A Tesla super fan has revealed he was behind the companys trademark applications for jets and boats, which he submitted in a bid to help Elon Musk.
In late December, a filing with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office caused a stir by hinting the Austin-based company could be expanding into motors that were not for land vehicles.
Investing.com reported the submission was for categories including motors for airplanes, boats and toys.
The apparent expansion came as shares in the disruptor took an uptick in the final days of 2022, as investors waited on news of a record Q4 and full-year delivery statistics.
However, Teslas supposed rollout into the sea and sky was actually the work of a self-professed fan, Jerome Eady.
Although the document signed on December 28 named Tesla as the trademark owner, it was actually Eadys signature that appeared on the bottom line.
Earlier this week the application had been listed as awaiting assignment to an examining attorney.
Speaking to Bloomberg on Wednesday, Eady said he was just trying to help.
Eady added he had proactively filed after Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, suggested its Cybertruck may be usable as a boat.
Musk has previously mused about building electric planes even confirming the batteries needed to make electric flight possible could be produced by 2024.
In 2021, the Twitter owner added he is dying to make a supersonic jet.
Eady confirmed he had acted without Teslas knowledge or permission.
Tesla and an attorney listed on the trademark filing did not respond to requests by Fortune for comment.
The patent office also didnt immediately reply.
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