Another Tesla Ex-Employee Sent A Whistleblower Tip To The SEC
Harin
Gouthro, a former Tesla employee, represented by Meissner Associates, has filed a whistleblower tip with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
- X to Introduce Regional Controls for Posts and Replies
- X Platform Poised to Introduce In-App Crypto and Stock Trading Soon
- Elon Musk Pivots: SpaceX Prioritizes Lunar Metropolis Over Martian Colony
A former Tesla employee has reportedly sent a whistleblower tip to the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission).
Sean Gouthro, Tesla’s former global security lead, was the one behind the whistleblower tip which was filed on Jan 24. According to Meissner Associates, Gouthro’s tip is aligned with the tip from Karl Hansen, also a Tesla’s ex-employee.
Whistleblower tip can result in fines and punishments for companies that are found guilty of a securities law violation.
In his tip, Hansen claimed that Tesla didn’t reveal to shareholders any information about the unauthorized surveillance, the theft of raw materials and the hacking of the company’s computers and cellphones.
The tip also stated that Tesla did not inform federal authorities when it received Hansen’s information about drug trafficking activities at Gigafactory located in Sparks, Nevada.
At that time, Elon Musk responded to Hansen’s claim with a Twitter direct message.
Also at that time, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the SEC declined to comment.
The tip from Gouthro also claims that Tesla’s 2018 take-private proposal was talked about and skeptically viewed by a great deal of Tesla employees before Musk discussed it on Twitter in August.
According to Meissner Associates, Gouthro’s tip claims, “Many were suspect of the purported deal's legitimacy.”
The whole Tesla’s go-private led to the SEC’s lawsuit which accused Musk of making “false and misleading statements" about the interest that investors had about the deal. The lawsuit ended with a settlement requiring Musk to leave his position as the chairman of the company’s board of directors in three years as well as paying a fine of $20 million. Tesla was also asked to monitor all of Musk’s communications that are relevant to shareholders.
A representative of Tesla denied both of Hansen and Gouthro’s claims.
The representative said:
The SEC refused to give any comments.
This is not the first time a former Tesla employee filed a whistleblower tip to the SEC. Gouthro is the third one to do so. Meissner Associates represent for all three cases. The first one to file a tip was Martin Trip who worked as Tesla’s former technician at the company’s Gigafacoty. The tip accused Tesla of using batteries having puncture holes in customers’ vehicles. The claim has been denied by Tesla.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Apr 13, 2026
DDR4 RAM Prices Finally Fall After Soaring More Than 2,200 Percent
ICT News - Apr 06, 2026
Artemis II Crew Enters Moon's Gravitational Sphere on Historic Day 5
ICT News - Mar 31, 2026
DDR5 RAM Prices Finally Easing: Relief for PC Builders in 2026
ICT News - Mar 29, 2026
FTC Takes Action Against Debanking Practices by Major Financial Firms
ICT News - Mar 27, 2026
Palantir CTO Identifies Iran Conflict as First Large-Scale AI-Driven War
ICT News - Mar 24, 2026
OpenAI on the Brink: Major Setbacks Signal the Bursting of the AI Bubble
ICT News - Mar 20, 2026
Top 10 Most Popular Social Media Sites Based on User Count in 2026
ICT News - Mar 19, 2026
Billion Dollar Blunder: Meta Shuts Down Metaverse After Wasting $80,000,000,000.00
ICT News - Mar 18, 2026
X to Introduce Regional Controls for Posts and Replies
ICT News - Mar 17, 2026
Is DLSS 5 Helping Games or Hurting Developers' Creative Style?
Read More
Mobile- Apr 21, 2026
Huawei Mate X7 Review: Foldable Photography Without Compromises
Huawei has built its Mate X series around one core promise: deliver premium experiences in a folding form factor without the usual trade-offs.
Mobile- Apr 19, 2026
Samsung Cuts Galaxy S26 Series Prices by Up to ₹19,000 in India
If you are planning to upgrade, this is a good time to check the latest offers on your preferred model.