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  4. Mike Lindell planned to take his e-commerce site MyStore public - but his legal battle against Dominion prevented that, he said in a new lawsuit

Mike Lindell planned to take his e-commerce site MyStore public - but his legal battle against Dominion prevented that, he said in a new lawsuit

Grace Dean   

Mike Lindell planned to take his e-commerce site MyStore public - but his legal battle against Dominion prevented that, he said in a new lawsuit
  • Mike Lindell said that Dominion "interfered" with plans to take his e-commerce site MyStore public.
  • It sells goods ranging from patriotic books and medical products to a life-size Lindell cutout.
  • Lindell has been in a legal battle with Dominion since it sued him for $1.3 billion in February.

Dominion Voting Systems' legal battle with Mike Lindell stopped him from taking his e-commerce site public via an initial public offering (IPO), he said in a lawsuit Thursday.

$4 sells an eclectic range of goods including patriotic books, medical products, and a pet-stain remover called "WoofPurrfect."

The store, which has been live for months, also sells Lindell merchandise including his autobiography, a bobblehead, and a $40 life-size cut-out of the MyPillow CEO.

"The Dominion lawfare campaign against Lindell has interfered with plans to take Lindell's on-line store, MyStore, public in an initial public offering," Thursday's lawsuit said, without elaborating.

Dominion did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Read more: $4

Lindell is in a legal battle with the voting-technology company after he spread debunked claims that it "flipped" votes from Donald Trump to Joe Biden during the 2020 presidential election.

$4 in February for $1.3 billion. Lindell then countersued and filed a separate $4, claiming Dominion was trying to stifle free speech.

$4 Thursday, outlining his conspiracy theory positing that their machines enabled voter fraud.

The lawsuit claimed that Dominion and Smartmatic $4

His lawyers said the "cancel culture" the two companies created caused Lindell both financial and reputational damage, and is $4. This figure includes the hundreds of thousands of dollars he has already spent defending himself against Dominion's $1.3 billion lawsuit, the new filing said.

It's unclear why Dominion's lawsuit against Lindell made him pause MyStore's IPO. He previously told Insider that MyPillow would lose millions in revenues after $4 over his election fraud claims, but that $4. Marketing analysts also told Insider that $4.

$4, which he said was four years in the making. He largely uses the site to spread debunked voter-fraud conspiracy theories alongside misinformation about COVID-19, with one article calling vaccines "a deadly depopulation bioweapon."

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