Read Tesla’s Full Response to ‘Fortune’

Fortune stands by its reporting. · Fortune

Editors’s Note: Earlier this week, Fortune published two articles questioning whether Tesla and its CEO Elon Musk broke securities laws in not disclosing a fatal accident in which the company’s much-hyped autopilot feature was in use. One, by former Fortune Editor-at-Large Carol Loomis said that the car crash was a material event and should have been disclosed to potential investors in Tesla’s stock offering, which was completed at least a week after Tesla knew about the accident. A follow-up article reported that Tesla itself stated in a financial filling just days after the accident that an injury or death involving its autopilot feature and the resulting liability claim against the company would have a “material adverse effect on our brand, business, prospects and operating results.”

On Wednesday evening, Tesla sent the below response to Fortune, reprinted in full below. In reporting both articles, Fortune reached out to both Tesla and Musk for comments, in particular seeking to find out when exactly they knew about the accident, and why it wasn’t disclosed. Fortune fully stands by its reporting and both articles. Here is Tesla’s response:

Fortune's article, “Tesla Said an Autopilot Crash Would Be ‘Material’ Before Elon Musk Said It Wasn't,” is fundamentally incorrect. First, it mischaracterizes Tesla's SEC filing. Here is what Tesla's SEC filing actually says:

We may become subject to product liability claims, which could harm our financial condition and liquidity if we are not able to successfully defend or insure against such claims.