Elon Musk escapes paying $500 million to former Twitter employees

Date:

Share:


The social media platform formerly known as Twitter has been at the center of from the very beginning of Elon Musk’s takeover. One such suit relates to the more than 6,000 employees laid off by Musk following his acquisition of the company – and his alleged failure to pay them their full severance. Yesterday, Musk notched over his former employees.

The case in question is a class-action filed by former Twitter employee Courtney McMillian. The complaint argued that under the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the Twitter Severance Plan owed laid off workers three months of pay. They received less than that, and sought $500 million in unpaid severance. However, on Tuesday, US District Judge Trina Thompson in the Northern District of California Musk’s motion to dismiss the class-action complaint.

Judge Thompson found that the Twitter severance plan did not qualify under ERISA because they received notice of a separate payout scheme prior to the layoffs. Instead, she dismissed the case, ruling that the severance program adopted after Musk’s takeover was the one that applied to these former employees, rather than the 2019 one the plaintiffs were expecting.

This ruling is a setback for the thousands of dismissed Twitter staffers, but there are future chances for them to win larger payments. Thompson’s order noted that the plaintiffs could amend their complaint for non-ERISA claims. If they do, Thompson said “this Court will consider issuing an Order finding this case related to one of the cases currently pending” against X Corp/Twitter. There are still lawsuits underway on behalf of some past top brass at Twitter, one which is seeking in unpaid severance and another attempting to recoup about in unpaid legal fees.



Source link

━ more like this

Watch this moonwalking humanoid robot impress with lifelike agility

A new video (above) out of South Korea features the field tests and interaction capabilities of KAIST Humanoid v0.7, developed at the Korea...

AI frame generation is coming to the PS5 Pro

Sony is preparing to take its PlayStation graphics technology a step further, with AI-powered frame generation now confirmed as a future feature for...

Why everyone hates NVIDIA DLSS 5 (but will love it eventually)

Upscaling, or reconstructing frames for video games in real time, is a pretty controversial practice. Pursists balk at the idea, but users with...

The future of Windows could include fewer ads and distracting upsells

Microsoft may finally be addressing one of the most frustrating parts of Windows 11: the constant ads and upsells. According to Scott Hanselman,...

Apple is reportedly sitting on new products because Siri AI isn’t ready

Apple might have new products ready to go, but it’s just not launching them yet. According to a recent report from Bloomberg, inventory...
spot_img