

MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell appeared to have been served legal papers while being interviewed at a Conservative Political Action Conference event on Thursday. In video posted online, a woman in a red outfit approaches the bedding company CEO, says “sorry to interrupt,” then attempts to hand him documents. “We’re on TV please,” Lindell says several times as the unidentified woman persists. He ...

Mike Lindell, CEO of MyPillow, seen here in December, was served legal papers while being interviewed at the CPAC event in Texas.
Anthony Soufflé/The Minnesota Star Tribune/TNS
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell appeared to have been served legal papers while being interviewed at a Conservative Political Action Conference event on Thursday.
In video posted online, a woman in a red outfit approaches the bedding company CEO, says “sorry to interrupt,” then attempts to hand him documents.
“We’re on TV please,” Lindell says several times as the unidentified woman persists.
He then tries waving her off and states “I’m not accepting” before the reporter interviewing Lindell asks the woman with the papers what it is she’s trying to hand the MAGA businessman.
Lindell eventually accepts the documents, tosses them aside, and continues his interview with O’Keefe Media Group reporter Michael Casey.
Casey posted video of the encounter on X and claimed a “deranged leftist” attempted to serve “court papers” to the 64-year-old activist.
It’s not clear what Lindell was handed. His representatives haven’t responded to a request for comment.
The MyPillow founder and right-wing politico has been sued numerous times for pushing unsubstantiated claims about alleged fraud in the 2020 presidential election. He believes Republican candidate Donald Trump defeated Democrat Joe Biden in that contest, which isn’t true.
His bid to overturn a 2020 defamation ruling related to that election was rejected Wednesday by a federal judge who also questioned his legal team’s practices, according to MS NOW.
Lindell, who’s running for governor of Minnesota, complained about his legal issues on social media Thursday.
“They surrounded my car and took my phone. Then came the subpoenas, debanking, and attacks on MyPillow. We lost 90% of our business,” he posted on X. “I’m not backing down, because if we lose our elections, we lose our country.”
That message included a link to a fundraising site for the “Mike Lindell Election Integrity Journey.”
_____