My Pillow boss Mike Lindell to pay $5m to man over bogus election claim

1 year ago 26
ARTICLE AD BOX

MyPillow CEO Michael Lindell arrives for a 2024 campaign rally by former US President Donald Trump in Waco, Texas, March 25, 2023.Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Mike Lindell, CEO of My Pillow, has peddled false claims that interference in the 2020 election cost Donald Trump the presidency

The founder of US bedding company My Pillow has been ordered to pay $5m (£4m) to an expert who proved his 2020 presidential election data was wrong.

Election denier Mike Lindell was so sure he had data showing Chinese interference in the 2020 vote that he threw down the gauntlet to others.

In 2021 he launched "Prove Mike Wrong" with $5m as a winning prize.

On Wednesday, a private arbitration panel ruled that a software expert did exactly that and was due the money.

The panel ordered Mr Lindell to pay Bob Zeidman and wrote in their ruling that none of the data Mr Lindell provided was related to the 2020 presidential election.

They also ruled that failure to pay the sum would amount to a breach of contract.

The challenge was announced as part of a so-called "cyber symposium" he had organised in South Dakota, with Mr Lindell claiming Chinese interference in some states delivered President Joe Biden the win over Donald Trump.

In an interview with the BBC's US partner CBS, Mr Zeidman said he spent a few hours examining the data provided by Mr Lindell before determining that it "was all bogus".

"I called my wife and said, 'Think about what you want to do with $5 million'," he recalled.

Mr Zeidman, a Las Vegas resident who voted twice for Mr Trump, added that some of Mr Lindell's data amounted to "a simple Word document and a table" that was made "to look sophisticated, and it wasn't".

After submitting his findings to a panel overseeing the challenge, Mr Zeidman said he had received no response, prompting him to sue Mr Lindell for the money.

Mr Lindell has vowed that he will appeal against the arbitration panel's ruling.

"I don't owe him money," Mr Lindell told CBS. "He didn't prove anything."

In their ruling, the arbitrators noted that their role was not to determine whether election interference occurred, but rather to determine whether Mr Zeidman won the contest based on the rules and data provided to him.

Mr Lindell has also been sued by voting machine company Dominion over his false claims of election interference.

Dominion was recently awarded $787.5m after settling a defamation lawsuit with Fox News over its reporting of the 2020 election.

Read Entire Article