Mike Lindell verdict: MyPillow founder defamed former voting equipment company boss
The Denver-based jury determined on June 16 that Lindell made "baseless conspiracy theories claiming election fraud in the 2020 election" and slandered Eric Coomer, a former director at Dominion Voting Systems, a North American company that makes and sells voting machines and tabulators.
Coomer filed the suit in the District of Colorado in May 2022, claiming Lindell and two of his companies − MyPillow and FrankSpeech − helped spread a conspiracy theory that he rigged the election against President Donald Trump.
More: Why is Mike Lindell in court? MyPillow CEO on trial for defamation lawsuit
According to the 67-page suit obtained by USA TODAY, Lindell previously called Coomer "a traitor."
The trial started on June 2 and lasted two weeks, online court records show.
'We're thrilled with the verdict,' said Coomer's attorney, Charles Caine, told Colorado Public Radio (CPR), after the jury handed down its decision, adding his client has "gone through a lot and he's still going to be looking over his shoulder... Hopefully this serves as deterrence for individuals working on our elections from being targeted."
USA TODAY has reached out to Caine as well as Lindell's attorneys.
Lindell, 63, has publicly defended his claims that the 2020 election was rigged.
"They're coming after me and MyPillow for telling the truth about our elections!" Lindell wrote on May 31 on Facebook.
After the verdict, Lindell was ordered to pay nearly $2.3 million in damages, CPR reported, a number nowhere near the award amount Coomer had requested ($62.7 million). Jurors, the outlet said, rejected claims Lindell and his two companies were responsible for comments made by others on social media platforms he controlled.
According to court documents, Lindell aligned himself with podcaster Joseph Oltmann to spread a conspiracy theory he was involved in rigging voting systems during the 2020 election.
Lindell spread a claim that originated from Oltmann, who is alleged to have made up a story about overhearing someone identified only as 'Eric, the Dominion guy' claiming to have rigged the election against Trump.
Oltmann disclosed the alleged claims on an episode of his podcast, which aired after former President Joe Biden's victory in November 2020, according to the lawsuit. The podcaster also said he infiltrated the conference call for a left-wing political group, which is where "Eric" made the claims on an unspecified date months before the election, the complaint says.
Lindell amplified the claim online, jurors found, causing threats against Coomer, whom Oltmann later identified as the anonymous 'Eric."
Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mike Lindell found liable for defaming former voting system executive

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'There may be some property, there may be some financial component, that is considered either facilitating property or proceeds' of those two counts, Trusty said. What Combs was convicted of, he said, 'Is really a glorified prostitution charge. It's just literally like prostitution across the state lines.' Trusty told USA TODAY in May that federal prosecutors wrote a "very broadly worded forfeiture allegation.' That included places where so-called marathon sex 'freak offs' between two of his girlfriends and paid escorts occurred and any vehicles used in getting the participants there. Combs was also indicted on federal charges of sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. Hiring a former DOJ asset forfeiture expert When Combs was first charged, his all-star defense team was so alarmed that it hired as a consultant Stefan Cassella, the former deputy chief of the Justice Department's Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section, USA TODAY reported exclusively at the time. At the time of his hiring, and after the verdict, Cassella said he could not comment on the specifics of the case because of his involvement in it. Broadly speaking, though, he said that by charging Combs under RICO, formally the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, the government was taking an aggressive approach to seizing as many of Combs' assets as possible. 'As alleged in the Indictment, for years, Sean Combs used the business empire he controlled to sexually abuse and exploit women, as well as to commit other acts of violence and obstruction of justice,' U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said after Combs' arrest in September 2024. A forfeiture target with $400 million in assets By becoming a successful entrepreneur in the music, fashion, liquor and other realms, Combs had amassed a personal wealth of at least $740 million by 2019, according to Forbes magazine. (Combs and his team would later claim he had reached billionaire status.) At its founding in 2013, Combs Enterprises included his New York City-based Bad Boy Entertainment, Combs Wines and Spirits, the AQUAhydrate water firm, Revolt Media, Sean John fashion and fragrances, Capital Preparatory Charter Schools and The Sean Combs Foundation. Over the years, it expanded to include new business units and ventures such as Empower Global, Our Fair Share and Love Records, which focused on R&B. Combs owned multimillion-dollar mega-mansions in Los Angeles and Miami and a Gulfstream G550 jet valued at more than $25 million, which he used to ferry his entourage from one party hotspot to another. Also potentially open to forfeiture was Combs' Bad Boy Records, which has generated big profits from recordings and music publishing rights since he launched the company in 1993. Combs is also believed to have an extensive art collection, including works by Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring. In 2018, he was revealed as the mystery buyer of the renowned painting 'Past Times' by Kerry James Marshall for $21.1 million. And at one time, his fleet of at least 20 luxury cars included a Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Ferrari, Lamborghini and an ultra-luxury Mercedes known as a Maybach. 'A much narrower basis' to go after Combs' assets In November 2023, Combs' empire began to crumble following allegations of rape, beatings and abuse by his former girlfriend Cassie Ventura Fine. In her testimony against Combs during the trial, Ventura Fine said she settled that case with Combs agreeing to pay her $20 million. He has also lost significant other business after Ventura Fine's allegations prompted a spate of other lawsuits and accusations. Forbes more recently estimated his net worth at closer to $400 million. Now it will likely be up to the jury that found Combs not guilty of racketeering and sex trafficking to determine whether any of his assets should be forfeited, said Trusty. He said it's likely that Combs and his legal team could offer up some small piece of his empire to settle that aspect of the case. 'With the acquittal, you just have a much narrower basis, factually and legally, to go after his assets,' Trusty said. 'I think it cries out for an agreement where the defense will offer up something like $100,000 or a million, and use that sentencing to say, he's already paid this severe price. He's had civil settlements with complainants, and now he's forfeiting X amount of dollars.' 'So now we'll see how hyper aggressive the government wants to be about it,' Trusty said. Combs still faces dozens of civil lawsuits Besides the federal criminal case, Combs still faces dozens of civil lawsuits from men and women who claim the rapper abused them, which could also cut into his fortunes significantly. To date, more than 70 lawsuits have been filed against Combs. In October, Texas-based attorney Tony Buzbee announced he would represent 120 individual accusers. Alleged victims represented by Buzbee now account for about half of the lawsuits filed so far. The music mogul was hit with yet another civil suit as jurors began deliberating in the sweeping federal sex-crimes case against him. In that one, Combs was accused in a civil complaint of drugging and raping an Orange County, California man in 2021, according to the lawsuit obtained by USA TODAY. 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