Dominion Voting Systems filed a $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit against Mike Lindell on Monday over the MyPillow founder's repeated and discredited claims that it helped steal the 2020 election for President Joe Biden.
The voting software company is also suing his Chaska-based company, accusing him of embarking on an election fraud crusade as a way to boost MyPillow's brand and sales, and raise his political profile for a possible run for governor in Minnesota.
"He's not the guy from the infomercials," said Megan Meier, an attorney for Dominion who compared Lindell's current activities to his long past of gambling. "We're talking about a former professional card counter who's gifted with numbers, interested in game theory, algorithms and deviations, and he knows what he's doing."
Lindell has openly invited a lawsuit from Dominion for more than a month, insisting that proof of election fraud would come out in the legal discovery process and threatening to sue the software company if they didn't sue him first.
"This is good news," Lindell said on Monday. "If they wanted to go to court tomorrow, I'm ready."
But he told the Star Tribune that the addition of MyPillow to the lawsuit was "more of an attack on the American people." He said he worries thousands of people could be put out of work.
Monday's lawsuit is the third defamation case filed by Dominion against Trump allies. The company has also sued Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani and pro-Trump attorney Sidney Powell over their efforts to spread claims about the company in a bid to overturn the 2020 election. Before suing Lindell, the company sent the MyPillow executive at least three notices seeking retractions of his statements and warning of legal actions.
In late December, programs on Newsmax, Fox News and Fox Business started airing corrections and clarifications to baseless allegations of "rigged" voting machines after legal threats by Dominion and another voter machine company, Smartmatic.