Mike Lindell defends banned election Wi-Fi gizmo: 'Beep beep — gonna be like a red alert'
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell insisted that his Wi-Fi detection devices were not illegal after they were banned from Kentucky polling stations.
"They don't even know what the devices are," Lindell complained to Real America's Voice on Thursday. "They're not Wi-Fi sniffers. They're not, they're not illegal."
Lindell claimed unnamed officials had asked him to develop a device to tell if voting machines were connected to the internet.
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"And these machines or these devices will say if they're lying or not," Lindell explained. "What this does, if you had your own Wi-Fi network with a password, it would tell you if other devices have hacked, or I mean, are hooked up to the network and that they are using it."
Lindell said it was all part of a plan to convince election officials to do away with voting machines.
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"And they're going to have these devices, they're going to catch when these devices or when these machines go online, whether it's a polling book, whether it's a router, whatever it goes online, the computer, the printer. Beep! Beep! Beep! It's going to be like a red alert," he remarked.
Lindell promised that users of his social media app FrankSpeech could view the results of the device scans in real time on election night.
"Now you can put it in your area and see what's going on in your area because you're going to get all these anomalies reported to you, and you're going to sit in your easy chair and go, wow, OK," the pillow executive concluded.