There are a total of 20 children that were murdered...all the parents plan to sue individually for their own defamation suit against Alex Jones.
This defamation award was only for the parents Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis.
Simply, 18 more to go or 18 x 750,000 = 13.5 million dollars while each defamation lawsuit (each count) is capped at 750,000.
That's how lawyers get around the Texas law that caps an individual defamation lawsuit. Lawyers will (as in this defamation lawsuit against Alex Jones) ask their clients to file individually instead of a class action (group) lawsuit.
In contrast, there's now the new issue of perjury that occurred during the trial. It will now most likely traverse into a criminal issue against Alex Jones. If convicted, he'll get a slap on the wrist...1 year instead of 2 years in prison.
Regardless, the world now knows he's a liar that stooped so low to enable his followers the ability to troll, stalk, harass and threaten the families of the murdered 20 children when he decided to give them their work addresses, home addresses and telephone numbers.
The guy is a troll and stupid that now needs to begin coughing up money to those parents.
wrbtrader
Another Defamation suit is underway in Connecticut with two other Defamation trials scheduled to begin next month...
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Aug. 16, 2022, 9:08 AM EDT / Source: Associated Press
By The Associated Press
Alex Jones must face defamation case in Connecticut despite bankruptcy filing, judge rules
An attorney for the plaintiffs praised the judge’s decision: "We’re grateful the bankruptcy court saw through Alex Jones’s brazen effort to block a jury from being empaneled and holding him accountable."
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — A federal bankruptcy judge on Monday cleared the way for a defamation lawsuit in Connecticut to proceed against Infowars host and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.
- The case was filed by relatives of some victims of the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Jones has falsely claimed that the nation’s deadliest school shooting — which killed 20 students and six educators — was a hoax.
However, Monday’s ruling by Judge Julie Manning essentially allows the plaintiffs to continue the defamation lawsuit against just Jones as an individual, without Free Speech Systems, a company owned by Jones and a defendant in the Connecticut case.
“The plaintiffs’ rights to have that process continue in the Connecticut Superior Court should not be disturbed,” Manning wrote in the decision, adding that the plaintiffs’ claims for damages were ready for trial.
A message was left seeking comment with Jones’ attorney, Norm Pattis.
Chris Mattei, an attorney for the plaintiffs, praised the bankruptcy judge’s decision. “We’re grateful the bankruptcy court saw through Alex Jones’s brazen effort to block a jury from being empaneled and holding him accountable. We look forward to trial,” he said in a written statement.
Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in Texas about a week before Jones’ lawyer sought to have the Connecticut case transferred.
A Texas jury this month ordered Jones to pay $45.2 million in punitive damages to the parents of one of the children killed at Sandy Hook, in addition to another $4.1 million he must pay for the suffering he put them through by claiming for years that the shooting was a hoax.
Jones’ attorneys plan to appeal and try to lower the amount. Meanwhile, besides the case in Connecticut, a trial for damages is pending in Texas that was filed by the parents of another child killed at Sandy Hook.
Before the trial in Texas, Jones had already been found liable in a separate defamation lawsuit in Texas and another in Connecticut by relatives of some of the Sandy Hook victims.
The Connecticut jury will decide what, if any, damages Jones owes in that case, although state law could also limit what he would have to pay.
- The two remaining trials are expected to begin next month, after juries are selected. Jury selection in the Connecticut case could resume this week, lawyers said.
wrbtrader