Sandy Hook Parents of Slain Children Sue Alex Jones for Defamation

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Did Reynal personally give Bankston the texts or could it have been some paralegal/assistant who had nothing to lose/hated Alex Jobes so they were like “f*%# it” and “accidentally” gave the texts?


Bankston said "Did you know that your lawyers messed up and sent me your entire cell phone texting history 12 days ago?" Bankston asked. "You know what perjury is right?" No indication it was a paralegal. Also Bankston sent Reynal a written notice of mistaken transmission of the contents of the phone as soon as it was sent, and Reynal did absolutely nothing. So if Alex Jones looked shocked that the opposing counsel had the contents of his phone, he shouldn't have been--his lawyer should have warned him, because he already knew.

https://abovethelaw.com/2022/08/alex-joness-lawyer-face-plants-in-epic-discovery-fail/
Who among us hasn’t forwarded the entire contents of our client’s phone to opposing counsel? And then ignored that counsel’s written notice of the mistaken transmission, allowing our client to be ignominiously impeached on the witness stand?

“Your attorneys messed up,” Bankston told Jones on the witness stand. “Twelve days ago they sent me your whole phone, and that is how I know you lied to me about not having any messages about Sandy Hook.”

Apparently, Reynal put the digital copy of Jones’s iPhone in a shared Dropbox folder, and then blew it off when Bankston sent a HEY, IDIOT notice. And now, it’s too late.

Bankston then went on to pull out texts about Sandy Hook, something that opposing counsel said did not exist. Ditto for emails, immediately disproving Jones’s testimony about not having an email account. And Jones’s vamping about his skimpy profit margins couldn’t survive the introduction of a glowing memo from Jones’s bookkeeper about all the money they were raking in on prepper meals.

“I must have dictated that to my assistant,” Jones mumbled, when confronted with incontrovertible proof that he does in fact use email.

Faced with Bankston’s demand to read a text from Infowars host Paul Joseph Watson referring to Sandy Hook, Jones remembered that he was “ill” and was overtaken by a coughing fit.

At the conclusion of Jones’s testimony, Reynal sat quietly staring at his hands and contemplating his life choices while Bankston’s team slapped him on the back and congratulated him.

“You know what nobody’s talked about yet?” Bankston said next to what he surely knew was a hot mike. “What happens when that phone goes to law enforcement?”


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.


But people have to remember that this is only two families in the current suit. There is nothing that will stop other Sandy Hook families from filing suit on Alex Jones after this. They just have to wait for the dust to settle, figure out if he will be in jail or not and if he has any assets remaining. If he removes himself from the management of the three companies filing bankruptcy and if they have anything left after the bankruptcy and this ruling, they can determine whether it is worthwhile to sue him again.
Anonymous
45.2 million
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.


Good.

He deserves to pay every single penny of it. Slandering the parents of dead children to grift the stupids and sell them guns.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.


Why is there a cap? He deserves to be forced to lick latrines clean as his only source of food for the rest of his life. Very disappointed it's that low.
Anonymous
Will the families really see any money?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Will the families really see any money?


How much they will see is yet to be sorted out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:45.2 million


Just to one family!! That’s amazing and I’m proud of those Sandy hook families for standing up for truth. Although jones’ court appointed accountant testified that he received like $9 mn in crypto Donations so I don’t know how they’re going to be able to track his funds since he’s so shady.
Anonymous
The judge says she is not preventing the Sandy Hook lawyers from giving Jones’s text messages to law enforcement and the Jan. 6 House committee. It’s a very good day for truth and the law and the universe trending towards justice.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:45.2 million


Just to one family!! That’s amazing and I’m proud of those Sandy hook families for standing up for truth. Although jones’ court appointed accountant testified that he received like $9 mn in crypto Donations so I don’t know how they’re going to be able to track his funds since he’s so shady.


Crypto can be traced and seized.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.


Why is there a cap? He deserves to be forced to lick latrines clean as his only source of food for the rest of his life. Very disappointed it's that low.


Because Texas doesn’t like plaintiffs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.


Why is there a cap? He deserves to be forced to lick latrines clean as his only source of food for the rest of his life. Very disappointed it's that low.


Because Texas doesn’t like plaintiffs.[/quote

Because juries have been too crazy in the past.
Anonymous
Am I understanding it right? Alex, who smells like a sewer on a hot day, had the confidential psychiatric records for nine Sandy Hook parents on his phone? Why would he have that information?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Did I read there’s a separate trial for punitive damages? Please no more. That judge has shown so much restraint. I would punch him the nose mid- lie.


Not a separate trial. A separate decision. That will be given tomorrow (Friday).

+1 and there’s a statutory cap on punitive damages so the max is $40M.

So the jury awarded as much as they possibly could. Good.


Why is there a cap? He deserves to be forced to lick latrines clean as his only source of food for the rest of his life. Very disappointed it's that low.


Because Texas doesn’t like plaintiffs.


Because juries have been too crazy in the past.

Juries like the one that awarded the settlement to the Governor?
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