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		Sandy Hook parents seek to stop InfoWars 
		bankruptcy payments to Alex Jones 
		
		 
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		[August 04, 2022] 
		By Dietrich Knauth 
		  
		(Reuters) - Parents of children killed in 
		the 2012 Sandy Hook school massacre urged a U.S. bankruptcy judge on 
		Wednesday not to allow the parent company of far-right website InfoWars 
		to send any money to its founder, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, or his 
		companies until they have an opportunity to get to the bottom of 
		InfoWars' finances.    | 
		
		 
		
		  
		
		Alex Jones attempts to answer questions about his emails asked by Mark 
		Bankston, lawyer for Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, during trial at the 
		Travis County Courthouse, Austin, Texas, U.S., August 3, 2022. Briana 
		Sanchez/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo  | 
	
	
		
		
			
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				 As 
				a jury deliberates in Austin, Texas, over how much Jones must 
				pay two parents for his false claims that the deadly shooting 
				was a hoax, families of Sandy Hook victims who have sued Jones 
				for defamation in that trial and others who have sued in 
				Connecticut warned a bankruptcy judge in Houston that Jones 
				might continue to pull assets from InfoWars parent company Free 
				Speech Systems LLC while using its bankruptcy case to avoid 
				paying court judgments in the defamation cases.  
				 
				Marty Brimmage, an attorney for the Sandy Hook parents, told 
				U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez in Houston on Wednesday 
				that Jones had told his audience that the bankruptcy would "tie 
				up" any defamation judgment for years.  
				 
				Judges in the Texas and Connecticut cases have already found 
				Jones liable for defamation. The parents in the Texas trial are 
				seeking a judgment of $150 million.  
				 
				Jones testified Wednesday in Austin, admitting that the Sandy 
				Hook shooting was real and that it was "crazy" of him to call it 
				a hoax. The jury has begun deliberations.  
				 
				The company's attorneys told the bankruptcy judge on Wednesday 
				that they were only making a "boring" request for permission to 
				make routine payments on debts during the first weeks of its 
				Chapter 11. The company filed for bankruptcy last Friday. 
				 
				But the Sandy Hook families said the company could not be 
				trusted to make accurate statements about its finances. They 
				also allege that Jones took $62 million from the company while 
				burdening it with $65 million in "fabricated" debt owed to PQPR 
				Holdings, a company owned by Jones and his parents. 
				 
				Lopez approved a two-week budget that would allow the company to 
				pay its bills, but he limited the amount it could pay Jones and 
				the company's consultants during that period.  
				 
				(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi) 
				 
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