That's a LOT of pillows

Started by ZenMode, April 20, 2023, 09:29:17 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

ZenMode

Mike Lindell's firm told to pay $5 million in 'Prove Mike Wrong' election-fraud challenge

MyPillow founder and prominent election denier Mike Lindell made a bold offer ahead of a "cyber symposium" he held in August 2021 in South Dakota: He claimed he had data showing Chinese interference and said he would pay $5 million to anyone who could prove the material was not from the previous year's U.S. election.

He called the challenge "Prove Mike Wrong."

On Wednesday, a private arbitration panel ruled that someone did.

The panel said Robert Zeidman, a computer forensics expert and 63-year-old Trump voter from Nevada, was entitled to the $5 million payout.

Zeidman had examined Lindell's data and concluded that it not only did not prove voter fraud, it had no connection to the 2020 election. He was the only expert who submitted a claim, arbitration records show.

He turned to the arbitrators after Lindell Management, which created the contest, refused to pay him.

In their 23-page decision, the arbitrators said Zeidman proved that Lindell's material "unequivocally did not reflect November 2020 election data." They directed Lindell's firm to pay Zeidman within 30 days.

In a statement to The Washington Post, Zeidman said he was "really happy" with the arbitrators' decision. "They clearly saw this as I did — that the data we were given at the symposium was not at all what Mr. Lindell said it was," he said. "The truth is finally out there."

Zeidman's attorney, Brian Glasser, said the panel's decision stands as a warning to others who have made wild allegations about election fraud. "I think the arbitrators thought it important that these claims be vetted, because they've done great harm to our country," he said.

Lindell said in a text to The Post: "They made a terribly wrong decision! This will be going to court!" His attorneys did not reply to a request seeking comment.

A copy of contest rules submitted in the arbitration said disputes would be "resolved exclusively by final and binding arbitration" and noted that arbitration "is subject to very limited review by courts."

Glasser said the panel's decision cannot be directly appealed but that Lindell could ask a federal court to quash it on the basis that it represented a "manifest injustice." The statutory grounds for such a claim are narrow, and it is "extremely rare" for such a claim to succeed, according to Glasser.

Lindell also faces a $1.3 billion defamation suit from Dominion Voting Systems and a defamation lawsuit from one of Dominion's former executives.

In the months after Trump's 2020 election loss, Lindell spent millions of dollars to finance lawsuits, support right-wing activists nationwide and launch a streaming television station dedicated to amplifying election-fraud falsehoods.

During frequent media appearances, he had advertised his three-day symposium as the event where he would finally provide data proving his claims. And he issued his high-stakes challenge.

"There's a $5 million prize for anybody that can prove the election data that I have from the 2020 election was false, is not from the 2020 election," Lindell said on the conservative show "The Glazov Gang," which streams online.

The data he planned to reveal, he said, were "packet captures" that would demonstrate Chinese government interference. Packet captures, or "pcaps," are a specific file format that is an industry standard for archiving internet traffic.

"They were captured in real time and preserved. They cannot be altered. ... They're 100 percent evidence," Lindell said on the show. "So it will show an intrusion. This was an attack from China."

The symposium, he later told arbitrators, was meant to "do three things: to make the media show up, cyber guys show up, and politicians to open their eyes and say, 'Hey, we got to check into this.'"

Lindell's claims that he had packet captures intrigued Zeidman, who has served as an expert for tech firms in intellectual property lawsuits. Describing himself as a "reasonable" and "moderate conservative" who voted twice for Donald Trump, Zeidman told the arbitration panel he was skeptical of Lindell's claims. But he said he also did not believe Lindell would promote unvetted data, so he thought the conference could offer a "great chance to see history in the making, perhaps an election overturned."

At the event, Zeidman received the contest rules. There was no mention of disproving Chinese interference, according to contest forms submitted in the arbitration case. Rather, winners would have to prove that the data provided "does NOT reflect information related to the November 2020 election."

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/mike-lindell-s-firm-told-to-pay-5-million-in-prove-mike-wrong-election-fraud-challenge/ar-AA1a6Cy5
"If someone doesn't value evidence, what evidence are you going to provide that proves they should value evidence."