Trevor's fraud didn't start with Nikola. The deal he inked with GM was the culmination of a decade of fraud. He started with a stolen patent, a family connection, and the balls to lie to Swift Transportation and leveraged it into what he has now. #NKLA#NKLAQ#Trevorgate
This is the story of dHybrid Inc. In late 2009, Trevor found out that a former neighbor of his was doing conversions of Diesel trucks to Diesel/Natural Gas hybrids. He got his pickup converted (rolled it a few months later, see my banner) and liked the savings.
Trevor suggested they go into business together and offered to help his friend patent his design. Instead, Trevor went and patented it in his own name and drove his pickup to Swift Transportation, a family member knew their CEO and put them in touch.
Trevor talked those guys into a contract. It was a terrible contract--$16 million for 800 systems, barely enough to cover the cost of parts. But it came with a $2 million down payment which was supposed to cover development and the first 100 systems.
Trevor instead squandered the down payment--as soon as the check came in he started spending over $100k a month on ads for his uPillar.com website. Swift alleges the money was diverted, and at any rate within a year and a half the money was completely gone.
Instead of delivering 100 systems, by the time the money was gone he only had 5 test mules that didn't work very well. So he went back to Swift and talked them into giving him a loan for over $300k. Then defaulted on that. Completely screwed, he looked for a buyout.
He started pitching the company to investors. He didn't want his team to just be he and his dad and his lawyer so he listed a contractor who had worked for him as his CTO. Used his initials in the slidedeck so they couldn't look him up. Just completely bushleague stuff.
But he found a buyer, Sustainable Power Group, and in May 2012 they signed a term sheet buying him out, taking over the defaulted loan to Swift and giving cash to Trevor. But within a month they figured out he had sold them a con and exercised their termination clause.
He lied about everything. He lied about the fuel savings, the mileage, the fuel blend, the EPA certifications. The company was complete trash. Once that deal fell apart, both Swift and S-Power sued dHybrid Inc, and that was the end of the road for that company. #Nikolagate
Here's where it gets really crazy: his con having destroyed his first company, he and his dad just started a new one called dHybrid Systems, left his investors and partners behind with the dead company and just pretended it was all the same company.
Spent about two years pumping up dHybrid Systems until he found another mark, Worthington Industries, and sold the thing to them before they could figure out what they were getting. I heard about this all the time in my Nikola days.
The company was complete trash. Quality control was non existent and parts were falling off of trucks. Within about a year Worthington had to write off the division because they spent more money fixing the flaws than the division was worth.
But Trevor had a small window of time when he could leverage Worthington. He convinced them to invest in his new company, Bluegentech LLC (later Nikola Corp), started posing as a top Worthington executive and getting new partners to screw.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Here is the story of the biggest allegation against Nikola that did NOT make it into the Hindenberg Report--and why it was left off.
Please read this whole thread. It is an important story, and delves into some of the unexpected issues that can face whistleblowers. 1/x
As I researched Nikola in August 2020, one of my biggest questions was: "What are they doing for batteries?" I had already discovered that Trevor was falsely stating that off the shelf inverters were made by Nikola, & I suspected something similar was happening w/ batteries. 2/x
The inverter lie was a big deal but batteries would be even bigger as that's the most important part of an EV, something where a company can build significant value if they have some clever IP. I knew enough about Nikola to know that they couldn't be making batteries in house 3/x
I read Trevor's June 2020 interview with Bloomberg this morning. Unsurprisingly, it was full of lies. That's what liars do--they lie. And when they get caught in a lie, they tell different lies. This is a skill that Trevor has, and he uses it here fluently.
Trevor's answer to Bloomberg's allegations that the Nikola One prototype was not functional was to say that it was made nonfunctional for safety reasons. This is a lie. It was not functional because Trevor ran out of time, expertise and (probably) money to make it functional.
2/
Trevor says that the motors and gear boxes were removed for safety reasons. Lie. They were not removed because they were never installed. Empty shells were lowered into the truck. How do I know? Reader, I was there.
So, let's talk about the Nikola Two. For those who don't know, that's the two trucks that they had Bosch design and build for them a couple of years ago. It's their ace in the hole--a truck that runs! We've all seen videos of it limping around the parking lot.
Please read on...
So, the Nikola Two does run. But does it run well? No. In one of Trevor's most brazen and bizarre lies, he claimed that it could do 0-60 in under five seconds, when anyone could see it took at least 10 seconds. Trevor deleted the video, but here it is:
When people called him out his responses were bizarre. He claimed that the ten seconds was from 0 to 60 then back to 0 even though the video plainly contradicts this. He promised that an edited video would somehow clarify what everyone could see themselves (that video never came)
It wasn't the biggest news to drop this weekend, but the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal both confirmed the rumor that Nikola signed a contract with Romeo Power to use their batteries in the Tre. Here is a (long) thread explaining why this is so important.
1/
Not only does this represent yet another lie from Nikola (Trevor stated on several occasions that the Tre would be using Nikola batteries) but it also has forced them to make a grave design error. This thread will be a little technical, but I'll try to explain this crucial error.
So, a little background on battery design. When you are designing a battery you have two separate things that you have to account for: capacity, which gives you range, and voltage, which allows you to provide necessary power. You get both of these by connecting together cells.
When Trevor switched from CNG to H2, he didn’t want the range to decrease so he arbitrarily kept it at 1200 miles. At the show, he defended the range with numbers “based on our testing”. They weren’t—the truck wasn’t done. And they ended up being off by more than a 2x factor.
All this time he was taking preorders with deposits—for an order value book of billions of dollars if you believe his numbers. And then he used that to raise huge investment. THAT is why this is such a huge scandal. The lie about the functional truck mattered.
Mark Russell has tried to defend this scandal by saying that the truck was designed to be functional. But if they had actually finished the truck and done the testing they claimed, they would have found the specs they were promising were massively off, both range and mileage.
Who is the CIO of Nikola? Well, according to LinkedIn, there are two people: Morgan Mackelprang since 2015 and Isaac Sloan since 2019. Obviously they don't have two CIOs, and since Isaac is more recent and listed on the website, he is the real one. Read on...
So apparently Morgan never updated his LinkedIn to reflect that he is not their CIO. But who is Morgan Mackelprang? In short, he is one of Trevor Milton's closest deputies. They go way back.
A decade ago, Trevor and Morgan were entering contests together for Doritos commercials. But they have been together for much longer, being long time friends.