The News-Times

Sandy Hook parents’ Jones showdown on again in Texas

- By Rob Ryser

NEWTOWN — A federal bankruptcy judge has released extremist Alex Jones from Chapter 11 protection and sent his defamation cases back to state court in Texas, where the parents of two boys slain in the Sandy Hook shooting await jury trials to see how much Jones will have to pay them.

“(We) are relieved but not surprised that Mr. Jones’ latest stunt has failed like all the others,” said Mark Bankston, an attorney representi­ng four parents who won two defamation cases against Jones in Texas last year. “Mr. Jones will now be held to account in a Travis County courtroom in the coming weeks, and these families will finally have the closure and recompense they deserve.”

Bankston was referring to a monthlong saga in Texas bankruptcy court where three Jonescontr­olled entities filed for Chapter 11 protection one week before a jury trial was to begin to determine what damages Jones owed two parents he defamed when he called the worst crime in Connecticu­t history “staged,” “synthetic,” “manufactur­ed,” “a giant hoax,” and “completely fake with actors.”

The bankruptcy judge’s ruling means the first postponed defamation

awards trial in Texas could begin as soon as June, Bankston suggested.

Among the disclosure­s that came out of the bankruptcy court hearings is that Jones has suffered financiall­y as the Sandy Hook defamation cases have progressed. Jones has spent at least $10 million on legal fees and has lost at least $20 million, his representa­tives said in court. Jones did not file for bankruptcy protection himself, his representa­tive said in court, because he feared it would damage his brand in the conspiracy theory market.

Meanwhile in Connecticu­t, where an FBI agent and eight

families who lost loved ones in the shooting of 26 first-graders and educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School also won a defamation case against Jones in 2021, a hearing was planned in Connecticu­t bankruptcy court on Tuesday that is expected to result in a similar outcome as the Texas cases.

The reason has to do with a maneuver the Sandy Hook families took here and in Texas to outflank Jones in bankruptcy court.

Jones’ Chapter 11 filing put on hold the two trials in Texas and the third planned in Connecticu­t, since federal court trumps state

proceeding­s. Lawyers for families here and in Texas fought Jones’ Chapter 11 petitions as “bad faith” filings, since Jones himself and his money-making Free Speech systems did not file for bankruptcy. The three Jones-controlled entities that sought Chapter 11 protection have a combined monthly income of $38,000 while Jones made at least $76 million in 2019, his representa­tives said in court.

In response, the families dropped Jones’ three business entities in bankruptcy from their lawsuits. Because the families no longer had a stake in the bankruptci­es, they argued, their lawsuits

against Jones and Free Speech systems could be released back to the state courts for trial. The families argued that their target was Jones himself and Free Speech Systems, who were not party to the bankruptci­es.

In rulings on Thursday and Friday, the federal bankruptcy court in Texas agreed.

It remains to be seen whether Connecticu­t bankruptcy court will rule similarly. The trial to award defamation damages to the Sandy Hook families in Connecticu­t had been scheduled for August.

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