Milton, 41, was sentenced Monday by US District Judge
Prosecutors had sought a sentence “in line” with the 11 years recommended by probation officials, saying a lengthy term of incarceration was needed both to punish Milton and deter other corporate executives from similar misconduct. The government said Milton’s fraud cost investors $660 million.
A teary Milton had asked the judge to sentence him only to probation, saying he didn’t intend to mislead investors and made mistakes due to a lack of experience.
“I was not a very seasoned CEO,” he said.
Ramos allowed Milton to remain free on bail while he appealed his conviction. Milton said after the sentencing that he believes the verdict will be overturned.
The jury took only a few hours to convict Milton in October 2022 after a two-month trial featuring testimony from more than a dozen government witnesses and evidence including an infamous viral video that appeared to show a Nikola semi prototype traveling under its own power. It was actually rolling downhill thanks to gravity.
Milton’s case was unusual among white-collar fraud cases because he was accused of making misrepresentations through public channels like YouTube, rather than in financial statements or other corporate filings.
“You used your considerable social media talents to tout your company in a way that was materially false,” Ramos said at the sentencing. “What you said over and over in multiple media outlets was wrong and it was materially wrong.”
Defense lawyer
But prosecutor Matthew Podolsky said it was “beside the point” whether Milton wanted to harm investors. “He ultimately didn’t care” if he did, Podolsky said.
Nikola drew investors eager to find the next
But soon after Nikola began trading, Bloomberg
Milton
His conviction was a victory for federal prosecutors in Manhattan, who have vowed to crack down on corporate wrongdoing, and his sentencing comes just over a month after FTX co-founder
Milton previously asked Ramos to throw out his conviction, arguing that some of the judge’s instructions to the jury were wrong and that one juror lied to get on the panel. The motion was rejected in August.
He remains Nikola’s second-biggest shareholder and earlier this year called for leadership changes at the company, urging investors to reject company-backed proposals to reelect directors and allow new shares to be issued.
The stock traded below $1 a share for most of April and May, raising threats of delisting. While shares rebounded to more than $3 in August, they have since fallen back below $1, far below a closing peak of almost $80 in mid-2020.
The case is US v. Milton, 21-cr-478, US District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
(Corrects name of prosecutor in 11th paragraph and spelling of Hindenburg Research in 13th.)
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Misyrlena Egkolfopoulou
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