Sandy Hook Families Seek $2.75T from Alex Jones
bloomberg.com> They reached the sum by multiplying the state law’s $5,000 per-violation fine by the 550 million social media exposures Jones’s audience received on his Facebook, YouTube and Twitter accounts in the three years following a school shooting that claimed the lives of 20 first graders and six educators in 2012.
Is this defamation calculation valid? Is the calculation based on the number of people who listen or read? If so, they would need to see how many actually viewed as not every follower sees every post by people they follow.
Maybe one of the nice upsides is that these social media firms are forced to reveal the source to how they display posts.
I think the amount they receive can only go down in court, so you want to start with the highest number you can justify in any way. This is just a way to get the initial number up.
it’s cockthumb
I would assume the per violation has nothing to do with his many people witnessed it.
From the article:
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They reached the trillion-dollar sum by multiplying the state law’s up-to $5,000 per-violation fine by the 550 million social media exposures Jones’s audience received on his Facebook, YouTube and Twitter accounts in the three years following a school shooting that claimed the lives
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So if you argue that each post to each person is an instance of aa violation as it's an attempted sale of his products, then they multiply out that way.
It's the lawyers role to advocate for a particular reading of the law.
You could argue it other ways too, eg. every actual sale, or every post is a single instance of an attempted sale (but in aggregate, rather than per individual).
But, I'm not a lawyer, and I'm interpreting the law as written in that except from the Bloomberg article, not the statute, so, don't put much legal weight on the above.
This is a bit like if you stood in the town square, yelled out "Bob's a pedophile, and btw, buy my book" and Bob charged you for each individual person who happened to be in earshot.
But, you know, it happened on the big bad internet, so let's just throw all precedent out and act like it's different.
Anyway, we get the point: 9/11 really was an inside job after all.
That’s why I quotes the part of the article that goes against my assumption and they estimate based on the readers.
One can seek $X dollars, but collecting is another story. He'll probably declare bankruptcy at some point, if he hasn't already.
He already declared bankruptcy, they said during the trial — their goal is that he never can work again
I don't follow conspiracy theorists or mainstream corporate news. The problem with eye-for-an-eye is it creates a blind martyr and a blind world. It's curious how hurt feelings translates into compensation. If so, there's an endless line out the door to claim their golden ticket. Freedom of speech in an open society, no matter how reprehensible the speaker, means freedom of listening and turning the channel. Or become like China with top-down censorship and prior restraint. You don't have to agree or be on the side of some conspiracy jackass to recognize that going after him makes him more (in)famous. Ignoring him would been the best move. Freedom of speech means taking the shit with the sugar. I blame greedy lawyers for capitalizing on traumatized people, a frivolous court system that doesn't toss this, and lazy communication majors for exploiting the situation and propping up AJ.
theres no problem too big or too small that enough lawyers cant fix
If so, that's quite stupid. That's more money that the richest person in the world has, and it's incommensurate with the impact of Jones's behavior. It serves nobody- not even the families whose children were killed.
I mean… if anyone watched the trial this whole thing is a joke. He may have done something bad, but the trial was Soviet level.
I followed the trial and this is the way the “trial” went:
1. Plaintiffs / Judge claimed he had evidence (marketing material on sandy hook - claimed he never had marketing material)
2. Jones said he didn’t
3. discovery didn’t prove the evidence ever existed
4. Judge then said “guilty by default, because he must have destroyed the evidence”
5. Jury trial commences for damages - judge tells Jones he can’t claim not to have evidence, can’t claim innocence, and a whole list of other stuff
6. Jury trial talks about a bunch of unrelated stuff that other people said.
7. A few times you see a clip where Jones mention “sandy hook is a psyop” or “this parent laughing before fake crying is a crisis actor” (paraphrasing obviously). But never mentions people by name, nor outside what is presented on the news (CNN for instance)
If anyone knows about defamation. (1) defaulting never happens (2) you have to name the person and have to claim an explicit in the defamation that you know to be false, with the purpose of causing damage.
It was real interesting to watch, but I imagine it’ll be overturned
He didn't submit to discovery in 6 years.
So default judgment, and he goes to court for damages (default mean he is automatically guilty if i understand right? Us law is weird. In my country the police would've seized then copied everything). From what I've managed to get (from a non English source), his lawyer then submitted too much and did not retract in time, so the plaintiffs have now more evidence than asked during the initial discovery. Maybe it's wrong (this was humor so this might have been exaggeration, but the guy research his stuff pretty well).
> He didn't submit to discovery in 6 years
You must be unfamiliar with the case; during the case they were bringing up Jones emails, texts, budgets, transaction history, deposition video. They even accidentally were sharing communications from between Jones and his attorney.
Even a search shows multiple articles on this without having to watch a second of court tv or read the docket.
https://news.yahoo.com/alex-jones-sits-depositions-sandy-185...
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/alex-jones-lost-two-sandy-hoo...
There’s a lot more, obviously he tried fighting producing all this. But in the end you can read / watch a lot of the information yourself. The trial had it as evidence.
> Us law is weird.
A little bit of explanation - this is a civil case for damages as it relates to defamation.
What that means is those suing Jones need to prove (1) Jones factually lied about them (meaning he said - “person X did Y” and Y is a lie. if he said it as an opinion though it’s fine: “in my opinion person X did Y”). (2) In addition, if they’re a public figure (ie on the news), it has to be actual malice - ie lying intentionally, with the intent to do harm.
In this case, none of that was adjudicated by a jury. Instead a judge defaulted Jones. Defaulting is when you’re found guilty because you refused to stand trial (aka show up to court)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/default_judgment
Jones was responding to summons and providing documentation. You can read the court filings and watch the depositions yourself. The judge just said “you didn’t provide what we think you have” - defaulted! (Btw this doesn’t mean he’s guilty, judgement can’t be rendered with no trial).
That was the most crazy part of all this.
The default was because Jones claimed he didn’t have something and although the plaintiffs never proved he did, the judge ruled Jones refused to provide the data (again, which was never proven to exist).
Like i said, i don't really follow that much us politics, i only heard of it by a non English speaker who made jokes about that.
Thanks for the information though.
I believe this was a civil case, not a legal one, so the police don't have the power to seize and copy everything.
This is the first of these takes I've heard; seems most of us are just taking third hand hearsay on this one. I've always found Jones entertaining, though more interesting back in the 9/11 Truth and Bilderberg group days than anything recently as he seems to have gone a bit loopier than ever. I wasn't even terribly opposed to a hefty fine for defamation if he did what he's accused to have done, though the idea of it being a billion dollars is a bit absurd (Facebook, for reference, got hit with a large fine of $5 billion a couple years back).
I'll have to get to doing some digging, because if it's as you say, this is even more of a travesty than it seemed.
As for this new total, well, this makes the Napster lawsuits against children of yore seem sane by comparison, and much of the same logic seems to have been used for how the figure was calculated. And the idea that we're actually talking about the events the trial is supposedly about rather than Jones' entire history of being a thorn in the side of some powerful people is clearly a lie. If anything, I have to wonder how anyone doesn't see this as suggesting that maybe he was onto a thing or two they'd previously written off that he's being publicly made an example of for exposing.
I don't understand the fuss apart from the media and lawyers dancing on misfortune to throw salt in someone's wounds. You either have freedom of speech or you don't. He didn't shout fire in a theater and didn't encourage a violent insurrection. There's either a marketplace of ideas or there's a purity test and truth-deciders and approved sentiment-shapers like MSNBC and Faux News.
Right: nobody, not even billionaires, can afford to do this ever again. Seems like a win condition to me.
Except that's not what civil court is for. It's for obtaining redress for damages suffered.
$10 million, or even $100 million, and I'd say these victims must have suffered a lot...but very well, maybe they did. $1 billion? This is an abuse of the court system, and is the sort of money large corporations get fined when they do something really bad. Facebook famously got hit for $5 billion over Cambridge Analytica in 2019. OJ Simpson, on the other hand, paid $70 million when a person actually died. Even with inflation, getting to $1 billion is stretching things well past the breaking point.
I respectfully disagree. As a father I am amazed Alex Jones is still walking free, still walking, not still.
Him being jailed, and given an impossibly large fine, are two distinct things entirely.