There’s a question yet to be answered in Twitter’s case against Elon Musk that could drastically alter the amount of discovery exchanged and what the defense can present at trial: is Twitter’s user data relevant enough to hand over to Musk?

During a 90-minute hearing on Musk’s discovery motion held Wednesday afternoon before Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick, Bradley Wilson of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz argued the defense has already been offered all it needs, while Alex Spiro of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan was adamant Musk has the right to look at raw data to check Twitter’s work.

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