MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell checks his cellphone inside the Covelli Centre before a Save America Rally, featuring former President Donald Trump, to support Republican candidates running for state and federal offices on September 17, 2022 in Youngstown, Ohio.
MyPillow CEO Mike LindellJeff Swensen/Getty Images
  • Four vendors have stopped doing business with MyPillow.

  • According to Insider, these businesses don't want to deal with MyStore because of the FBI investigation.

  • Lindell's phone was taken by the FBI at a fast food restaurant.

According to Insider, four entrepreneurs have pulled out of the plan to list their businesses on MyStore.

At least four businesses have told him that they don't want to deal with his MyStore platform after the FBI seized his phone at a fast food joint.

They don't want the FBI to be connected to them. Vendors are scared by the FBI.

He said that they don't want to be canceled.

He said that he had signed deals with the entrepreneurs that have fallen through, but he did not name them. The businessman told Insider that he was told over the last week that a private lender had withdrawn support for one of the businesses that were trying to sell products on the MyStore platform.

The money was earmarked for one of the entrepreneurs so that they would have enough products to sell on MyStore. The loan was canceled because of the link to MyStore. It's heartbreaking.

MyStore was started as a response to Amazon. A range of ground coffee with the businessman's face on the packaging is one of the new products listed in the store.

The MyStore pull-out is not the first time that Lindell has run into issues with financial institutions and partners due to pushing false claims of election fraud.

After he was subpoenaed by the House Select Committee for his phone records, one of his banks cut ties with him.

Walmart was accused of pulling his pillows from their stores.

The phone seizure was connected to an investigation into Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters, who is accused of facilitating an election-data leak.

The businessman filed a lawsuit against the FBI and the Department of Justice for violating his rights after his phone was seized.

The FBI is accused of violating his "First, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment" rights in a lawsuit. He wants his cell phone back and that the FBI or DOJ don't release information from his phone.

He told Insider on Tuesday that he had been unable to access his cash and wire money to his businesses without his phone.

The codes he needed were on the phone that was seized. The files that were in there were taken and crippled me with work.

Business Insider has an article on it.