Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has already been found liable in multiple defamation cases for spreading lies about families of those killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. A trial kicked off last week in Texas to determine how much he will have to pay plaintiffs in one of the cases.
Jones, however, made it clear Monday that he intends to use financial trickery to try to evade a harsh penalty.
Jones could be forced to pay $150 million or more in damages in the Texas case alone after he claimed the massacre was a “hoax” involving victims’ families. (Jones later acknowledged the shooting was real as lawsuits against him piled up.)
Some people on social media were gleeful Friday when reports revealed Jones had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for Free Speech Systems, the media company that owns his Infowars conspiracy theory empire. But others astutely saw this as a ploy to protect his finances from an impending verdict, and Jones all but confirmed that Monday on an episode of his podcast.
Ranting about the defamation suits, Jones said he plans to use bankruptcy filings to tie the families up in litigation for “years.”
Alex Jones says he filed for bankruptcy so his appeal bond on the Sandy Hook judgment will now only be half his net worth, allowing him to tie it up for years and stay on the air. pic.twitter.com/pHdL1ai48H
— Ron Filipkowski (@RonFilipkowski) August 1, 2022
In comments to The Texas Tribune on Saturday, Avi Moshenberg, a lawyer for Sandy Hook families suing Jones in Texas, called the bankruptcy filing “a stunt by Alex Jones to try to avoid facing justice.”
Nonetheless, those families are “going to bring him to justice,” Moshenberg said. “That is our goal. That is our mission, and we’re just not going to relent until that happens.”








