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DHL Sues Mike Lindell for $800,000 Pillow Delivery Debts

Delivery company DHL is suing Mike Lindell for nearly $800,000 as his debts continue to mount.
The company said it has been waiting to collect the money the MyPillow CEO owes for pillow delivery. It filed the lawsuit in Hennepin County, Minnesota, this week, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported.
Lindell, a strong supporter of former President Donald Trump, is struggling to keep MyPillow solvent after a string of election-related lawsuits. Lindell owes $5 million to a computer expert after offering the money to anyone who could disprove his theory about Chinese interference in the 2020 election.
The computer expert proved that Lindell’s data was inaccurate and won a court case to collect the $5 million.
Lindell is also being sued for hundreds of millions of dollars by Dominion Voting Machines for wrongfully claiming that its voting machines were rigged in the 2020 election.
DHL is demanding $799,925.59 with 18 percent interest annually and legal costs.
According to the DHL lawsuit, MyPillow made just two of the 24 payments the delivery company was seeking. Documents included with the lawsuit show that DHL signed a $4 million a year agreement with the company in 2015, but MyPillow has been unable to pay its debts in the last year.
It says that DHL entered into a new agreement last year in which MyPillow would pay off a debt of $818,493 with monthly installments of $32,291.67.
That arrangement began in April 2024, and MyPillow made the first two payments on time for $64,583.34. However, no other payments were made, and in June, DHL lawyers said they would begin legal action in five days if MyPillow didn’t make a payment.
Newsweek reached out to Lindell’s attorney via email for comment on Thursday.
In February, U.S. District Judge John R. Tunheim upheld an April 2023 ruling that requires Lindell to pay computer forensics expert Robert Ziedman $5 million.
The case stemmed from a 2021 symposium in which Lindell issued his “Prove Me Wrong” challenge. He said he possessed data that proved Chinese interference affected the 2020 presidential race’s results. He offered $5 million to anyone who could prove his data wrong.
Ziedman’s figures debunked Lindell’s claim, and Ziedman went to court to recover the money.
After the February ruling, Lindell told War Room podcast host Steve Bannon that he would appeal the decision and that Zeidman wouldn’t “see a dime.”
“I don’t have any money,” Lindell told NBC News. “I have a pickup truck and a house that I live in. That’s it.”

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