A Pennsylvania judge ruled that Elon Musk and his super PAC to continue its daily $1 million giveaway to registered voters in swing states through Tuesday’s presidential election.
Common Pleas Court Judge Angelo Foglietta denied Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner’s request to issue an injunction and stop the controversial giveaway. Foglietta didn’t immediately explain his reasoning. The ruling came after Musk’s lawyers claimed the winners were paid spokespeople and not selected by chance.
Krasner filed the suit last week, calling Musk’s efforts an “illegal lottery scheme.”
Musk and America PAC launched the daily $1 million giveaway on Oct. 19 for voters in certain swing states. They ask registered voters to share personal identifying information (such as a cell phone number and address) and to sign a petition pledging support for the Constitution and the right to bear arms. They are then eligible to be selected to “randomly” win $1 million, though an attorney for Musk and America PAC said winners were actually preselected.
“The $1 million recipients are not chosen by chance,” Musk lawyer Chris Gober said Monday. “We know exactly who will be announced as the $1 million recipient today and tomorrow.”
America PAC director Chris Young testified that the winners were pre-vetted, in order to “feel out their personality, [and] make sure they were someone whose values aligned” with Musk’s group.
Musk’s America PAC has already given away 17 different $1 million checks to registered voters. It plans to announce one more winner on Tuesday.
Inicia sesión para agregar comentarios
Otros mensajes en este grupo.

Two of the nation’s real estate titans are on a collision course.
Compass, one of the largest brokerage

A team of prominent AI researchers, led by Databricks and Perplexity cofounder Andy Konwinski, has launched Laude Institute, a new nonprofit that helps univers

YouTube star Jimmy Donaldson—aka MrBeast—is the face of the online video-sharing platform. He tops the platform’s most-subscribed list, with more than 400 million people following his exploits. On

Tesla deployed a small group of

Imagine you owned a bookstore. Most of your revenue depends on customers coming in and buying books, so you set up dif

For 13 years, Subway Surfers’ download rate has been consistent: about one million new installs every single day.
Half of those downloads come from users upgrading to new

Misbehavior on digital platforms can be tricky to manage. Issue warnings, and you risk not deterring bad behavior. Block too readily, and you might drive away your user base and open yourself to a