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		Sandy Hook families' lawyer says Alex Jones' InfoWars bankruptcy is 
		'sinister'
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		 [April 23, 2022] 
		By Maria Chutchian 
 (Reuters) - Families of the 2012 Sandy Hook 
		Elementary School massacre called for InfoWars' bankruptcy to be thrown 
		out of court on Friday, accusing the far-right wing website of seeking 
		Chapter 11 protection for "sinister" purposes.
 
 Lawyers for the families, who have won defamation lawsuits against 
		InfoWars and its founder, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, raised 
		questions about the legitimacy of the bankruptcy at a hearing in 
		Victoria, Texas.
 
 They alleged the case was not filed for a valid purpose under bankruptcy 
		law, but to force the families into settlements instead of proceeding 
		with trials that will determine the amount of the damages they are owed 
		for the defamation judgments relating to Jones' false claims that the 
		school mass shooting was a hoax.
 
 A lawyer for a group of Connecticut families, Randy Williams, said he 
		plans to ask the court to dismiss the case soon.
 
 InfoWars holding company, InfoW LLC, and two other media assets owned by 
		Jones filed for Chapter 11 on April 17 after Jones and his media 
		companies were found liable in multiple defamation lawsuits brought in 
		Texas and Connecticut by families of the shooting victims.
 
		
		 
		Jones, who has not filed for bankruptcy himself, has falsely claimed 
		that the shooting, during which 20 children and six school employees 
		were killed in Newtown, Connecticut, was a hoax fabricated by 
		gun-control advocates and mainstream media. 
		The families have previously rebuffed Jones' efforts to settle the 
		cases. A trial to determine damages was scheduled to begin Monday in 
		Texas but was halted as a result of the bankruptcy.
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			Alex Jones of Infowars talks to the media while visiting the U.S. 
			Senate's Dirksen Senate office building as Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey 
			testifies before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Capitol 
			Hill in Washington, U.S., September 5, 2018. Picture taken September 
			5, 2018. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/File Photo 
            
			
			
			 “Let me tell you, I think we have a 
			sinister or unworthy purpose here,” J. Maxwell Beatty, who 
			represents plaintiffs in the Texas case, said during Friday’s 
			hearing.
 The U.S. Department of Justice's bankruptcy watchdog has raised 
			similar concerns.
 
 U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez, who is overseeing the 
			bankruptcy, raised questions on Friday about the decision to file 
			InfoW's case under a bankruptcy provision that is designed for small 
			businesses. InfoW lawyer Kyung Lee said he would explain at an April 
			29 hearing.
 
 Lee also rejected the attacks on the bankruptcy, saying the case was 
			filed “to preserve the means to pay” the families’ claims.
 
 Marc Schwartz of the Houston-based firm Schwartz & Associates, who 
			is expected to serve as InfoW’s chief restructuring officer, said on 
			Friday that people involved with the case did not want Jones to 
			personally file for bankruptcy because they didn’t want to harm the 
			value associated with his name or “his ability to generate funds, to 
			sell merchandise.”
 
 A lawyer for Jones did not immediately respond to a request for 
			comment.
 
 (Reporting by Maria Chutchian, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and 
			Alistair Bell)
 
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