Alex Jones asks US Supreme Court to hear appeal of $1.4 billion Sandy
Hook judgment
[September 10, 2025]
By DAVE COLLINS
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear
his appeal of the $1.4 billion judgment a Connecticut jury and judge
issued against him for calling the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School
shooting a hoax staged by crisis actors.
The Infowars host is arguing that the judge was wrong to find him liable
for defamation and infliction of emotional distress without holding a
trial on the merits of allegations lodged by relatives of victims of the
shooting, which killed 20 first graders and six educators in Newtown,
Connecticut.
Judge Barbara Bellis, frustrated at what she called Jones' repeated
failure to abide by court rulings and to turn over certain evidence to
the Sandy Hook families, issued a rare default ruling against Jones and
his company in late 2021 as a penalty. That meant that she found him
liable without a trial on the facts and convened a jury to only
determine what damages he owed.
A six-person jury in Waterbury issued a $964 million verdict in October
2022 in favor of the plaintiffs — an FBI agent who responded to the
shooting and relatives of eight children and adults who were killed.
Bellis later tacked on another $473 million in punitive damages against
Jones and Free Speech Systems, Infowars' parent company that is based in
Austin, Texas.
During the trial to determine damages, relatives of the shooting victims
testified that people whom they called followers of Jones subjected them
to death and rape threats, in-person harassment and abusive comments on
social media. Jones argues there was never any proof presented that
linked him to those actions.
Jones filed his request to the Supreme Court on Friday and it was
released by the court on Tuesday.

Jones' lawyers — Ben Broocks, Shelby Jordan and Alan Daughtry — insist
in the petition that state courts cannot determine liability based only
on sanctions such as default rulings. They say that constitutional law
and Supreme Court precedent require public figures such as the Sandy
Hook families to prove their defamation claims against journalists such
as Jones.
They also say that the Connecticut judge imposed the default ruling on
Jones based on “trivial” reasons and that Jones had substantially
complied with the court’s orders — which the Sandy Hook families’
lawyers deny.
Jones' attorneys further cite First Amendment protections for free
speech, saying Jones' comments about the school shooting being a hoax
were not defamatory but rather “expressions of constitutionally
protected opinion." Jones has since said he believed the shooting was
“100% real."
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Alex Jones pauses before speaking to the media after arriving at the
federal courthouse for a hearing in front of a bankruptcy judge,
June 14, 2024, in Houston. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, file)

"The media landscape is rife with groups challenging various events,
including Holocaust denial, moon landing skepticism, 9/11 conspiracy
theories, and even flat Earth claims,” the petition says. “However,
such statements critique or dismiss the events themselves, not the
character, conduct, or reputation of those associated with them.”
Among other claims, Jones' petition says the $1.4 billion judgment
is excessive punishment under the Eighth Amendment.
If the judgment is allowed to stand, Jones' lawyers said it would
“chill the reporting of news” and “result in self-censoring fear of
suits.”
Lawyers for the Sandy Hook families disputed Jones' arguments.
“There is no legitimate basis for the U.S. Supreme Court to accept
this last gasp from Alex Jones and we will oppose it in due course,”
Christopher Mattei, a lawyer for the families, said in a statement.
A mid-level appellate court in Connecticut upheld all but $150
million of the $1.4 billion judgment in December, and the state
Supreme Court declined to hear Jones' appeal of that ruling in
April.
In a similar defamation lawsuit filed in Texas by the parents of
another Sandy Hook victim, Jones was found liable without a trial as
punishment for failing to turn over documents. In that case, which
also is being appealed, a judge and jury issued a $49 million
judgment against Jones in August 2022.
Jones filed for bankruptcy in late 2022. In those proceedings, an
auction was held in November to liquidate Infowars' assets to help
pay the defamation judgments, and the satirical news outlet The
Onion was named the winning bidder. But the bankruptcy judge threw
out the auction results, citing problems with the process and The
Onion's bid.
The attempt to sell off Infowars' assets has moved to a Texas state
court in Austin. Jones is now appealing a recent order from the
court that appointed a receiver to liquidate the assets. Some of
Jones' personal property is also being sold off as part of the
bankruptcy case.
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