Mike Lindell's Lawyer Reveals New Supreme Court Evidence

Mike Lindell's lead counsel on Friday discussed the "new evidence" he is hoping to put before the Supreme Court in a bid to persuade it to rule that the use of electronic voting system to cast or tabulate votes is unconstitutional.

Lindell, the MyPillow CEO and prominent Donald Trump backer, is teaming up for the case with Arizona Republican Kari Lake, who has said her 2022 defeat in the state's gubernatorial election was marred by fraud. Lake's allegations have already been repeatedly rejected in the courts.

This week, Lindell's team issued a filing to the Supreme Court seeking to revive a 2022 lawsuit, dismissed by judges as "frivolous" at the time. It came from Lake and failed Arizona secretary of state candidate Mark Finchem challenging the use of electronic voting systems.

Lake and Finchem's petition read: "Newly uncovered evidence also shows Arizona's Maricopa County flagrantly violated state law for electronic voting systems—including using altered software not certified for use in Arizona—and actively misrepresented and concealed those violations."

Speaking on Steve Bannon's War Room podcast, Finchem said he had three pieces of "concrete evidence that's new, that was not known before."

Firstly, Finchem said that, in 2022, authorities used altered software in electronic voting machines that had not been certified by the federal Election Assistance Commission. Finchem added that preelection "logic and accuracy" tests weren't conducted on voting machines as required. He also said that "cyber experts have uncovered that the master cryptographic encryption keys that are used to govern and encrypt all election data had been left open on the database in plain text," leaving it vulnerable to tampering.

None of these allegations has been independently verified by Newsweek.

Lake's claims about electronic voting system enabling vote rigging have already been rejected by an Arizona district court judge and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, with members of her legal team sanctioned to deter them from introducing "similarly baseless suits in the future."

Former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani told Newsweek that the case from Lake and Lindell is unlikely to be successful "because the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction over very few types of cases, and they rarely allow for direct appeals that skip the trial and appellate."

Mike Lindell
Mike Lindell, CEO of MyPillow, speaks during the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) meeting on February 24, 2024, in National Harbor, Maryland. His legal team is trying to get the use of electronic voting... MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GETTY

In February, a federal judge ordered Lindell to pay $5 million to a software engineer after offering the prize in a "Prove Mike Wrong Challenge" to disprove specific claims the businessman made about why the 2020 presidential election was invalid.

Trump, who this week became the presumptive Republican presidential candidate for the 2024 election, is continuing to say the 2020 contest was rigged against him, despite this being repeatedly rejected in the courts and by independent election experts.

In October, Lake announced a run for the Arizona Senate seat held by Kyrsten Sinema, who was elected as a Democrat but serves as an independent. Earlier this month, Sinema announced she won't run for reelection, preventing a potential three-way battle for the seat.

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About the writer


James Bickerton is a Newsweek U.S. News reporter based in London, U.K. His focus is covering U.S. politics and world ... Read more

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