Alex Jones files for bankruptcy following $1.5 billion Sandy Hook verdicts

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by everlong241
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Dec 2 (Reuters) - Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones filed for bankruptcy on Friday, after he and the parent of his Infowars website were ordered to pay about $1.5 billion for spreading lies about the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting.

Jones filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors with the U.S. bankruptcy court in Houston, a court filing showed.

The filing said Jones has between $1 million and $10 million of assets and between $1 billion and $10 billion of liabilities. The extent of Jones' personal wealth is unclear.

Jones claimed for years that the 2012 killing of 20 students and six staff members at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, was staged with actors as part of a government plot to seize Americans’ guns. He has since acknowledged the shooting occurred, but plaintiffs said Jones cashed in for years off his lies about the massacre.

"Like every other cowardly move Alex Jones has made, this bankruptcy will not work," said Chris Mattei, an attorney representing Sandy Hook families. "The American judicial system will hold Alex Jones accountable, and we will never stop working to enforce the jury’s verdict."

Mattei said Jones had engaged in intentional and egregious attacks and the bankruptcy system would not protect him.

A lawyer for Jones did not immediately return a request for comment.

In October, a Connecticut jury said Jones and Free Speech Systems, the parent company of Infowars, should pay nearly $1 billion in damages to numerous families of victims of the Sandy Hook shooting.

The Connecticut court later ordered Jones to pay an additional $473 million in punitive damages.

The trial was marked by weeks of anguished testimony from the families, who recounted how Jones’s lies about Sandy Hook compounded their grief.

Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in July.

Infowars founder Alex Jones speaks to the media after appearing at his Sandy Hook defamation trial at Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury, Connecticut, U.S., October 4, 2022. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

In a separate case in Texas, a jury in August decided Jones must pay the parents of a 6-year-old boy killed in the Sandy Hook massacre $45.2 million in punitive damages, on top of $4.1 million in compensatory damages.

Jones's lawyers have said he would appeal the Connecticut and Texas verdicts.

Bankruptcy can be used to wipe out debts, but not if they result from "willful or malicious injury" caused by the debtor. Jones's lies appear to meet that standard, said Susan Block-Lieb, a professor of bankruptcy law at Fordham University School of Law.

"Defamation is pretty clearly an intentional tort - it is especially clear in Alex Jones's case,' Block-Lieb said.

The filing also comes with risk for Jones, who will have to disclose all of his assets in court, said bankruptcy lawyer Sidney Scheinberg.

"Now that he's filed for bankruptcy, his assets are an open book," Scheinberg said. "If you hide assets in a bankruptcy case, that's a federal crime."

An economist in the Texas case estimated that Jones is personally worth between $135 million and $270 million.

The bankruptcy filing lists the plaintiffs who won verdicts against Jones as his largest unsecured creditors.

Among them are Robert Parker, father of six-year-old Emilie Parker, who was awarded $120 million by the Connecticut jury, and FBI agent William Aldenberg, who was among the first law enforcement officers on the scene of the 2012 shooting.

Connecticut judge Barbara Bellis had temporarily blocked Jones from moving any personal assets out of the country at the request of the plaintiffs, who claimed Jones was trying to hide assets to avoid paying.

The families have sued Jones in Texas state court seeking to unwind what they say are millions of dollars worth of illegitimate transfers from Jones’s company to shell entities he controls. They allege those transactions were intended to shield Jones’s assets from potential judgments.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel and Dietrich Knauth in New York, Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware and Jack Queen in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky, Chizu Nomiyama and Noeleen Walder

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

alphabeticdisorder on December 2nd, 2022 at 14:40 UTC »

It was pretty amusing in the Texas damages trial when he said he was already bankrupt and the judge reminded him he has to tell the truth when he's under oath.

edingerc on December 2nd, 2022 at 14:29 UTC »

People might be focusing on the money he owes, but if they can prove that he intentionally hid assets from a bankruptcy, that's serious prison time.

steve_dallasesq on December 2nd, 2022 at 14:21 UTC »

Bankruptcy attorney here - this may actually be a positive for the families.

First, there's no way their debt will be discharged. It clearly falls into one of the exemption from discharge categories. They are going to have to prove that in Court, which will take time and expense, but I can't imagine they don't win.

Second, he's now under federal scrutiny. He's in an 11 so technically he's in charge, but the US Trustee's office now has jurisdiction. They are allowed to investigate a lot of his financial dealings. If he has money somewhere, they can find it. And if he tries to avoid cooperating, they can ask for a Chapter 11 Trustee to be appointed, which means someone takes over all of Jones's finances, or they can seek to convert him to a 7, which also puts someone in charge and liquidates.

I've seen people think they can escape into Bankruptcy only to discover they HATE the process. And you don't have an automatic right to dismiss the 11 or 7, Judge has to approve it. And "they're finding my hidden cash" isn't a strong argument.