mikelindell
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell is facing financial ruin as he continues to rack up huge legal bills while facing three separate defamation lawsuits. Still, Lindell is determined to vindicate himself, no matter the cost. “I would never settle in any lawsuit,” in a new interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune. “You don’t settle for something where you’ve done nothing wrong.” He is hoping to find new evidence that his attorneys can use to get him off. Lindell’s options may be dwindling. He has already run out of money and cannot pay his lawyers for the work they’ve done. MyPillow is almost in ba...
uInterview.com
Lawyers defending Mike Lindell in several defamation lawsuits filed to withdraw from the cases due to “millions” of dollars in unpaid legal fees. Lindell, an entrepreneur, has made headlines in recent years as an avid supporter of Donald Trump‘s false 2020 election fraud claims. He has used his company, MyPillow, to advertise his right-wing views, spending at least $60 million on political endeavors. Lindell is said to be one of the largest advertisers on right-wing channels Fox News and Newsmax. He is now being sued on defamation charges by Dominion Voting Systems, Smartmatic and Eric Coomer,...
uInterview.com
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell says his firm is currently facing a “massive cancellation” and being forced to auction off its equipment and sublease its manufacturing spaces. Lindell claims that many of the stores and networks that bought its products have canceled thousands of orders, causing the company to lose $100 million. This comes after big retailer brands, including Kohl’s, Walmart and Bed Bath & Beyond, have pulled all MyPillow products from their stores after Lindell falsely asserted that the 2020 presidential election was “rigged and stolen” from former President Donald Trump, without e...
uInterview.com
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell has been ordered to pay $5 million to a software engineer who disproved that data he presented showed fraud in the November 2020 election. Lindell assembled a “cyber symposium” in South Dakota in 2021 that was designed to show off the data he claimed demonstrated Chinese interference in the U.S. 2020 elections. To draw further media attention, he promised to give $5 million to anyone who could prove his data was unrelated to the 2020 election. > 50 ‘BEST’ CELEBRITY MUGSHOTS – FAMOUS PEOPLE AT THEIR LOWEST Robert Zeidman took up the challenge and delivered a 15-page re...
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