Arizona
resident
Jacqueline
McAferty
is
suing
Elon
Musk
and
his
pro-Trump
America
PAC
in
a
Texas
federal
court,
alleging
that
the
PAC’s
$1
million-a-day
lottery
to
registered
voters
in
swing
states
was
fraud.
The
proposed
class-action
lawsuit
was
filed
a
day
after
a
Philadelphia
judge
denied
the
city’s
request
to
order
Musk
to
end
the
lottery
—
and
seems
to
have
been
spurred
by
Musk’s
legal
defense
in
the
Philadelphia
case.
The
complaint,
filed
in
a
federal
court
in
Austin,
alleges
that
Musk
falsely
claimed
the
PAC
would
choose
sweepstakes
winners
randomly
when
the
selections
were,
in
fact,
predetermined.
The
complaint
cites
comments
made
yesterday
by
Chris
Gober,
a
Republican
lawyer
CNBC
identified
as
America
PAC’s
former
treasurer.
“The
$1
million
recipients
are
not
chosen
by
chance,”
Gober
said
during
the
Monday
hearing
in
the
Philadelphia
case.
“We
know
exactly
who
will
be
announced
as
the
$1
million
recipient
today
and
tomorrow.”
Grober’s
testimony
contradicted
Musk’s
own
claim
that
the
funds
were
awarded
“randomly,”
as
he
said
when
he
announced
the
contest
at
a
political
rally
in
Pennsylvania.
McAferty
signed
the
petition
on
October
20th,
the
day
Musk
announced
the
contest,
according
to
the
complaint.
Musk
“made
the
false
statements
with
the
intention
of
inducing
individuals
to
sign
the
America
PAC
petition,”
which
was
a
scheme
to
obtain
users’
data,
the
complaint
alleges.
McAferty
is
accusing
Musk
of
fraud
and
breach
of
contract.
To
sign
the
petition,
voters
had
to
provide
their
first
and
last
name,
email
address,
mailing
address,
and
cell
phone
number.
“The
America
PAC
petition
places
no
limitations
on
America
PAC’s
use
of
or
sale
of
the
personal
data
it
collects,
nor
does
it
provide
any
additional
information
about
the
planned
use
of
data,”
the
complaint
claims.
The
suit
also
claims
that
Musk
used
the
lottery
to
drive
“significant
traffic
to
Musk’s
X
platform.”
Original author: Gaby Del Valle
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