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Tesla CEO and founder Elon Musk, who is in a legal fight with a former employee who says the company used punctured battery cells in the Model 3 electric car. Photo: AP

Tesla uses ‘dangerous batteries’, whistle-blower says as Elon Musk derides him as ‘horrible’

A fired Tesla technician whom Musk called a ‘horrible human being’ tells a US agency the carmaker has used dangerous batteries

Tesla

Martin Tripp, the fired Tesla technician fighting a corporate legal battle and a war of words with chief Elon Musk, has formally filed a tip with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) alleging the carmaker lied to investors and used dangerous batteries in its electric cars, his lawyer said.

Tripp told the SEC on Friday that the Silicon Valley car company, whose US$53 billion value rivals that of General Motors, had pushed for a number of potentially damaging measures to meet production quotas, including placing batteries with puncture holes into vehicles and reusing scrapped parts.

The company, Tripp said, had also inflated the number of Model 3 sedans it was making each week by as much as 44 per cent, skewing the figure that investors and buyers had for months watched closely for clues to Tesla’s performance.

The rear of a Tesla roadster on a dealer's lot in June. Photo: AP

Tesla did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The company has in the past repeatedly denied Tripp’s claims, saying no batteries with puncture holes had been used in cars, that Tripp was wrong about the scrap materials, and that the company’s production numbers were accurate. The SEC declined to comment.

Tesla fired Tripp last month and sued him for allegedly hacking the company’s computer systems, leaking false and damaging information to the press, and stealing valuable secrets, which Tripp denies.

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In emails, Musk told Tripp he should be “ashamed” of himself and was “a horrible human being”.

The company also said it received a phone call from a friend of Tripp after his firing, suggesting Tripp would go to Tesla’s battery-producing Gigafactory in Nevada, where Tripp had worked, and “shoot the place up”.

Tripp said the claim was “absurd”, and law enforcement authorities who investigated the call said “there was no credible threat.”

A still from a video posted by Mary McCormack, showing what she said was her husband's Tesla Model S bursting into flames in Los Angeles on June 15. Image: Mary McCormack via Twitter

Tripp has retained Stuart Meissner, a New York lawyer who represented the anonymous whistle-blower in a 2016 case against agriculture-chemical giant Monsanto.

The whistle-blower won US$22 million in the case, one of the largest payouts since the SEC began offering awards in 2012 to encourage more internal reporting of potential violations.

Meissner said Tesla has sought to ruin Tripp’s reputation as a way to protect its image and intimidate other potential whistle-blowers from coming forward.

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“Tesla and Mr. Musk have poured petrol on the fire of Tesla supporters,” Meissner said. Tripp “is not a public figure, like Elon Musk, and yet he’s been just tossed out there into the public realm and trashed.”

Tripp has yet to retain a lawyer for his legal defence against Tesla, which is seeking at least US$1 million in damages.

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