Alex Jones' assets to be liquidated as his company exits bankruptcy
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[June 15, 2024]
By Dietrich Knauth
NEW YORK (Reuters) -A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Friday ordered a
court-supervised liquidation of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones' personal
assets, but he dismissed the bankruptcy of Jones' company Free Speech
Systems without ordering it to be liquidated.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez appointed a Chapter 7 trustee to
sell Jones' assets, including his ownership stake in Free Speech
Systems, the parent company of his Infowars website. Proceeds would go
to pay Jones' creditors, relatives of 20 students and six staff members
killed in the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in
Newtown, Connecticut.
But Lopez declined to force Infowars itself into a separate liquidation,
instead saying at a court hearing in Houston, Texas that Jones could
continue to run the company until the trustee sells his ownership stake.
Lopez rejected an argument by some of the Sandy Hook families that Jones
should not be allowed to regain control of his company. The judge said
the bankruptcy court's supervision had never impacted Jones' broadcasts.
"There's been lots of talk about whether Mr Jones has regained control
of the business, but the reality is he never really lost it," Lopez
said.
The split ruling will mean further litigation between Jones, his
company, and the Sandy Hook families, including battles over $6 million
in cash held by Free Speech Systems. The families also will continue
trying to collect money that Jones kept from them by sending it to his
wife and father and close associates.
The proposed liquidation of Free Speech Systems split the Sandy Hook
families. Families who sued Jones in Connecticut argued that an
immediate shutdown would prevent him from hiding the company's cash or
working to undermine the company from the inside. Families who sued
Jones in Texas argued instead that he would pay more in the long run if
he kept control of his business instead of "selling it for scraps."
"You can't control Alex Jones," said Avi Moshenberg, an attorney for the
Texas families. "What you can do, what the law allows, is to make Alex
Jones and Free Speech Systems pay on the judgments that were rendered by
juries."
Jones' attorney, Vickie Driver, said the Connecticut families wanted to
override Jones' First Amendment right to free speech. Even forcing
Infowars into liquidation "doesn't stop Mr. Jones from saying what he
wants, when he wants, on his broadcast," Driver said in court.
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Infowars founder Alex Jones arrives to speak 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
Chris Mattei, an attorney for the Connecticut families, said after
the ruling that it was a "good day," and said that Infowars is
"soon-to-be defunct."
"Alex Jones is neither a martyr nor a victim," Mattei said. "He is
the perpetrator of the worst defamation in American history."
Lopez appeared to fight back tears at one point in his ruling, after
pointing out the painful irony of deciding the fate of Infowars just
before Father's Day. Lopez said he "had no words" to describe the
pain of losing a child.
"I wish I would have picked a better day," Lopez said.
Lopez deferred decisions on some demands by the Sandy Hook families,
who have sought control over Jones' social media accounts and the
ability to choose the trustee who will be responsible for collecting
assets from Jones to pay some of the $1.5 billion in defamation
judgments that courts have awarded to the families. Those decisions
can be made later, Lopez said.
Jones filed bankruptcy protection 17 months ago, but he was unable
to reach a settlement that would reduce the $1.5 billion he owes to
the Sandy Hook families after courts in Connecticut and Texas ruled
that he defamed them with repeated false statements about the
massacre.
Jones claimed for years that the Sandy Hook killings were staged
with actors as part of a government plot to seize Americans' guns.
Jones has since acknowledged that the shooting occurred.
The judge overseeing Jones' bankruptcy has ruled that most of the
debt will survive after a liquidation, because it resulted from
"willful and malicious" conduct.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth; Editing by David Gregorio and Alexia
Garamfalvi)
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