Website ๐ https://has2see.com/
Telegram ๐ https://t.me/has2see_channel
AUSTIN, Texas โ When viral lies harm private people, are the courts their best refuge? A trial to decide how much the conspiracy broadcaster Alex Jones must pay a Sandy Hook family for defaming them attempts to answer that question.
Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of Jesse Lewis, 6, who died at Sandy Hook, are requesting $150 million in compensatory damages for years of torment and threats they endured in the aftermath of Mr. Jonesโs lies about them on Infowars, his Austin-based website and broadcast. They are suing him in the first of three trials in which juries will decide how much he must pay relatives of 10 people killed in the Dec. 14, 2012, mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., for spreading lies that they were actors in a โfalse flagโ operation, planned by the government as a pretext for gun control.
Last year Mr. Jones lost a series of Sandy Hook defamation cases by default, setting the stage for the damages trials.
Mr. Heslin, Ms. Lewis and J.T. Lewis, Jesseโs brother, will testify this week.
More important than money, the parents said, is societyโs verdict on a culture in which viral misinformation damages lives and destroys reputations, yet those who spread it are seldom held accountable. โSpeech is free, but lies you have to pay for,โ Mark Bankston, the parentsโ lawyer, told the jury in his opening statement last week. โThis is a case about creating change.โ
But the trial demonstrates how difficult it is to counter the views of die-hard conspiracy theorists. Over nearly three days of testimony last week, Daria Karpova, Infowarsโ corporate representative, advanced bogus claims, refusing even to rule out the possibility that the trial itself was a staged event. She cast Mr. Jones as the victim, worrying over his health and saying the Sandy Hook lawsuits have cost him โmillions.โ
That claim allowed the familiesโ lawyers to share records with the jury showing that Infowars reaped revenues of more than $50 million annually in recent years.
At the heart of the trial is a June 2017 episode of NBCโs โSunday Night with Megyn Kelly,โ in which Ms. Kelly profiled Mr. Jones. In the broadcast Mr. Heslin protested Mr. Jonesโs denial of the shooting. He recalled his last moments with Jesse, saying, โI held my son with a bullet hole through his head.โ
Afterward, Mr. Jones and Owen Shroyer, a lieutenant of Mr. Jones at Infowars, aired shows implying that Mr. Heslin had lied. โWill there be a clarification from Heslin or Megyn Kelly?โ Mr. Shroyer said on Infowars. โI wouldnโt hold your breath.โ
The Sandy Hook School Massacre
Lawyers say the three trials hold lessons for other cases against conspiracy-minded defendants, from the Jan. 6 insurrectionists to Trump allies sued for falsely claiming that voting machine manufacturers helped โstealโ the 2020 presidential election. Mr. Jones is also under scrutiny for his role in events surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.
โThese Sandy Hook parents have spent years of their lives and sacrificed whatever is left of their privacy to shine a light on peddlers of disinformation, not only to seek justice for their children, but to make folks who profit from tragedy consider the consequences of their actions,โ said Karen Burgess, a trial lawyer at Burgess Law in Austin who represented Dominion Voting Systems when it was sued by Texas conspiracy theorists who said the company helped rig the 2020 vote. Facing sanctions from the court, the conspiracy theorists dropped their suit against the company.
Lawyers for the Sandy Hook families say a verdict, expected this week in the first trial, could send a signal to other conspiracy purveyors about the cost of online lies and set into motion a chain of events that could shut Infowars down.
Still, the path forward is not clear. On Friday Mr. Jones put Infowarsโ parent company, Free Speech Systems, into Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which usually automatically halts all pending litigation. Free Speech Systems, however, requested that the bankruptcy court lift that automatic stay, so the trial in progress can continue to a verdict. That motion is set for a hearing Monday morning in a bankruptcy court in Victoria, Texas. Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of the Travis County District Court indicated that the trial would proceed.
Lawyers for the families say a big jury award this week along with the bankruptcy could threaten Infowarsโ operations, but many details about Mr. Jonesโs current finances are murky.
For now the filing puts on hold the remaining two Sandy Hook damages trials, both scheduled for September.
In court last week, Mr. Jonesโs lawyers launched a defense advanced by other defendants in politically charged defamation cases: Our national discourse has become so polluted by disinformation, they said, that who really knows what is true or false?
Federico Andino Reynal, Mr. Jonesโs lawyer, blamed errors in mainstream media reports about Sandy Hook for the bogus theories spread by Mr. Jones.
โHe had seen what he perceived as so many lies and so many cover-ups and so much hand-washing of the facts that he had become biased,โ Mr. Reynal said. โHe was looking at the world through dirty glasses. And if you look at the world through dirty glasses, everything you see is dirty.โ
But Infowars staffers testified that they did not check easily available facts about Sandy Hook โ or much else โ before broadcasting their incendiary assertions. Lawyers for Mr. Heslin and Ms. Lewis, using internal emails and testimony from Infowars staffers, showed how Mr. Jones and his top lieutenants ignored multiple warnings that continuing to broadcast Sandy Hook lies would harm the survivors and land Infowars in legal trouble.
In a videotaped deposition, a former employee, Rob Jacobson, said he repeatedly delivered these warnings to Infowars staffers, โonly to be received with laughter and jokes.โ
The NBC episode, which was shown in court, was particularly striking. In it Mr. Jones made a variety of damaging false claims, including dismissing a 2017 suicide bombing that killed 22 adults and children at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, as an attack on โa bunch of liberal trendies,โ who support โIslamistโ immigration.
Mr. Shroyer also testified that he failed to fact-check a false report on the episode defaming Mr. Heslin because he did not have the time.
At the trial last week, Mr. Jonesโs seat at the defense table often remained empty. His lawyer, Mr. Reynal, has declined to say whether he will testify, adding that Mr. Jones is in charge of his defense. Mr. Reynal told the judge that Mr. Jonesโs absences were because of a โmedical conditionโ that Mr. Jones, speaking outside the courthouse, described as an untreated hernia.
But he continues to broadcast his show, where he and Mr. Shroyer derided the trial last week, violating the judgeโs order not to comment on it. When Mr. Jones did come to court, he drove up in a motorcade and sat in the courtroom surrounded by bodyguards. Last week Mr. Reynal thrust a raised middle finger into the face of the familiesโ lawyer in a dispute over exhibits that nearly ended in a fistfight.
The trial proceedings have taken a toll on Mr. Heslin and Ms. Lewis. They hired security after they spotted people waiting for them outside their hotel, and they have heard Infowars loyalists describe them as pawns in Mr. Jonesโs pursuit of online clout.
During his testimony in court on Thursday, Mr. Shroyer suggested that it was the lawsuits, not his and Mr. Jonesโ lies, that exacerbated the familiesโ suffering. โIโm very upset that this continues,โ he said, citing its โtremendous negative effects on my career and livelihood.โ