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Suicide or murder? Why Sam Altman and Elon Musk are clashing over whistleblower Suchir Balaji’s death

Altman’s televised defence of the suicide finding and Musk’s immediate counter-claim of murder have ensured that Suchir Balaji's case remains in the public eye.

September 12, 2025 / 16:40 IST
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For the first time since the death of whistleblower Suchir Balaji, OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman has publicly addressed the case. His comments, given during a combative interview with former Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson, set off a storm that drew in Elon Musk and reopened questions about the Indian-origin researcher’s mysterious end.

The interview began with Carlson pressing Altman about Balaji’s earlier allegations against OpenAI. “You had complaints from one programmer who said you guys were basically stealing people’s stuff and not paying them, and then he wound up murdered. What was that?” Carlson asked.

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Altman called the death “also a great tragedy” and added, “He committed suicide.” When Carlson followed up, “Do you think he committed suicide?” Altman replied, “I really do. He was like a friend of mine. I spent a lot of time trying to, you know, read everything I could, as I’m sure you and others did too, about what happened. It looks like a suicide to me.”

Carlson pushed back. “Why does it look like a suicide?” he asked. Altman answered, “It was a gun he had purchased.”