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DHL Files Lawsuit Against MyPillow Guy Mike Lindell's Company for Unpaid Bills

Due to his mounting debts, Mike Lindell is being sued by delivery company DHL for around $800,000.

Mike Lindell

The business said that it has been waiting to get the money owed to the CEO of MyPillow for the supply of pillows. According to the Minnesota Star Tribune, it filed the case this week in Hennepin County, Minnesota.

Strong advocate of the late President Donald Trump, Lindell is having difficulty keeping MyPillow afloat following a series of lawsuits pertaining to the election. After Lindell offered the money to anyone who could refute his claim of Chinese meddling in the 2020 election, he ended up owing the computer expert $5 million. The computer expert won the lawsuit to obtain the $5 million by demonstrating the errors in Lindell's data.

Dominion Voting Machines is suing Lindell for hundreds of millions of dollars for falsely alleging that their voting machines were manipulated in the 2020 election.
DHL is requesting $799,925.59 in addition to legal fees and an annual interest rate of 18%.

As to the DHL complaint, MyPillow only received two of the twenty-four payments that the delivery firm demanded. According to court documents, DHL and the business inked a $4 million annual contract in 2015, but MyPillow hasn't been able to make payments on its bills for the last year.
According to the article, DHL and MyPillow signed a new deal last year whereby MyPillow agreed to pay $818,493 in debt in increments of $32,291.67 per month.

April 2024 saw the start of that agreement, and MyPillow paid the first two installments of $64,583.34 on schedule. But no more payments were made, and in June DHL attorneys threatened to file a lawsuit against MyPillow if they didn't pay within five days.
On Thursday, Newsweek emailed Lindell's lawyer asking for a statement.
U.S. District Judge John R. Tunheim upheld in February an order from April 2023 mandating that Lindell pay $5 million to Robert Ziedman, a specialist in computer forensics.

Due to his mounting debts, Mike Lindell is being sued by delivery company DHL for around $800,000.
The business said that it has been waiting to get the money owed to the CEO of MyPillow for the supply of pillows. According to the Minnesota Star Tribune, it filed the case this week in Hennepin County, Minnesota.

Strong advocate of the late President Donald Trump, Lindell is having difficulty keeping MyPillow afloat following a series of lawsuits pertaining to the election. After Lindell offered the money to anyone who could refute his claim of Chinese meddling in the 2020 election, he ended up owing the computer expert $5 million.

The computer expert won the lawsuit to obtain the $5 million by demonstrating the errors in Lindell's data.
Dominion Voting Machines is suing Lindell for hundreds of millions of dollars for falsely alleging that their voting machines were manipulated in the 2020 election.
DHL is requesting $799,925.59 in addition to legal fees and an annual interest rate of 18%.
As to the DHL complaint, MyPillow only received two of the twenty-four payments that the delivery firm demanded. According to court documents, DHL and the business inked a $4 million annual contract in 2015, but MyPillow hasn't been able to make payments on its bills for the last year.

According to the article, DHL and MyPillow signed a new deal last year whereby MyPillow agreed to pay $818,493 in debt in increments of $32,291.67 per month.
April 2024 saw the start of that agreement, and MyPillow paid the first two installments of $64,583.34 on schedule. But no more payments were made, and in June DHL attorneys threatened to file a lawsuit against MyPillow if they didn't pay within five days.

On Thursday, Newsweek emailed Lindell's lawyer asking for a statement.
U.S. District Judge John R. Tunheim upheld in February an order from April 2023 mandating that Lindell pay $5 million to Robert Ziedman, a specialist in computer forensics. The lawsuit started with Lindell's "Prove Me Wrong" challenge during a conference in 2021. He claimed to have evidence that Chinese meddling influenced the outcome of the 2020 presidential contest. If someone could refute his statistics, he would provide $5 million. Lindell's allegation was refuted by Ziedman's calculations, and Ziedman proceeded to court to obtain the money.

Following the verdict in February, Lindell declared to Steve Bannon of the War Room podcast that he would file an appeal and Zeidman would not "see a dime."
Lindell said, "I don't have any money," to NBC News. "I reside in a home and I own a pickup truck. That concludes it. 


Post Tag- Trump, Mike Lindell, USAElection

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