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Mike Lindell Gets Served Live On Air


The lawfare against the CEO of MyPillow, Mike Lindell, continues.

On Thursday, while being interviewed at CPAC, Mike Lindell was served with documents.

In a video, Lindell is seen being interviewed by a reporter when a woman comes up to him and attempts to serve him papers.

Lindell eventually takes the papers and tosses them.

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Newsweek had the full scoop:

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell appears to have been served with legal documents while being interviewed on air on Thursday.

Footage of the incident shows Lindell initially refusing to take the papers and repeatedly telling the woman who says she is serving him “we’re on TV please,” before eventually taking the documents and tossing them aside.

On Wednesday, Lindell was ruled against in a 2020 election-related defamation case. It is unclear whether the new papers he was allegedly served are connected to that case.

Watch here:

Backup here if needed:

So, what’s Mike Lindell been up to nowadays?

Well, he’s running for the governor of Minnesota.

CBS News reported more on Lindell’s campaign:

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The November 2026 election may be months away, but the selection process of party nominees in key races starts on Feb. 3, when both the Minnesota GOP and DFL have caucuses.

Among the most important races: the one for governor. On the Democratic side, things are up in the air after Gov. Tim Walz dropped his reelection bid, though Sen. Amy Klobuchar made a first step in a gubernatorial run this week, filing preliminary paperwork with the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board.

On the Republican side, it’s a competitive race with a dozen candidates. Four candidates are consistently finishing strong in recent straw polls. In a party poll last month, businessman Kendall Qualls was first, followed by Speaker Lisa Demuth in second, MyPillow mogul Mike Lindell in third and attorney Chris Madel in fourth.

“I love Minnesota. I was born and raised here, and I think that I’ve seen so many problems that I believe this is what I do. I fix problems,” said Mike Lindell.

Lindell’s campaign got a boost in December when President Trump said Lindell “deserves to be governor” of Minnesota. Lindell says he does not take that as an endorsement.

In recent years, Lindell’s loyalty to Mr. Trump has cost him. Big box retailers dropped his pillows after Lindell repeatedly backed the president’s claim that the 2020 election was rigged.

Lindell says he’s not bankrupt despite having two big judgments awarded against him, including one for $2 million and another for $5 million in cases involving the 2020 election. The $5 million award was overturned.



 

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