Center
In San Francisco, as of 2024, 56.3% of registered voters are Democrats, 6.8% are Republicans, and 27.6% have no party preference, indicating a heavily Democratic-leaning population from which jury pools are drawn.
Registration by Political Party — San Francisco Department of Elections
Juries in US lawsuits have awarded nominal or symbolic damages, such as $1, to establish liability without significant financial compensation, as seen in various defamation and civil rights cases where the focus is on vindication rather than monetary recovery.
Top 4 Famous Punitive Damages Cases — We Make It Right
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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