Norman Alexander
Penultimate Amazing
The Alex Jones Memorial 1.5 Billion Dollar Slander Loss Settlement Fund and Comedy Shack.Will it look any different?
Perhaps they should rename it InPoeWars.
The Alex Jones Memorial 1.5 Billion Dollar Slander Loss Settlement Fund and Comedy Shack.Will it look any different?
Perhaps they should rename it InPoeWars.
A lot of people are asking that question and similar ones. X/Twitter's legal theory is novel.If the poster owns the content, doesn't it include naturally the handle they chose and posted, as well as followers who followed the content?




uh, yeah. Exactly who made that trial a farce, Pattis? It wasn't the parents who thought they could ignore discovery motions for years and years. It wasn't the parent's lawyers who finally sent the wrong info showing Jones was a complete liar."We had hoped the Appellate Court would have seen through the charade and farce that this trial became. It didn’t," Pattis said, adding that he plans to appeal to the Connecticut Supreme Court.
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looks like the judge ignored the wishes of the victims
Wonder if the victims who pledged their compensation share to Jones' other creditors as part of the Jones consortium bid (that lost) will now withdraw those pledges. So Jones will have a far lower pot of money to bid with next time. Which means the Onion will (should) win even easier next time.
Although The Onion's cash offer was lower than that of First United American, it also included a pledge by many of the Sandy Hook families to forgo $750,000 of the auction proceeds due to them and give it to other creditors.
Whoops! My dyslexia read it the other way round.The families were supporting the Onion bid...
What is it worth people like Trump and Jones that they get so many stupid decisions in their favour.![]()
Judge rejects the sale of Infowars to The Onion
At the end of a lengthy two-day hearing in a Texas courtroom, Judge Christopher Lopez criticised the auction process as flawed and said the outcome "left a lot of money on the table" for families of victims of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.www.abc.net.au
But did the judge accept the offer from Jones' buddies?Well it looks like The Onion got denied by the judge. I'm not sure what the next move is but the judge determined that the offer from Jones' buddies was better than the deal worked out from The Onion. Taking the offer from The Onion would have "left money on the table". So a huge, huge win for Jones for sure.
But did the judge accept the offer from Jones' buddies?
No that's not the ruling at all. The judge ruled that the auction was run fairly and impartially, but that the liquidators should have given more time to allow for newer and better bids to be submitted so that more of the value could be realised for the creditors.Well it looks like The Onion got denied by the judge. I'm not sure what the next move is but the judge determined that the offer from Jones' buddies was better than the deal worked out from The Onion. Taking the offer from The Onion would have "left money on the table". So a huge, huge win for Jones for sure.
No that's not the ruling at all. The judge ruled that the auction was run fairly and impartially, but that the liquidators should have given more time to allow for newer and better bids to be submitted so that more of the value could be realised for the creditors.
My guess is that the same process will be run again but over a longer time period.
Lopez said there was a lack of transparency in the bidding process and too much confusion about The Onion’s bid, and he expressed concern that the amount of money offered was too low.
The Onion’s parent company, Global Tetrahedron, submitted a $1.75 million cash offer with plans to kick Jones out and relaunch Infowars in January as a parody. The bid also included a deal with many of the Sandy Hook families for them to forgo $750,000 of their auction proceeds and give it to other creditors.
Lopez 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 by the Onion and auction competitor First American United Companies, affiliated with Jones’s 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.”