Law Judge Won’t Let Alex Jones Use Bankruptcy to Avoid Sandy Hook Damages - A Texas court ruling means the Infowars broadcaster must pay most of the $1.4 billion he owes Sandy Hook families, regardless of whether his business survives.

Judge Won’t Let Alex Jones Use Bankruptcy to Avoid Sandy Hook Damages
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Elizabeth Williamson
2023-10-19 22:26:27GMT

The judge in Alex Jones’s bankruptcy case ruled on Thursday that he will not be allowed to use his Chapter 11 filing to evade paying more than $1 billion in verdicts to families of the Sandy Hook shooting.

The ruling by Judge Christopher Lopez in a Houston bankruptcy court means that Mr. Jones, the Infowars conspiracy broadcaster, will likely be working the rest of his life to pay his debt to the families. Last year, they were awarded historic damages in defamation lawsuits against him.

It also closes off the possibility that Mr. Jones could liquidate Infowars and force the families to accept whatever proceeds result, leaving him free to start a new business.

Earlier this year, the families asked that Judge Lopez order Mr. Jones to pay them the full damage awards, with no possibility of a trial or a forced settlement over a lesser amount — in legal terms, to make Mr. Jones’s debts to the families “non-dischargeable” through bankruptcy.

Mr. Jones spent years spreading lies that the 2012 shooting that killed 20 first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., was a hoax aimed at confiscating Americans’ firearms. In 2018, the families of 10 victims sued him for defamation, and in trials in Texas and Connecticut they were awarded $1.4 billion in damages. As the cases went to trial, Infowars declared bankruptcy, and Mr. Jones declared personal bankruptcy late last year.

The families have been fighting him in bankruptcy court ever since.

Lawyers for the families had argued that Mr. Jones acted with “willful and malicious” intent in spreading lies about the families. In bankruptcy law, debts incurred through actions that are deemed “willful and malicious” are exempt from the protections for debtors offered through the courts.

Judge Lopez ruled in the families’ favor for about $1.1 billion in damages awarded to the relatives of nine victims who sued Mr. Jones in Connecticut. But he excluded $323 million in attorneys’ fees and costs awarded in the Connecticut lawsuit, ruling that the trial record did not clearly establish that those damages stemmed from “willful and malicious” actions.

Judge Lopez’s ruling was more mixed in the Sandy Hook lawsuit in Texas, won by Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, whose son Jesse Lewis died in the shooting. A Texas jury had awarded the parents $49 million in damages last year. On Thursday, Judge Lopez ruled that a trial is necessary to determine whether $44 million in punitive damages, the bulk of the award, meets the “willful and malicious” standard.

Mr. Jones’s lawyers had argued that his target was “the deep state,” not the families, and that Mr. Jones was raising questions about the official narrative of a national tragedy, as he has for other events. So while he was “reckless,” his lawyer Chris Davis said, “the idea that he had a willful and malicious intent is in substantial and factual dispute,” and needed to be adjudicated separately in court.

In the case brought by the parents of Jesse Lewis, the judge agreed that it was not clear whether most of the damages awarded to Mr. Heslin and Ms. Lewis were as a result of willful and not merely reckless behavior by Mr. Jones. That is what the trial will determine.

Although Infowars has estimated revenues of some $70 million a year, Infowars was able to file for Chapter 11 under the more lenient bankruptcy rules of the Small Business Reorganization Act, known as Subchapter V.

Unlike in a traditional Chapter 11 bankruptcy, Subchapter V gives creditors like the Sandy Hook families virtually no say in a restructuring plan, nor can they file a competing plan. Before Thursday’s ruling, an impasse in talks could have resulted in liquidation of the company.

A liquidation would have put the families in line to collect a fraction of the damages, leaving Mr. Jones free to start another company just like it. Though the ruling largely closes off a forced outcome like that, settlement talks continue because Mr. Jones’s current assets are likely not sufficient to cover the damages in full.

The bankruptcy case has dragged on for nine months, putting on hold a third and final damages trial in a defamation suit filed by Veronique De La Rosa and Leonard Pozner, the parents of Noah Pozner, a 6-year-old who died in the attack. They will take part in a potential settlement with Mr. Jones regardless of whether the damages trial takes place, through an agreement approved by the bankruptcy court.
 
I'm pretty sure this shit is illegal but it's not like they care. When it comes to punishing an enemy of the globe homo, the law is just a piece of paper.

The funny thing is, the more they do this, the more I start to believe Alex's take on the shooting because if they are THAT desperate to silence him, he surely must have been onto something, right ? Cuz there is no way they are punishing him so much over mere conspiratorial lies, right ?
 
I'm pretty sure this shit is illegal but it's not like they care. When it comes to punishing an enemy of the globe homo, the law is just a piece of paper.

The funny thing is, the more they do this, the more I start to believe Alex's take on the shooting because if they are THAT desperate to silence him, he surely must have been onto something, right ? Cuz there is no way they are punishing him so much over mere conspiratorial lies, right ?
I thought Jones was a nutcase too until I saw a press conference for a mass shooting in Texas somewhere years later and one of the Sandy Hook parents was there sobbing hysterically and mugging for the camera.

Exact same fucking guy unless he has an identical twin with the same birthmark on his cheek.

Even if your not a huge conspiracy guy that's fucking weird right? Why was he there? For what purpose?
 
Niggers get a W. They've been saying fuck da police for years never realizing that the true culprit is the judicial system as a whole. This sucks too. This is technically a civil case right? Can't be pushed to higher courts?
 
The only way I would've given any of those families a billion dollars is if Alex Jones gave Adam Lanza a gun, trained him to shoot kids, and dropped him off at Sandy Hook saying "Go for the high score, champ."

And nothing Alex Jones said has made me think Sandy Hook were crisis actors. Robbie Parker on the other hand...
 
Can judges in the US just do whatever the Hell they want? Can they just declare that bankruptcy laws wont apply to some guy if they feel like it?

The saddest words of Tongue or Pen,
Alex Jones was right, again.
In Clown World, yes, because the judges have turned their eyes from lady justice to activism; which is horrifying no matter which way you slice it.
 
Let's review the facts of this case to enumerate just how compromised the US "justice system" is.

Partisan hack judge demands Jones produce "discovery materials" that do not belong to him.
When he understandably cannot, judge rules him in default.
He goes through appeals all the way to the supreme court, and not one judge is willing to examine the merits of this.

He has been systematically stripped of the most basic judicial rights, the protection of the strongest anti-slapp laws in the country, and the first amendment in this process, and not even a "6/3 conservative" supreme court has stepped in to stop this farce.

Now, he is being stripped of the protection of bankruptcy laws.

This is the first time the western world has effectively "outlawed a person" in several centuries.

If Jones will be denied protection of law wholesale, he should cease to obey it, and start operating from outside the country.
 
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