Texarkana Gazette

Kelly presses ‘Infowars’ host Jones on Sandy Hook denial

- By Hillel Italie

NEW YORK—Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones hemmed and hawed when pressed repeatedly by Megyn Kelly to admit he was wrong to call the massacre at Newtown, Connecticu­t a hoax.

Jones never gave a direct answer in a segment Sunday night on NBC’s “Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly.’ Kelly has been criticized intensely for giving a platform to Jones, who has also called the Sept. 11 attacks an inside job. She has defended her decision by noting that President Donald Trump has praised Jones and appeared on his radio program.

The “Infowars” host said at one point that he was playing “devil’s advocate” in denying the 2012 mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School. But he continued to express doubts, saying that he had “watched the footage” of children leaving the building that it “looks like a drill.”

“Some of it looks like it’s real but then what do you do when they’ve got the kids going circles in and out of the building with their hands up. I’ve watched the footage,” he said. “That looks like a drill.”

The segment with Jones combined Kelly’s interview with background on his history of false remarks, his relationsh­ip with Trump and comments from Newtown parent Neil Heslin, whose 6-year-old son, Jesse Lewis, was killed in the shooting. When Kelly asked him whether he had anything to say to Jones for Father’s Day, he responded, “I think he’s blessed to have his children to spend the day with, to speak to. I don’t have that.”

Last week, Jones leaked an audio recording of what he said was a phone conversati­on with Kelly, heard promising she would not portray him as “some kind of boogeyman.” Shortly before Sunday’s night interview, Jones released a Father’s Day video in which he offered condolence­s to families who had lost children in the “horrible tragedy” of Newtown, but did not refer to his previous comments disputing the killings.

“Parents should never have to bury their own children,” Jones said.

Connecticu­t’s NBC affiliate said Friday it wouldn’t air the report. In an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press, NBC Connecticu­t staff members were told station executives made the decision after listening to concerns from employees, Sandy Hook families and viewers and considerin­g “the deep emotions from the wounds of that day that have yet to heal.”

 ?? Austin American-Statesman via AP ?? “Infowars” host Alex Jones arrives on April 17 at the Travis County Courthouse in Austin.
Austin American-Statesman via AP “Infowars” host Alex Jones arrives on April 17 at the Travis County Courthouse in Austin.

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