In a court filing this week, the voting systems company said there was no realistic chance of it agreeing to settle the defamation lawsuit.
The company made its position clear in a new filing Monday night as part of the company's lawsuits against the trio for pushing an array of conspiracy theories about the election-technology company's role in the 2020 election.
Lawyers for the company wrote in the filing that they do not believe there is a realistic possibility of a settlement given the devastating harm to the people.
Lawyers for Powell and Giuliani said in the same filing that their claims about the role of Dominion in the election did not meet the legal standard for defamation.
Powell and Giuliani are open to settlement discussions once the discovery is complete and they realize that the claims are without merit.
The claims were made in a joint filing in which the parties proposed a schedule to the US District Judge. Powell, Giuliani, and Lindell tried to have the lawsuits against them dismissed. They would go to trial together after he consolidated the case.
Lawyers for both Powell and Giuliani said in the filing that they would participate in the discovery of the lawsuits, though Giuliani's attorneys said the FBI was in possession of his digital files. The FBI raided his Manhattan apartment and office last year as part of an investigation into whether he broke lobbying laws.
The discovery process has been refused to participate in by Lindell. He told Insider that he was going to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.
He is countersuing the company for $1.6 billion, after saying he would never settle with them.
They are in prison. They are trying to cover up their crimes and committing more crimes in the process.
Giuliani and Lindell have been repeating their baseless claims of voter fraud since early last year.
In December, Giuliani made a claim that he had proof to support the conspiracy theory that votes were cast in dead people's names in the 2020 election. The Trump ally didn't say where he got the evidence.
Lindell is pushing voter-fraud conspiracy theories. The voting-systems company Smartmatic filed a defamation lawsuit against Lindell, accusing him of intentionally stoking the fires of xenophobia and party divide for the purpose of selling his pillows.