Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Judge Allows Alex Jones To Reorganize Company


The production company of right-wing radio host Alex Jones can reorganize itself as a small business even though Jones owes $1.4 billion to the families of Sandy Hook school shooting victims, a Texas judge ruled Monday.

Bloomberg reports US Bankruptcy Judge Christopher M. Lopez agreed with Jones’ company, Free Speech Systems, which argued that it met the test as a small business when it filed for bankruptcy in July. The families and the US Trustee argued that Free Speech lost eligibility when Jones filed a related, personal bankruptcy a few months later.

The ruling means Free Speech, based in Austin, Texas, can retain the advantages of the small business bankruptcy rules, including the ability of Jones to keep ownership of the company. The families also won’t have the right to vote down a repayment plan they don’t like.

Jones is locked in legal battles with families of the school shooting victims, who have sued him for inflammatory comments he has made about the 2012 massacre. Jones has lost cases in Connecticut and Texas related to the shooting. The families are trying to collect about $1.4 billion from Jones.


Free Speech filed bankruptcy in July in a second attempt by companies controlled by Jones to force Sandy Hook families to resolve their fight in bankruptcy. Companies that owe less than $7.5 million in debt can use special rules designed to help small, owner-operated businesses clear debts without having to shut down, or turn over their equity.

Because Jones owns Free Speech, the small business designation should have been revoked when he filed his own bankruptcy case and it became clear he owed at least $1.4 billion to the families, Kyle J. Kimpler, a lawyer for the families, said in court. Lopez disagreed and ruled the $1.4 billion debt didn’t count toward the Free Speech debt limit because Jones’s case was filed months later.

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