Alex Jones's Assets Are Frozen by Judge in Sandy Hook Case
7 Articles
7 Articles
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones told to pay an extra $473m over Sandy Hook shooting hoax claims
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his company were ordered to pay an extra $473m (€463m) to victims’ families and an FBI agent for calling the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting a hoax, adding to a nearly one billion dollar jury verdict issued last month.
Judge freezes Alex Jones' assets amid Sandy Hook case claims
Alex Jones (Video screenshot)By Trevor Schakohl Daily Caller News FoundationA judge froze InfoWars host Alex Jones’ assets and ordered him and his company Free Speech Systems to pay $473 million for lying about the Sandy Hook school shooting, according to reports, adding to nearly $1 billion in payments already required.A Connecticut jury ruled Oct. 12 that Jones and the company must pay over $960 million in damages to family members of victims …
JUST IN: Judge Overseeing Sandy Hook Case Freezes Alex Jones' Assets
A state judge overseeing the Sandy Hook case froze Alex Jones’ assets late Wednesday.Alex Jones is only allowed to spend money on ‘ordinary living expenses’ according to the judge’s order.“With the exception of ordinary living expenses, the defendant Alex Jones is not to transfer, encumber, dispose, or move his assets out of the United States, until further order of the court,” Judge Barbara Bellis said in the one-page order.Bloomberg reported:I…
Alex Jones Gets Assets Frozen, Now Has To Pay Almost $1.5 Billion To Sandy Hook Families
Infowars founder Alex Jones was ordered to pay another $473 million to the families of children killed in the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, adding to the $965 million he has already been told to pay.Jones had asserted for years that the 2012 attack, in which the shooter murdered 26 people, including 20 children, was a hoax meant to help the federal government confiscate citizens’ firearms. The conspiracy theorist must pay a combined …
Judge Freezes Alex Jones’ Assets As He Faces Over $1 Billion In Damages For Spreading Sandy Hook Conspiracy Theories
There were concerns Jones was “looting” his estate and stashing money in shell companies to avoid handing it over in damage payments, according to Bloomberg.
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