MyPillow sued for unpaid debts by company who claims Mike Lindell promised ‘to connect’

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California: Extend, Inc. filed an eleven-page document with exhibits with the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on August 30. “A company that helps merchants offer customers shipping and product protection,” is how the plaintiffs define themselves. Their lawsuit states that they are owed $564,151.39 by MyPillow.

Furthermore, it is said that the formerly well-liked pillow company has repeatedly fallen behind on its alleged bills for a considerable amount of time. “In November 2022, My Pillow and Extend signed a contract whereby Extend agreed to supply specific shipping and product protection services to My Pillow’s clients in return for a portion of the profits from those services’ sales,” the lawsuit claims.

But according to the lawsuit, more than a year has gone and some of the obligations owed to the San Francisco-based business are still outstanding. The original petition goes on, “My Pillow was overdue on amounts it owed to extend under the Agreement in March 2024.” Thus, the parties concluded a Termination Agreement on March 29, 2024, which terminated the Agreement. According to the termination agreement, MyPillow committed to repaying their obligation in five equal installments.

The payback plan called for a $75,000 payment from MyPillow to Extend in April, and a payment of about $53,000 plus “any additional amount due and owing under the Agreement related to the sale of Extend” by the end of June.

According to the lawsuit, that vague “additional amount” turned out to be more than $110,000. Additionally, the business states that they passed along a “spreadsheet detailing the transactions that account for the amounts shown on the invoice” at the beginning of April. The court summoned MyPillow on Tuesday and established a short timeline: an initial meeting is scheduled for December 4 and a statement about discussions is expected by November 27.

Naturally, this is not the first time Lindell and MyPillow have been accused of whining about their debts; this seems to be a direct result of Lindell’s vocal and personal insistence that certain conspiracies lost Donald Trump the 2020 election. The courts have repeatedly chastised Lindell Management LLC in a long-running litigation for refusing to pay the winner of a “Prove Mike Wrong” challenge.

In that disastrous competition, engineer Robert Zeidman—a Trump supporter himself—took up the gauntlet of poly-foam that the former QVC star had thrown down. Zeidman defeated Lindell over untrue assertions regarding electoral data, despite serious doubts about his own skills.

When Law&Crime contacted Lindell for comment regarding the lawsuit brought before the Northern District of California, no answer was received right away. This was noted at the time of publishing.

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