• bitcoinBitcoin(BTC)$77,693.001.50%
  • ethereumEthereum(ETH)$2,340.852.53%
  • tetherTether(USDT)$1.000.00%
  • rippleXRP(XRP)$1.411.17%
  • binancecoinBNB(BNB)$628.990.95%
  • usd-coinUSDC(USDC)$1.000.00%
  • solanaSolana(SOL)$85.331.91%
  • tronTRON(TRX)$0.3232910.04%
  • Figure HelocFigure Heloc(FIGR_HELOC)$1.030.29%
  • dogecoinDogecoin(DOGE)$0.10962910.34%
  • whitebitWhiteBIT Coin(WBT)$55.031.59%
  • USDSUSDS(USDS)$1.000.00%
  • HyperliquidHyperliquid(HYPE)$40.600.75%
  • leo-tokenLEO Token(LEO)$10.36-0.02%
  • cardanoCardano(ADA)$0.2530182.78%
  • bitcoin-cashBitcoin Cash(BCH)$454.901.68%
  • moneroMonero(XMR)$382.381.03%
  • chainlinkChainlink(LINK)$9.391.65%
  • CantonCanton(CC)$0.1507831.14%
  • zcashZcash(ZEC)$335.06-0.33%
  • stellarStellar(XLM)$0.1641620.28%
  • MemeCoreMemeCore(M)$3.551.54%
  • USD1USD1(USD1)$1.00-0.04%
  • litecoinLitecoin(LTC)$57.394.08%
  • daiDai(DAI)$1.00-0.02%
  • avalanche-2Avalanche(AVAX)$9.412.65%
  • hedera-hashgraphHedera(HBAR)$0.0906541.97%
  • shiba-inuShiba Inu(SHIB)$0.0000065.90%
  • Ethena USDeEthena USDe(USDE)$1.000.01%
  • suiSui(SUI)$0.941.23%
  • RainRain(RAIN)$0.0074631.52%
  • paypal-usdPayPal USD(PYUSD)$1.000.01%
  • the-open-networkToncoin(TON)$1.331.63%
  • crypto-com-chainCronos(CRO)$0.0693060.04%
  • Circle USYCCircle USYC(USYC)$1.120.00%
  • tether-goldTether Gold(XAUT)$4,560.10-0.99%
  • BittensorBittensor(TAO)$261.095.02%
  • Global DollarGlobal Dollar(USDG)$1.000.00%
  • World Liberty FinancialWorld Liberty Financial(WLFI)$0.0734260.45%
  • BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity FundBlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund(BUIDL)$1.000.00%
  • pax-goldPAX Gold(PAXG)$4,554.58-1.07%
  • mantleMantle(MNT)$0.641.16%
  • polkadotPolkadot(DOT)$1.252.70%
  • uniswapUniswap(UNI)$3.322.85%
  • SkySky(SKY)$0.086145-2.33%
  • Pi NetworkPi Network(PI)$0.191252-0.01%
  • Falcon USDFalcon USD(USDF)$1.00-0.01%
  • nearNEAR Protocol(NEAR)$1.371.30%
  • okbOKB(OKB)$83.770.15%
  • AsterAster(ASTER)$0.675.58%
TradePoint.io
  • Main
  • AI & Technology
  • Stock Charts
  • Market & News
  • Business
  • Finance Tips
  • Trade Tube
  • Blog
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
TradePoint.io
No Result
View All Result

Elon Musk demands judge’s recusal over ‘support’ of LinkedIn post that mocked him after $2B verdict

March 25, 2026
in Business
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Elon Musk demands judge’s recusal over ‘support’ of LinkedIn post that mocked him after B verdict
ShareShareShareShareShare

Elon Musk is demanding a Delaware judge step aside from a high-stakes Tesla case after she allegedly “supported” a LinkedIn post mocking a $2 billion verdict against him in a separate California case.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Piccorini Morini restaurant to open in Nolita in June

NYC’s Milling Room abruptly shuts, may owe more than $1M in rent

Lawyers for Musk and Tesla filed a motion in Delaware’s Court of Chancery seeking the recusal of Chancellor Kathaleen St. J. McCormick from overseeing consolidated shareholder lawsuits, arguing her conduct “create[s] a perception of bias” that taints the proceedings.

The explosive filing centers on activity tied to McCormick’s LinkedIn account following a federal jury verdict in California that found Musk liable over tweets he posted in 2022 about his $44 billion Twitter deal.

Elon Musk is seeking to remove the Delaware judge overseeing key Tesla shareholder lawsuits. Getty Images

The complaint includes a screenshot of a LinkedIn post by Harry Plotkin, a Southern California-based jury consultant who worked with the legal team that sued Musk for securities fraud in San Francisco federal court.

“Sorry, Elon. Sorry, Quinn Emanuel,” Plotkin wrote, referring to Musk and the law firm that represented him.

“Thanks $2 billion for your help in this trial. It was a pleasure working against you. Congratulations to the trial team at Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy, LLP and Bottini Law for standing up for the little guy against the richest man in the world.”

The filing alleges the post was promoted by McCormick’s account, with a banner above it reading: “Katie McCormick supports this.”

McCormick has denied intentionally endorsing the post, claiming she was unaware of the interaction until LinkedIn notified her she had used the heart-in-hand “support” icon, according to the Financial Times.

“I either did not click the ‘support’ icon at all, or I did so accidentally. I do not believe that I did it accidentally,” she wrote in a letter to attorneys.

Delaware Chancery Court Chancellor Kathaleen St. J. McCormick is facing a recusal demand from Elon Musk. Delaware Court of Chancery
A banner reading “Katie McCormick supports this” appears above the post cited in Musk’s recusal motion.
A separate LinkedIn post criticizing Elon Musk — calling people “deeply ashamed of themselves” — was “liked” by an account tied to the judge’s chambers, a detail Musk’s lawyers cite as evidence of potential bias.

As alleged in the filing, LinkedIn’s “Support” reaction — shown as a heart cradled in an outstretched hand — requires a deliberate selection from multiple options and is generally interpreted as a stronger endorsement than a standard “Like,” which is the platform’s default, one-click response.

A separate LinkedIn post criticizing Musk also drew engagement from the judge’s chambers, with a staff account “liking” a message saying “so many people who should be so deeply ashamed of themselves seem incapable of being so,” according to the filing.

In the filing, Musk’s lawyers argue the LinkedIn activity strikes at the core of judicial impartiality, writing that the posts “are not simply negative criticism” but “inflammatory,” mocking Musk and his attorneys while celebrating a multibillion-dollar verdict against them.

They say the judge’s alleged reaction creates an unavoidable appearance of bias under Delaware law, which requires recusal where there is “any reasonable basis to question the impartiality of the trial judge.”

A source close to Musk alleged to The Post that the judge was “corrupt.” In December 2024, Musk hit out at McCormick for her “absolute corruption” when she declined to reinstate his Tesla compensation package.

The problem, they argue, is compounded by the overlap between the federal case and the Delaware proceedings, noting that “the very facts underlying the litigation celebrated in the posts are squarely at issue” in the shareholder lawsuits now before McCormick.

Plaintiffs in the Delaware case have already pointed to the California ruling to support their claims — making the judge’s alleged endorsement of that outcome especially problematic, according to the filing.

“The Court’s support of posts about a ‘pending… proceeding’” in another jurisdiction, the lawyers wrote, “runs afoul” of judicial conduct rules barring public comment on active cases.

Chancellor Kathaleen St. J. McCormick appears with members of the Delaware Court of Chancery in this undated file photo. Delaware Court of Chancery

McCormick is currently presiding over consolidated shareholder derivative lawsuits accusing Musk and Tesla’s board of breaching fiduciary duties, including claims tied to executive compensation and corporate governance.

One of the central cases — brought by a Detroit pension fund — challenges how Tesla’s directors awarded themselves stock-based pay, alleging the company was harmed by excessive compensation.

The litigation has been consolidated with related shareholder claims, some of which also touch on Musk’s conduct during the 2022 Twitter deal, putting multiple aspects of Tesla’s governance under scrutiny.

The clash between Musk and McCormick dates back to 2022, when she presided over the blockbuster lawsuit that forced him to complete his $44 billion acquisition of Twitter.

McCormick previously presided over the case that forced Musk to complete his $44 billion Twitter deal. REUTERS

McCormick put the case on a fast track and signaled she was prepared to order Musk to close the deal — a pressure campaign that ended with the billionaire backing down and finalizing the purchase just days before trial.

Musk has since made clear he blames the Delaware court for that outcome, testifying earlier this month that he believed he was “unlikely to win” because the judge was “extremely biased against me.”

Tensions escalated further in 2024 when McCormick voided Musk’s massive Tesla pay package — then valued at roughly $56 billion — finding the process that approved it was deeply flawed and overly influenced by Musk himself.

The Post has sought comment from the Delaware Court of Chancery and McCormick.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin

Related Posts

Piccorini Morini restaurant to open in Nolita in June
Business

Piccorini Morini restaurant to open in Nolita in June

April 28, 2026
NYC’s Milling Room abruptly shuts, may owe more than M in rent
Business

NYC’s Milling Room abruptly shuts, may owe more than $1M in rent

April 28, 2026
‘Not OK to steal a charity’
Business

‘Not OK to steal a charity’

April 28, 2026
Coca-Cola sales are climbing — and ‘shrinkflation’ is the sly way it’s keeping fans buying more
Business

Coca-Cola sales are climbing — and ‘shrinkflation’ is the sly way it’s keeping fans buying more

April 28, 2026
Next Post
Kornacki Cam: Watch Steve Kornacki analyze Illinois midterm primary election results | NBC News

Kornacki Cam: Watch Steve Kornacki analyze Illinois midterm primary election results | NBC News

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

No Result
View All Result
"DeSantis Dummymander": Democrats heap ridicule on Florida's proposed House maps – Axios

"DeSantis Dummymander": Democrats heap ridicule on Florida's proposed House maps – Axios

April 28, 2026
The BEST ChatGPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0 Guides – New!

The BEST ChatGPT Image 2 + Seedance 2.0 Guides – New!

April 27, 2026
Strikes continue in Middle East amid fragile ceasefire

Strikes continue in Middle East amid fragile ceasefire

April 28, 2026

About

Learn more

Our Services

Legal

Privacy Policy

Terms of Use

Bloggers

Learn more

Article Links

Contact

Advertise

Ask us anything

©2020- TradePoint.io - All rights reserved!

Tradepoint.io, being just a publishing and technology platform, is not a registered broker-dealer or investment adviser. So we do not provide investment advice. Rather, brokerage services are provided to clients of Tradepoint.io by independent SEC-registered broker-dealers and members of FINRA/SIPC. Every form of investing carries some risk and past performance is not a guarantee of future results. “Tradepoint.io“, “Instant Investing” and “My Trading Tools” are registered trademarks of Apperbuild, LLC.

This website is operated by Apperbuild, LLC. We have no link to any brokerage firm and we do not provide investment advice. Every information and resource we provide is solely for the education of our readers. © 2020 Apperbuild, LLC. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • AI & Technology
  • Stock Charts
  • Market & News
  • Business
  • Finance Tips
  • Trade Tube
  • Blog
  • Shop

© 2023 - TradePoint.io - All Rights Reserved!