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Twitter aims to take Elon Musk to court amid acquisition fallout

The company 'plans to pursue legal action to enforce the merger agreement,' said Twitter chairman Bret Taylor

Elon Musk

After Elon Musk confirmed his intention to terminate his $44 billion Twitter acquisition deal on July 8th, the San Francisco, California-based social media company seems to have lawyered up.

As reported by The Verge, Twitter has hired the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, with one of its founders, Martin Lipton, credited as the inventor of the shareholder rights plan or the “Poison Pill,” a tactic that Twitter deployed earlier this year to block Musk’s initial buyout offer.

Following Musk’s July 8th remarks, Twitter chairman Bret Taylor released a statement on Twitter saying that the company “plans to pursue legal action to enforce the merger agreement” in the Delaware Court of Chancery.

Following Taylor’s comment, Musk — being the meme lord he is — posted a meme about the current debacle, implying that the reason he withdrew his offer was that Twitter wouldn’t disclose how many users on its platform are bots and that the platform will now have to do so in court.

“For nearly two months, Mr. Musk has sought the data and information necessary to make an independent assessment of the prevalence of fake or spam accounts on Twitter’s platform,” reads Musk’s legal team’s letter to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

Musk’s legal team, the Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan law firm, has defended the billionaire in the past, specifically in his “pedo guy” defamation lawsuit, and has also defended Samsung in its Apple patent lawsuit, according to The Verge.

Via: The Verge

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