Offbeat

We know what Musk will probably dress up as this year: A victim

Mr X ordered to show at Halloween hearing over election lottery as his lawyers file docs to dodge it


Updated Elon Musk has been ordered to attend a Halloween hearing on the legality of his election petition lottery, but a last-minute removal request may have given the billionaire a reprieve to spend the day enjoying quality holiday time with his family or more relentless campaigning to help elect Donald Trump.

Musk and his America PAC, you may recall, were giving out $1 million a day to random folks in swing states, provided they signed his voter information gathering scheme petition in support of the Constitution and its first and second amendments. That didn't sit well with the governor of Pennsylvania - where the first several prizes were given out - who said the matter looked illegal, and merited further investigation.

It didn't take long for Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner to decide the Governor's suggestion was worth taking action on, so he sued Musk and his PAC on Monday in a bid to freeze the cash giveaway on the grounds it's an illegal lottery.

"Running an illegal lottery and violating consumer protections is ample basis for an injunction and concluding that America PAC and Musk must be stopped, immediately, before the upcoming presidential election on November 5," Krasner, a Democrat, argued in his complaint, "because America PAC and Musk hatched their illegal lottery scheme to influence voters in that election."

Philadelphia County Judge Angelo Foglietta appeared to concur with the critical nature of the case, and agreed to set a hearing for today at 1000 local time, which Musk was ordered to attend, to show cause why an immediate injunction shouldn't be granted.

No treat, just a legal trick

Musk apparently wasn't keen to fly home and drag his perpetual victim costume out of the closet for a Halloween court date, so his lawyers instead filed a removal motion [PDF] in Pennsylvania federal court.

In the lengthy document, Musk's lawyers argue that Krasner's application of state law is inappropriate, given that the claims of election interference pertain to a federal election and not a state one. Musk's lawyers further argue that the election-related activities Krasner filed suit over, namely "independent expenditures to influence campaigns for federal office and the core political speech via petition gathering," are exclusively a matter for federal court.

Removal motions put actions in lower courts on hold immediately, meaning the hearing is likely on hold pending a hearing on the removal motion. As of writing, today's hearing in Philadelphia is still on the docket for the case (no. 241003509 in Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas).

The Register was told by the court's office of communications that the hearing would likely still be held as scheduled, during which time Musk's lawyers will probably bring their removal request to the judge, and the hearing is likely to be adjourned.

Whether Musk will be in attendance is unknown, and his lawyers have not responded to questions. ®

Updated to add at 1845 UTC on October 31 2024

Elon Musk was a no-show at the court hearing, but it doesn't appear to have cost him anything legally, as Judge Angelo Foglietta agreed to place the case on hold pending the outcome of a hearing regarding the removal motion in federal court.

Musk took to X to celebrate, saying "American justice FTW" in response to another post from an individual who told Krasner he "can suck it."

Send us news
99 Comments

Major publishers sue Perplexity AI for scraping without paying

We sell that to OpenAI – how dare you steal it and make stuff up

Musk's $1M election lottery raises serious legal concerns, says Pennsylvania governor

C'mon, do you really think ol' Elon’s handing out all that cash, day after day?

X to allow third parties to train their AI models with social media users' data

Another raft of reasons to ponder your social media presence

Server-maker Wiwynn expands $61M lawsuit against X

Finds two more reasons Musk should have known he was on the hook for datacenter kit

Musk, Bezos need just 90 minutes to match your lifetime carbon footprint, says Oxfam

Between jets, yachts and investments in destructive companies, billionaires are speed running the apocalypse

Musk claims Cybertruck has become profitable at last

Third quarter results recharge Tesla's stock price

US lawmakers push DoJ to prosecute tax prep firms for leaking taxpayer data to big tech

TaxSlayer, H&R Block, TaxAct, and Ramsey Solutions accused of sharing info with Meta and Google

US leans on Japan to curb sales of chipmaking equipment to China

Tokyo between a rock and a hard place as Beijing threatens to retaliate

Tesla FSD faces yet another probe after fatal low-visibility crash

Musk’s camera-only approach may not be a great idea after all?

Elon Musk's disaster relief promises: Should we believe the hype?

When you look behind the headlines, you'll find unfulfilled commitments

Elon Musk's X isn't important enough to feel the full force of EU regulation

DMA gatekeeper status denied, meaning X can carry on without extra compliance chores

First time's the charm: SpaceX catches a descending Super Heavy Booster

Mechanical chopsticks on the launch tower grab a returning rocket and Starship splashes down on target