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Jones’ personal social media sites, including his account on the social platform X, which has 2.8 million followers, would not be included. Murray also is expected to sell many of Jones’ personal assets. The Sandy Hook families who won the Connecticut lawsuit want Jones to lose his personal social media accounts. It’s unclear how much money would be raised by selling Infowars and Jones’ assets, and how much money the Sandy Hook families would get. If the debt is found to be valid, that could reduce any amount the Sandy Hook families ultimately get from the liquidations.
Persons: Alex Jones, Sandy, Christopher Lopez, Jones, , ” Jones, Sandy Hook, , Jones ’, Lopez, Christopher Murray, Murray, Christopher Mattei, “ Alex Jones, ” Mattei, , PQPR, wasn’t Organizations: Elementary, Free Speech Systems, Systems, PQPR Holdings, Speech Systems Locations: Houston, Austin , Texas, Newtown, Connecticut, Texas and Connecticut
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones filed for bankruptcy, but he wants to be paid $520,000 per year. Jones owes around $1.5 billion to the relatives of the Sandy Hook shooting victims. Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems — which he fully owns — filed for bankruptcy separately in December and July, respectively. As part of the bankruptcy proceedings, Free Speech Systems filed a reorganization proposal on Tuesday. It sources some of its products from a company called PQPR Holdings, to which Free Speech Systems owes $54 million.
WaPo reported Alex Jones transferred millions from InfoWars' parent company ahead of its bankruptcy. Jones was ordered to pay nearly $1.5 billion in damages related to lies he spread about Sandy Hook. "In the middle of this lawsuit, they started documenting debts that had no evidence of existing beforehand," Sandy Hook attorney Avi Moshenberg told the Post. Jones' lies about the Sandy Hook shooting have spread pervasively since he began amplifying conspiracy theories that the shooting was faked and the victims' families were crisis actors. Representatives for Jones and Raymond Battaglia, a lawyer for Free Speech Systems, did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.
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