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Former Tesla employee agrees to pay fine over tips to reporters

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Tesla

(Reuters) — A former Tesla Inc. factory employee will pay Elon Musk's electric car maker $400,000 after it accused him of tipping reporters about alleged production inefficiencies and delays, a court filing shows.

The payment by Martin Tripp, a former process technician at Tesla's Gigafactory near Reno, Nevada, was part of a settlement detailed in a Monday filing with the federal court in that city. It requires approval by Chief Judge Miranda Du.

Tesla and Mr. Musk became embroiled in a public dispute with Mr. Tripp in June 2018, when it fired and then sued him.

The Palo Alto, California-based company accused Mr. Tripp of writing software to hack into its manufacturing operating system, stealing trade secrets, and making false claims to reporters about information he stole.

Judge Du has said Mr. Tripp characterized himself as a whistleblower who had identified production inefficiencies and delays in Tesla's effort to produce 5,000 Model 3 cars each week.

In September, the judge dismissed Mr. Tripp's defamation counterclaim over statements from Tesla, including an email to employees in which Mr. Musk accused him of "sabotage," saying Mr. Tripp did not show actual malice.

According to the court filing, Mr. Tripp did not contest Tesla's claims that he stole trade secrets, and acknowledged that his counterclaims were funded by a short seller of Tesla stock. The filing was signed by Mr. Tripp and a Tesla lawyer.

The case is Tesla Inc. v Tripp, U.S. District Court, District of Nevada, No. 18-00296.