A Pennsylvania state judge said on Thursday he would not immediately proceed with a lawsuit seeking to stop Elon Musk’s $1 million voter giveaway ahead of the Nov. 5 U.S. presidential election.
At a hearing in Pennsylvania, Judge Angelo Foglietta said he would place the lawsuit on hold while a federal court considers whether to take up the case.
Musk’s bid to move the case frees him to continue the giveaway because the matter likely won’t be resolved until after Tuesday’s election.
The billionaire entrepreneur, who is spending heavily to back Republican Donald Trump, had been ordered to attend the hearing but did not appear.
Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner is seeking to halt the giveaway less than a week before the tightly contested presidential election between Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris.
Krasner, who championed progressive causes when running for district attorney, accuses Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab CEO Musk and his political action committee America PAC of hatching an “illegal lottery scheme to influence voters.”
Musk has been giving $1 million checks to randomly selected people who sign a petition pledging support for free speech and gun rights.
The offer is limited to registered voters in one of seven states that will likely decide the outcome of the Nov. 5 election – Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Musk gave away the first $1 million at an Oct. 19 America PAC rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania’s state capital.
After the hearing, Musk said “American Justice FTW” in a post on his social media platform X, using the abbreviation for “for the win.”
Krasner’s Oct. 28 lawsuit says the giveaway should be stopped because it amounts to an illegal lottery that violates consumer protection laws by using deceptive language.