The Pillow Idiot keeps moving the goalposts... Now Mike Lindell Predicts Trump’s Fantastical Reinstatement Before Year’s End “Or there is no 2022 or 2024,” the MyPillow CEO added ominously at an Alabama rally for the former president. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mike...2022-alabama-rally_n_6122c878e4b0e5b5d8eb0b85
'The door is now wide open': Mike Lindell accused of handing hackers the keys to creating election chaos https://www.rawstory.com/lindell-election-fraud/ According to a report from the Guardian, efforts by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and Arizona Republicans seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election have had the adverse effect of making fraud easier in coming elections. With the report first noting, "Republican efforts to question Donald Trump's defeat in 2020 have led to voting system breaches experts say pose a risk to future elections," it goes on to state that -- in the case of Lindell -- his handouts at his cyber seminars are making the job easier for any hacker who wants to interfere in future elections. "Copies of Dominion Voting Systems softwares used for designing ballots, configuring voting machines and tallying results were distributed at an event this month in South Dakota organized by the MyPillow chief executive, Mike Lindell, a Trump ally who has made unsubstantiated claims about last year's election," the report states before adding, "The software copies came from voting equipment in Mesa county, Colorado, and Antrim county, Michigan, where Trump allies challenged results last fall. Dominion software is used in some 30 states, including California, Georgia and Michigan." According to election security expert Harri Hursti, who attended Lindell's South Dakota event, he claims he and others were handed "three separate copies of election management systems that run on the Dominion software" which can be used for practicing entering systems. Speaking with the Guardian, he explained, "The door is now wide open," before adding that all hackers would need is "... physical access to the systems because they are not supposed to be connected to the internet." Kevin Skoglund, an election technology expert, agreed saying sabotage, including changing election results could be possible. "This disclosure increases both the likelihood that something happens and the impact of what would happen if it does," he admitted. "Ryan Macias, an election technology and security expert who was in Arizona earlier this year to observe that review, was alarmed by a lack of cybersecurity protocols," the report states. "This is what I anticipated would happen, and I anticipate it will happen yet again coming out of Arizona," Macias said. "These actors have no liability and no rules of engagement." You can read more here.
How Dominion doesn't now sell mypillows after stripping Lindell of all his worth after disclosing their tech. is beyond me.
Another slow death associated to Trump..... Mike Lindell's unraveling begins as he sells $2.5 million MyPillow plane to fund Dominion lawsuit With Dominion's $1.3 billion lawsuit hanging over his head, records indicate that Lindell is making major personal concessions in preparation for a significant legal battle. According to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) records reviewed by Salon, Lindell (through his company MyPillow) has recently sold off at least one of his private planes. FAA records indicate that an aircraft registered to MyPillow — a 1993 Dassault-Breguet Falcon 50 with tail number N497SP — was transferred to Clyde Air LLC on July 26, for an undisclosed purchase amount. (A similarly-configured 1993 Falcon 50 private jet currently on the market has a $2.5 million price tag.)
Mike Lindell paid millions to "cyber experts"; allegedly bought luxury home for accused fraudster MyPillow CEO may have bought $1.5 million home for supposed expert — who didn't even show up at "cyber symposium" https://www.salon.com/2021/09/03/mi...dly-bought-luxury-home-for-accused-fraudster/ MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell's alleged net worth of $300 million may be dwindling rapidly, thanks in large part to the team of blundering operatives, advisers and self-appointed cyber experts who have convinced Lindell to pay them big bucks for their thoroughly unsuccessful work to help him reverse the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. According to interviews with sources close to Lindell and documents reviewed by Salon, the bedding magnate has paid more than $3 million to various advisers and his team of "white hat hackers." They produced the supposed "packet-capture" evidence, which Lindell has promised for months would prove the election had been hacked, and were also paid to ensure its "safety" between the November election and Lindell's much-hyped "cyber symposium" last month in South Dakota. On Thursday, Josh Merritt, a former member of Lindell's "red team" at the South Dakota event, told Salon that the $3 million was split among a group of Lindell's "cyber experts." Most of the money, he said, went toward the purchase of a luxury Florida home for Dennis Montgomery, a discredited former government contractor with a checkered history who has become central to Lindell's operation. Merritt said that in the "red team room" he heard Lindell and an employee discuss "that being the house that Dennis Montgomery lived in. Lindell had stated many times he had paid Montgomery and others over $3 million, and he had spent a total of over $15 million" on his claims of election fraud. "Lindell is who has been funding Dennis Montgomery since Nov. 3, 2020," Merritt said, adding that the mysterious home was a key point of Lindell's operation leading up to the South Dakota symposium, which Lindell claims only failed because it was hijacked by antifa insurgents. The home in question is a Naples, Florida, property acquired through a financial trust called Gray Horse, Merritt said, suggesting it was purchased through a pro-Trump lawyer and Lindell sidekick. "Gray Horse was just the trust name," Merritt said, "common practice when hiding and protecting an owner." The $1.5 million luxury home in Naples, which has four bedrooms, a large swimming pool and palm trees, was reportedly where four hard drives that Lindell claimed were full of 2020 election "data" — specifically, the "Scorecard and Hammer" data much coveted by election truthers — were being stored ahead of the August cyber symposium. It was also where Dennis Montgomery had set up housekeeping. Salon obtained a Florida Department of State document filed on Aug. 23, showing that Montgomery registered his company, "Blxware LLC," at that address last week. (See above url for document and more information)
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell threatens to 'go after' investigative journalist, calling him an 'enemy of our country' https://www.businessinsider.com/mypillow-ceo-mike-lindell-calls-salon-reporter-enemy-of-our-country-2021-9 MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell threatened to "go after" an investigative journalist on Friday. Lindell called Salon reporter Zachary Petrizzo an "enemy of our country." Petrizzo told Insider Lindell is "more interested in lying about a reporter than a 1.3 billion dollar lawsuit." MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell on Friday threatened an investigative journalist who wrote several exposés about him, calling him "an enemy of the country." In a live stream posted on his social media platform, Frank, Lindell vowed to "go after" Salon investigative reporter Zachary Petrizzo. "I going to spend a lot more money, Zachary. I'm not out of money contrary to your little thing here," Lindell said. "We are going after this kid." "Zachary is an enemy ... He's an enemy of our country," Lindell added. Petrizzo has written several stories about Lindell and his unsuccessful quest to prove voter fraud at the 2020 presidential election. He recently reported that Lindell allegedly paid more than $3 milliont o "white hat hackers" who were meant to reveal evidence that China helped President Joe Biden "steal" the election. However, the experts did not deliver. Salon also published an article alleging that Lindell sold a 10-seat luxury aircraft this summer to fund his defense in the Dominion Voting Systems defamation lawsuit. In a statement to Insider, Petrizzo said: "Unfortunately, Mr. Mike Lindell is more interested in lying about a reporter than a 1.3 billion dollar lawsuit against him from Dominion. Sounds like his priorities are backward! As to having me criminal charged? I wish him luck in that venture. I'll keep my head on a swivel for the pillow police!" "Mr. Lindell knows our Salon investigation is showing first hand that he was conned! More to come on that next week," he added. Insider has reached out to Lindell for comment. Lindell has been a staunch ally of former President Donald Trump and a driving force of voter-fraud conspiracy. Earlier this year, he was sued by voting-machine companyDominion for spreading baseless election claims.