Elon Musk has revealed that he received a “settlement demand” from the Gary Gensler-run SEC in connection his Twitter takeover – the latest in a long-running public feud between the billionaire
The post features a screenshot of a letter Musk’s lawyer Alex Spiro sent to soon-to-depart SEC chair Gary Gensler. In the letter Spiro, partner at the law firm Quinn Emanuel, wr
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reopened an investigation into Elon Musk's brain-chip startup Neuralink, according to a letter shared by Musk on social media platform X on Thursday.
US SEC Chair Gary Gensler has issued a 48-hour deadline to DOGE co-chair Elon Musk to settle an investigation into his company, Neuralink.
The X and Tesla executive — now a close adviser of President-elect Donald Trump — publicly posted a letter from his lawyer to the agency.
Spiro suggested that the SEC’s latest actions against Musk may have been politically motivated and demanded to know who directed these actions, “whether it was you or the White House.”
Tech mogul Elon Musk criticized the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Thursday over a settlement offer in the agency’s probe into his 2022 purchase of Twitter, now known as X. In a
Elon Musk revealed on X that the SEC has reopened its investigation into Neuralink and issued a 48-hour settlement ultimatum. His lawyer, Alex Spiro,
Elon Musk shared that the Security and Exchange Commission issued a "settlement demand" in a long-running probe of his purchase of the social media platform now known as X.
Elon Musk's brain-chip implant startup Neuralink faces a new SEC probe, according to a letter from his lawyer he posted on X.
Elon Musk says the Securities and Exchange Commission wants him to pay a penalty or face charges involving what he disclosed — or failed to disclose — about his purchases of Twitter stock before he bought the social media platform in 2022.
The transition team has been grappling with an agency that has a superfluity of field centers—ten spread across the United States, as well as a formal headquarters in Washington, DC—and large, slow-moving programs that cost a lot of money and have been slow to deliver results.