The Norwalk Hour

Judge denies request to drop Jones attorneys

Pattis asks to be removed from Sandy Hook defamation case as trial looms

- By Rob Ryser

NEWTOWN — In the first Connecticu­t court appearance since Alex Jones was sprung from bankruptcy protection to face a damages award trial for a defamation case he lost to Sandy Hook families, his New Haven-based attorneys asked to be dropped from the case.

“We are in an untenable position — our communicat­ion with our client has broken down,” said Cameron Atkinson, a lawyer who works with high-profile New Haven attorney Norm Pattis. “We have not had direct communicat­ion with our client in over a month.”

State Superior Court Judge Barbara Bellis said she has heard that story before. She listed 13 separate motions where Pattis and other attorneys have either replaced each other or asked to be dropped from Jones’ case over the last four years. In an unusually lengthy ruling, Bellis called it a “tortured history of appearance­s,” which was “convoluted and bizarre.”

Thursday’s hearing, which revealed that Jones is seeking to forestall a similar damages award trial in Texas where he lost two other defamation cases to Sandy Hook parents last year, is the latest developmen­t after a springtime saga that saw Jones seek bankruptcy protection for his business interests without seeking bankruptcy protection for himself. Lawyers for Sandy Hook families here and in Texas figured how to get their cases returned to state trial courts by simply dropping the Jones business entities in bankruptcy from their lawsuits.

It wasn’t a hard decision to make. The three Jones business entities in federal bankruptcy protection have a combined monthly income of $38,000. Jones made at least $76 million selling merchandis­e to his Infowars audience in 2019, his representa­tives said.

The bankruptcy cases revealed that Jones has not only spent $10 million on attorneys fees and has lost at least $20 million because of the Sandy Hook lawsuits, but Jones is concerned that his brand as the “Coca-Cola of the conspiracy theory community” may be suffering, his representa­tives said.

Lawyers for an FBI agent and eight Sandy Hook families who won a defamation case against Jones in Connecticu­t last year agreed with Bellis not to allow Pattis to withdraw from Jones’ case.

“The (families) oppose any action that could potentiall­y delay the trial date in this case,” wrote Alinor Sterling from the Bridgeport firm Koskoff, Koskoff and Bieder. “Jury selection is scheduled to begin on Aug. 2, 2022, and trial is scheduled to begin on Sept. 1.”

During a Thursday morning court conference in Waterbury, Bellis ordered Pattis and Atkinson to continue representi­ng Jones until she rules on the matter on June 15.

Bellis refused to move the trial date from early September to October, when Atkinson asked her to accommodat­e Pattis’ plans to spend time with family in July.

“The most appropriat­e pathway is to have a hearing on the motion to withdraw (our representa­tion) first and proceed with a new (trial) schedule from there,” Atkinson said. “I appreciate your honor’s repeated statement that the trial date is going to hold firm, but I believe with these developmen­ts in the case, it is not practicall­y feasible at this point.”

Bellis responded “no” for now.

At the same time in Texas, two Jones defamation cases that were frozen in bankruptcy court were returning to trial court. The first of two jury trials was expected to begin at the end of June.

Jones’ attorneys in Texas filed a motion claiming the $1 million in legal fees he was ordered to pay by a judge left him unable to raise a defense and constitute­d a deprivatio­n of his right to due process, lawyers here and in Texas confirmed.

“It’s just another part of the game that Alex Jones is playing,” said Bill Ogden, an attorney representi­ng four parents who won two defamation cases against Jones in Texas. “We are contemplat­ing how to respond.”

Jones called the 2012 killing of 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School “staged,” “synthetic,” “manufactur­ed,” “a giant hoax,” and “completely fake with actors.”

Jones got more bad news on Thursday when Bellis ruled to unseal an email containing social media engagement data that Jones considered a trade secret.

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