Mike Lindell alleges that the MyPillow warehouse, which received an eviction notice, has been dormant for months
A MyPillow warehouse in Minnesota faced eviction after CEO Mike Lindell argued it had been unused for some time. The warehouse in Shakopee, Minnesota, was targeted for eviction with claims of overdue rent payments exceeding $200,000 to First Industrial. Lindell stated the smaller warehouse wasn’t necessary for the company, leading to the eviction notice. The MyPillow warehouse in Shakopee, Minnesota, received an eviction notice due to CEO Mike Lindell’s claim of it being unused for an extended period. The eviction was linked to rent arrears of over $200,000 owed to First Industrial. Lindell maintained that the smaller warehouse was surplus to the company’s requirements, prompting the eviction action.
A MyPillow warehouse in Minnesota recently received an eviction notice from a judge, though CEO Mike Lindell has argued the property had not been used by the company for some time.
The eviction notice for the warehouse in Shakopee, Minnesota, was issued alongside a lawsuit claiming that MyPillow was over $200,000 behind on rent payments owed to First Industrial. Lindell claimed that the smaller warehouse, about a third of the size of the main one, was not needed by the company and that someone else had been set to move in to use the warehouse before choosing not to, according to Minnesota Reformer.
“We were just sick about it,” Lindell told the outlet.
MyPillow gave no comment when asked by the Washington Examiner about the eviction.
Lindell, a vocal supporter of former President Donald Trump, has undergone financial struggles in recent years, stating that MyPillow had been “decimated” by various court battles stemming from his repeated claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. Trump himself has repeated the claim many times since President Joe Biden was declared the winner of the last presidential election.
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Last month, U.S. District Judge John Tunheim upheld a ruling from a private arbitration panel last April that found computer and software expert Robert Zeidman succeeded in rejecting Lindell’s data related to 2020 election fraud claims. Lindell had said he would pay $5 million to anyone who disproved his data but has opted to fight in court rather than paying Zeidman.
Lindell also confirmed last year that he does not have the funds to pay his legal team that represented him through the case.
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