Mike Lindell My Pillow CEO Delegates from 45 states to attend 2020 election Cyber Symposium
My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell said delegates from 45 states have registered to attend a three-day event in South Dakota that the outspoken ally to former President Trump says will result in a unanimous Supreme Court ruling to overturn the November 2020 election.
Mr. Lindell claims to have 37 terabytes of âirrefutableâ evidence that hackers, who he said were backed by China, broke into election systems and switched votes in favor of President Biden, which he plans to present at what he calls a âCyber Symposiumâ beginning Tuesday.
âWhether youâre a Democrat or Republican, this will be the greatest uniting of our country, ever,â Mr. Lindell told The Washington Times on Friday. âBecause this isnât about politics. This is about free and fair elections and about the 2020 [election]. And you got to get that righted.â
Mr. Biden defeated Mr. Trump in the November general election. Federal election officials in both administrations have found no evidence of widespread election fraud, despite claims by Mr. Trump and several of his allies that the election was stolen. Former Attorney General William P. Barr, who was appointed by Mr. Trump, also has contested the former presidentâs claims.
Mr. Lindell said Mr. Trump has not backed and is in no way involved in the symposium.
In-person attendance at Mr. Lindellâs event is limited to state and local politicians, cybersecurity experts, and members of the media. Mr. Lindell told The Times that he invited thousands of politicians from both parties. As of Friday, he said close to 500 invitees had registered, including politicians or their delegates from 45 states. Mr. Lindell has offered $5 million to any in-person attendee who can disprove his claims.
Representatives from Connecticut, Delaware, Rhode Island, Hawaii and Maine had not registered to attend as of Friday, according to Mr. Lindell.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi declined Mr. Lindellâs invitation to attend the symposium citing scheduling conflicts, according to an email obtained by The Times. A member of Ms. Pelosiâs staff thanked Mr. Lindell for his understanding.
Attendees will receive an in-depth review of the proof Mr. Lindell says he has of the Election Day cyberattack. Mr. Lindell said he was approached in early January by multiple individuals who said they recorded âpacket capturesâ in real-time on Election Day, which he said provides âobjective proofâ of a cyber attack on the elections. He said he hired a team of experts that spent months validating the material and has organized the symposium to present the evidence.
Several election officials told CNN last week that Mr. Lindellâs claim is baseless. A Wisconsin election official from a county where Mr. Lindell says votes were switched told CNN that their county conducted a hand recount of every ballot and that the results are backed by a paper trail.
The full duration of the symposium will be live-streamed on Mr. Lindellâs website, Frank Speech. He said he hoped to attract 1 billion viewers.
âItâll be the most seen event in history,â he told The Times. âI believe that because everyone in the world is going to be curious and to see this. And theyâre going to be talking, going âYou got to see this. This is real. The United States was, their election was taken, hacked into by China.ââ
He said that if the roles were reversed and Mr. Trump had been declared the winner in November he would still come forward with the evidence of a cyberattack on the election which he said he possesses, even it if would benefit Mr. Biden.
The event marks a culmination after months of Mr. Lindellâs highly publicized claims of election fraud, which, to date, have widely been discredited and cost him significantly both financially and in terms of reputation.
He has produced several documentaries outlining several claims of election fraud that are posted on his website. The most recent, titled âAbsolute 9-0,â alluding to a unanimous Supreme Court ruling, outlines the specific claim that is the subject of the Cyber Symposium.
He said several retailers have pulled My Pillow products from their shelves since he began publicly challenging the election results.
In February, one of the largest manufacturers of voting machines, Dominion Voting Systems, sued Mr. Lindell and MyPillow for $1.3 billion in damages for defamation. The complaint alleges that Mr. Lindell damaged Dominionâs reputation through his claims of compromised election integrity. Mr. Lindell filed a $1.6 billion countersuit against Dominion in June, citing the First Amendment and claiming that Dominion had infringed on his right to free speech.
Late last month, Mr. Lindell pulled ads valued at more than $1 million per week off of Fox News, one of My Pillowâs biggest promoters, after the network refused to run an ad for the Cyber Symposium.
âWeâve lost about $80 million worth just with the box stores that dropped us for this year in revenue,â Mr. Lindell said. âAnd now weâre dropping Fox, thatâs another million dollars a week for My Pillow that we lose. So we donât get that back. We canât just bring it somewhere else.â
He said he has personally spent close to $15 million on election fraud investigations and the Cyber Symposium. In total, he said the election claims have cost him and his company hundreds of millions of dollars.
He said he has also received countless threats against him and his business since coming forward with the claims.
âYou cannot imagine what theyâd come after me when I was attacked in every single way,â he said. âEven overseas. Anybody that I dealt with, they hired bots and trolls and hit groups, whoever they were, hired to attack me and My Pillow.â
Mr. Lindell did not disclose any names of those who had registered, or the sources of the raw material used to support his claim out of concerns for their security.
âThis is about our country,â Mr. Lindell said. âI would go until the last dime is spent.â
âEven if I went down and lost everything and was penniless in the street it wouldnât matter,â he said. âThis is it. It doesnât matter about the money.â
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