Elon Musk's company SpaceX recently settled a lawsuit with popular game maker Cards Against Humanity that alleged Musk's company was "squatting" on the game maker's land, according to a new report from The New York Times.
The lawsuit, which was filed in the District Court in Cameron County, Texas, accused SpaceX of trespassing and damaging Cards Against Humanity's undeveloped property near Texas's southern border. The report characterized the lawsuit as arguing that SpaceX treated the property "as if it were its own for at least six months, turning the land into what was effectively a work site."
Cards Against Humanity had sought $15 million in damages because the construction equipment SpaceX parked on the land disturbed the natural habitat, according to the report.
"SpaceX owns many other vacant lots along the same road, according to the lawsuit, which included before-and-after photos of the property," the report stated. "Gone was the greenery, replaced by heavy construction equipment and piles of gravel, the images showed."
The New York Times also found that the land has a connection to the Trump administration.
"The lot occupies 0.3936 acres in the Tarpon Haven subdivision, a swath of land along the Rio Grande that President Trump was eying for a border wall at the beginning of his first term in the White House in 2017," it continued.