Thursday, December 12, 2024


Judge blocks Onion’s purchase of Alex Jones’ conspiracy site

Dietrich Knauth
Dec 12, 2024, updated Dec 12, 2024


A US bankruptcy judge has stopped parody news site the Onion from buying conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Infowars website, ruling that a bankruptcy auction did not result in the best possible bids.

Judge Christopher Lopez rejected Jones’ claims that the auction was plagued by “collusion”, at the end of a two-day hearing in Houston.

But he said the court-appointed bankruptcy trustee who ran the auction made “a good-faith error” by quickly asking for final offers for Infowars instead of encouraging more back-and-forth bidding between the Onion and a company affiliated with Jones’ supplement-selling businesses, which was the runner-up.

“This should have been opened back up, and it should have been opened back up for everybody,” Lopez said.

“It’s clear the trustee left the potential for a lot of money on the table.”

Lopez said neither of the two offers for Infowars were enough money given the scope of Jones’ debts. He told the trustee to work to resolve some of the disputes between the creditors before a new attempt to sell Infowars.

The Onion was named the winning bidder for Infowars in a November auction. Jones and First American United Companies, the Jones-affiliated company, had argued the sale process was tainted because the Onion received too much credit for having the support of families that won large court verdicts against Jones.

Jones declared bankruptcy in 2022 and was forced to liquidate his assets to pay $US1.3 billion ($A2 billion) in legal judgments to the families of 20 students and six staff members who were fatally shot in the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

Courts in Connecticut and Texas have ruled Jones defamed the families by making repeated false claims the mass shooting was staged as part of a government plot to take guns away from Americans.

The Onion has said it plans to relaunch Infowars in 2025 as a parody site filled with “noticeably less hateful disinformation” than before.

Jones’ lawyer Ben Broocks told Lopez at a hearing on Monday (US time) that the Onion only put up half as much cash as the $US3.5 million offer from First American United Companies, but boosted its bid with “smoke and mirrors” calculations.

The Connecticut-based Sandy Hook families, who are Jones’ largest creditors, augmented the Onion’s bid by agreeing to forgo some repayment from the Infowars sale so that other creditors could receive more money.

Christopher Murray, a court appointee trustee charged with selling Jones’ assets, testified on Tuesday that the auction was fair, and First American United Companies complained about the process only after learning that its bid was not chosen.

-AAP

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