Alex Jones' Sandy Hook punitive damages likely to be slashed, experts
say
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[August 10, 2022]
By Jack Queen
(Reuters) -U.S. conspiracy theorist Alex
Jones could end up owing as little as 10% of the $45.2 million in
punitive damages that a Texas jury awarded to the parents of a Sandy
Hook victim last week, legal experts told Reuters on Monday.
A jury handed down the punitive damages' verdict on Friday and awarded
the parents $4.1 million in compensatory damages on Thursday after a
two-week trial in Austin, Texas, where Jones’ Infowars radio show and
webcast is based.
Jones was found last year to have defamed parents Neil Heslin and
Scarlett Lewis, whose 6-year-old son Jesse Lewis died in the Sandy Hook
Elementary School shooting in 2012, by spreading lies that they were
part of a government plot to stage the massacre.
While juries have broad discretion on awards, Texas law caps punitive
damages at $750,000 when economic losses are not involved, as in this
case.
Mark Bankston, an attorney for the parents, told Reuters by email that
because Jones and his company face three claims each, he estimates the
cap would be $4.5 million. Bankston said he will argue the damages cap
does not apply but declined to elaborate.
Judge Maya Guerra Gamble must approve the final amount, a decision that
is expected soon.
Jones' lawyer, Federico Andino Reynal, said in court Friday that he will
seek to reduce the $45.2 million punitive damages award because it does
not comply with Texas law. He confirmed to Reuters on Monday that he
plans to invoke the cap.
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Alex Jones steps outside of the Travis County Courthouse, to do
interviews with media after he was questioned under oath about text
messages and emails by lawyer Mark Bankston, in Austin, Texas, U.S.
August 3, 2022. Briana Sanchez/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
According to the New York Times, Reynal has said he expects the
punitive award to be reduced to $1.5 million.
Several defamation lawyers said they were skeptical that the parents
will be able to get around the cap.
"They're not going to collect it all -- no way," Texas defamation
lawyer Chuck Sanders said.
The initial number will still be a lasting deterrent to spreading
misinformation if the verdict is cut significantly, Sanders said.
Even if the parents can convince Judge Gamble that the cap should
not apply, Texas Supreme Court precedent holds that the ratio of
punitive to compensatory damages should rarely exceed four-to-one.
The jury's verdict in this case represents an 11-to-1 ratio.
In reaching their decision, the Texas justices cited a 2003 decision
by the U.S. Supreme Court, which said that the ratio of punitive to
compensatory damages should only exceed single digits in rare cases.
Jones' company, Free Speech Systems LLC, filed for bankruptcy
protection on July 29, pausing two other Sandy Hook cases against
Jones.
(Reporting by Jack Queen; Editing by Amy Stevens and Cynthia
Osterman)
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