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Infowars host Alex Jones ordered to pay $473m more to Sandy Hook families Infowars host Alex Jones ordered to pay $473m more to Sandy Hook families
(38 minutes later)
Conspiracy theorist must pay punitive damages on top of nearly $1bn jury verdict for falsely claiming 2012 shooting was hoaxConspiracy theorist must pay punitive damages on top of nearly $1bn jury verdict for falsely claiming 2012 shooting was hoax
The conspiracy theorist Alex Jones must pay $473m in punitive damages on top of a nearly $1bn verdict handed down last month for his defamatory claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting, a Connecticut judge ruled on Thursday.The conspiracy theorist Alex Jones must pay $473m in punitive damages on top of a nearly $1bn verdict handed down last month for his defamatory claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting, a Connecticut judge ruled on Thursday.
The ruling comes a month after a jury in Waterbury, Connecticut, found Jones must pay more than a dozen relatives of Sandy Hook victims $965m in compensatory damages for falsely claiming they were actors who staged the shooting as part of a government plot to seize Americans’ guns.The ruling comes a month after a jury in Waterbury, Connecticut, found Jones must pay more than a dozen relatives of Sandy Hook victims $965m in compensatory damages for falsely claiming they were actors who staged the shooting as part of a government plot to seize Americans’ guns.
On 14 December 2012, a gunman murdered his mother, then killed 20 children and six staff members at Sandy Hook elementary school before killing himself. The conspiracy theories amplified by Infowars on its website, social media and a show hosted by Jones led to years of threats and other harassment of the parents of the murdered children.
The plaintiffs had asked a judge to impose additional punitive damages, citing what they said was the “historic” scale of Jones’s wrongdoing and his “utter lack of repentance”. Jones has since acknowledged the shooting took place but refused to apologize to the families during his trial testimony.The plaintiffs had asked a judge to impose additional punitive damages, citing what they said was the “historic” scale of Jones’s wrongdoing and his “utter lack of repentance”. Jones has since acknowledged the shooting took place but refused to apologize to the families during his trial testimony.
In a statement, the plaintiffs’ attorney Chris Mattei said the ruling “serves to reinforce the message of this case: those who profit from lies targeting the innocent will face justice”. In a statement, plaintiffs’ attorney Chris Mattei said the ruling “serves to reinforce the message of this case: those who profit from lies targeting the innocent will face justice”.
More details soon Jones’s lawyer, Norm Pattis, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In recent court filings, he has argued for a new trial or a substantial reduction of the verdict.
In a separate order late on Wednesday, state judge Barbara Bellis temporarily blocked Jones from moving any personal assets out of the country. The ruling came at the request of the plaintiffs, who claim Jones is trying to hide assets to avoid paying damages.
Jones’s company, Free Speech Systems LLC, is also liable for the verdict. It filed for bankruptcy in Texas in July.
The verdict in Connecticut came two months after Jones and the parent company of his Infowars site were hit with a nearly $50m verdict in a similar case brought by two Sandy Hook parents in Austin, Texas, where Infowars is based.