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Tag: Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting

  • Parents share emotional look inside empty bedrooms of children killed in school shootings

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    Jada Scruggs sometimes wonders what she and her husband Chad will do with the empty room left behind by her daughter, 9-year-old Hallie, who was killed in a 2023 Nashville school shooting.

    Hallie’s room remains as she left it that Monday morning. For her parents, Hallie’s bedroom is a devastating reminder of what was taken from them, and of who their daughter was. There are Legos, Tennessee football memorabilia, and the books Hallie read together with her mom at night. 

    “All these physical things are tangible ways of reminding me, like, she was real. She was here. She lived with us,” Scruggs said. “In some ways, this room kinda holds the space for her.”

    Hallie’s bedroom is one of several documented by CBS News’ correspondent Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp, who spent the last seven years asking parents whose children were killed in school shootings for permission to take pictures of all the empty rooms they’ve left behind.

    “Empty Rooms”

    Hallie was killed along with two classmates, Evelyn Dieckhaus and William Kinney, in a shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville on March 27, 2023. Hallie’s father, Chad Scruggs, was drawn to his daughter’s room the day she was killed.

    “I went into her room to lay on her bed to smell. I knew that would go,” he said. 

    Jada Scruggs said she visits her daughter’s room less frequently now, but her feelings when she goes in haven’t changed. To Chag Scruggs, the room now feels like an “indication of absence.” 

    “It feels more like a relic now,” he said.

    A photo of Hallie Scruggs

    60 Minutes


    Some 2,000 miles away, in Santa Clarita, California, Gracie Muehlberger’s bedroom serves as a reminder for her parents. The 15-year-old, killed six years ago in the Saugus High School shooting, adored her brothers and her Vans sneakers. 

    Parents Cindy and Bryan Muehlberger went to her room right after they got home from the hospital. 

    “That’s where I spent, like, the next week or two. I slept in her bed,” Cindy Muehlberger said.

    Dominic Blackwell, a 14-year-old killed alongside Gracie, left behind a room filled with SpongeBob stuffed animals. A basket of his laundry still waits to be washed. 

    A toothpaste tube remains uncapped in the bathroom of 14-year-old Alyssa Alhadeff, who was killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in 2018. 

    There’s a library book, 13 years overdue, in the bedroom of Charlotte Bacon, who was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012. 

    Why it was important to document the rooms left behind 

    The rooms are among eight that were photographed as part of the project created by Hartman, who began covering these tragedies for CBS News 28 years ago. He first covered a shooting at a high school in Pearl, Mississippi, two years before the massacre at Columbine High School. 

    At the time, the shooting was big news, with ongoing coverage. Hartman said that’s often not the case for school shootings today. 

    “It still gets coverage, but it’s usually a day or two. And people forget about them, I’d say, by the end of the week, many times,” Hartman said. 

    That is what sparked the idea for his project.

    Click here to explore the interactive feature.

    So seven years ago, he began writing letters to parents asking to photograph their murdered children’s rooms. 

    “I don’t think there’s really a better way to get to know a kid and to remember a life than to look around that room, to stand in that space,” he said. 

    “I wanted to shake people out of this numbness that I was feeling whenever there was a school shooting,” Hartman said. “I was moving on quickly. I was forgetting the names of the children who were lost. And I knew the country was doing the same.”

    Eight families whose children were killed in five different schools agreed to let photographer Lou Bopp into their kids’ rooms. A recent exhibit in New York displayed some of the 10,000 photos he’s taken.

    “I’m trying to take a picture of a child who’s not there,” Bopp said.

    The photographs serve as a reminder that while the country moves on, the families left behind never do, Hartman said. 

    The project is now the subject of a documentary premiering on Netflix Dec. 1. It follows Hartman and Bopp as they travel across the country, visiting rooms.

    What’s next for parents and the project

    The Muehlbergers were considering moving when they got Hartman’s letter in 2024 but they didn’t know if they could leave Gracie’s room behind. 

    “It’s, like, do you take a lotta pictures of it and then try to recreate it somewhere else? We didn’t know what to do with it. And it really wasn’t until this opportunity to work with Steve on this film that we started feeling a peace about it,” Bryan Muehlberger said. 

    Earlier this year, the Muehlbergers sold their house and packed up Gracie’s room. They found mementos, artwork, and cards she had made that they hadn’t seen in years. For now, they’ve placed them in a storage unit, while they build a new life in Georgia.

    They’ve designated an outdoor area on the plot of land where they’re building a new home as “Gracie’s Point.” 

    “So peaceful, which is what we were looking for,” Cindy Muehlberger said. 

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie's Point

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie’s Point

    60 Minutes


    For Hartman, the project isn’t over. 

    “If parents want us to, we’ll continue to document the rooms, just so they have the pictures,” Hartman said. “I wish this project would end, but I don’t anticipate it will.”

    More than 160 children have been killed in school shootings across the U.S. since the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

    Back in Nashville, the Scruggs have no plans to change Hallie’s room but they did send some of her drawings and journals to an artist, Brenda Bogart, who created a collage portrait of her. 

    “Everything on this canvas is something that was made by Hallie’s hand,” Jada Scruggs said. “Brenda went through and noticed a theme of, ‘I am happy. I am happy. I am happy.’”

    Chad and Jada Scruggs hope the images of Hallie’s room will help people better understand the person she was. . 

    “This is not a generic person, you know? It’s someone that uniquely bore God’s image in the world and [was] irreplaceable,” Chad Scruggs said. “We just want you to know her, you know? She’s worth being known.”

    If you or someone you know is struggling with the loss of a child, support networks are available.  

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  • Memorializing the bedrooms of children killed in school shootings:

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    Since the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, 13 years ago, more than 160 children have been killed in school shootings across the U.S. They’ve left behind devastated families, and friends, and empty bedrooms they once filled with life. For many parents, these rooms have become sanctuaries: a tangible link to a child they can still feel but no longer hold. Steve Hartman, a veteran CBS News correspondent, and Lou Bopp, a photographer, have spent the last seven years asking parents whose children have been killed for permission to take pictures of the empty rooms they’ve left behind. No easy task; they are, after all, portraits of a child who is no longer there.

    Up a flight of stairs in their Nashville home, Chad and Jada Scruggs took us to see their daughter Hallie’s room. It remains as she left it one Monday morning two and a half years ago.

    Chad Scruggs: I don’t think anything’s changed.

    Hallie Scruggs loved Legos, Tennessee football, and hiding things in a toy safe from her three older brothers. The books she and her mom read together at night are still stacked by her bed. A school project, with important milestones in her life, a reminder Hallie was just 9 years old.

    Chad Scruggs: First tooth, first soccer game, first Tennessee game. 

    Anderson Cooper: That was a– that was a– a milestone. 

    Jada and Chad Scruggs: Yeah. 

    Chad Scruggs: This is the first time they held her.

    Jada Scruggs: I love that picture.

    Chad and Jada Scruggs with Anderson Cooper in Hallie’s room

    60 Minutes


    Jada Scruggs: I do wonder, sometimes, like, what will we do with this room, eventually. All these physical things are tangible ways of reminding me, like, she was real. She was here. She lived with us. In some ways, this room kinda holds the space for her.

    Chad Scruggs: Yeah.

    Jada Scruggs: And so–

    Anderson Cooper: And it still does.

    Jada and Chad Scruggs: Yeah. Yeah.

    Hallie was killed along with two classmates, Evelyn Dieckhaus and William Kinney, in a shooting at The Covenant School in Nashville in 2023.

    Anderson Cooper: What has grief been like, for you?

    Chad Scruggs: It felt like everything collapsed, everything, internally, pain that– I mean, gosh. It’s just hard to endure. And then, you know, you have to relearn how to do everything, like how to eat, how to sleep. And you just have a– new relationship with pain, and sadness, and anger. There’s been joy, too, but– the– the sadness– was– has been– was just, I mean, overwhelming.

    Chad is a pastor at the church that’s part of The Covenant School. He was drawn to Hallie’s room the day she was killed.

    Chad Scruggs: I went into her room to lay on her bed to smell. I knew that would go. And I wanted, you know–

    Anderson Cooper: You knew that– you knew the smell would dissipate?

    Chad Scruggs: Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. And her blankie was there and everything was there.

    Anderson Cooper: And you could smell her, that day?

    Chad Scruggs: Oh, yeah. Absolutely. Yeah. That was true probably, for a week or two after. So you’re trying to get her back. And it’s not possible. But you don’t believe that. And so anything that– that draws that possibility closer, I wanted to be there for that, so– yeah. I went in, just laid on her bed, and cried by myself.

    Chad and Jada Scruggs

    Chad and Jada Scruggs

    60 Minutes


    Anderson Cooper: Has your relationship to the room changed over time?

    Jada Scruggs: Maybe, it’s not as frequent that I go up there, but the feelings haven’t changed, when I go in the room. You know, it kind of captures all the feelings of sadness and joy, just because it’s– it’s a capsule of time.

    Chad Scruggs: I think initially, that room was for me, an indication of, like, presence. And now, it feels more of an indication of absence.

    Jada Scruggs: Absence, yeah.

    Chad Scruggs: You know. It feels more like a relic now. 

    Anderson Cooper: Like a relic?

    Chad Scruggs: A relic. 

    Anderson Cooper: Yeah. 

    Some 2,000 miles away, in Santa Clarita, California, another room, another child killed. 

    This is Gracie Muehlberger. She was 15. She adored her brothers and her Vans sneakers. She was killed six years ago in the Saugus High School shooting. Cindy and Bryan Muehlberger are her parents. 

    Anderson Cooper: Do you remember the first time you went into Gracie’s room after–

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right when we got home from the hospital.

    Anderson Cooper: You went right to her room?

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right to her room. And that’s where I spent, like, the next week or two. I slept in her bed. I just–it’s the closest I could feel to her, so. 

    Anderson Cooper: Did that feeling though of the room providing comfort, did that last for a long time?

    Cindy Muehlberger: Yes.

    Bryan Muehlberger: Oh yeah–

    Cindy Muehlberger: Always. Yeah.

    Bryan Muehlberger: Always.

    Gracie Muehlberger and Hallie Scruggs’ rooms are two of eight that were photographed as part of the project begun by Steve Hartman, who began covering these tragedies for CBS News 28 years ago. This was his first, a shooting at a high school in Pearl, Mississippi, two years before the massacre at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado. 

    Steve Hartman

    Steve Hartman

    60 Minutes


    Steve Hartman: It was news, at the time. A school shooting was actually big news.

    Anderson Cooper: As opposed to now?

    Steve Hartman: As opposed to now. It still gets coverage, but it’s usually a day or two. And people forget about them, I’d say, by the end of the week, many times.

    Anderson Cooper: Initially, in your mind, what was the idea?

    Steve Hartman: I wanted to shake people out of this numbness that I’ve– that I was feeling whenever there was a school shooting. Now, I was moving on quickly. I was forgetting the names of the children who were lost. And I knew the country was doing the same.

    So seven years ago, he began writing letters to parents asking to photograph their murdered children’s rooms. 

    Steve Hartman: Because when you go into a kid’s room, you go into my kid’s room, you see their whole history. You see every dream, every desire, everything they value. It’s all there on the walls and sitting on the shelves.

    Anderson Cooper: Or scattered on the floor.

    Steve Hartman: Or scattered on the floor, in some cases. It’s all there. And I don’t think there’s really a better way to get to know a kid and to remember a life than to look around that room, to stand in that space.

    Eight families whose children were killed in five different schools agreed to let photographer Lou Bopp into their kids’ rooms. At a recent exhibit in New York, he showed us some of the 10,000 photos he’s taken.

    Lou Bopp: You know I’m trying to take a picture of a– of a– of a child who’s not there.

    Dominic Blackwell’s room is still filled with Spongebob. He was killed, along with Gracie Muehlberger, at Saugus High School. Dominic was 14. A basket of his laundry still waits to be washed. A toothpaste tube remains uncapped in the bathroom of 14-year-old Alyssa Alhadeff, killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

    Charlotte Bacon loved pink. She was 6, killed at Sandy Hook. There’s a library book in her room that’s now 13 years overdue.

    Lou Bopp: If that’s not a little girl’s room, I don’t know what is. 

    Lou Bopp: And even this. This to me, it’s so poignant, the way the head is tilted down. 

    Anderson Cooper: It’s such a reminder– that while everybody else moves on– from what is a story to them the– the families never move on.

    Lou Bopp

    Lou Bopp took thousands of photos for the project.

    60 Minutes


    Steve Hartman: That’s part of the reason the families did agree because it’s very frustrating for them when the country moves on. And they certainly haven’t moved on and will never move on.

    Anderson Cooper: I think there’s such weight in– for these parents in being the holders of the memory, that they are the only ones who remember–excuse me–

    Steve Hartman: It’s okay. What are you thinking about?

    Anderson Cooper: Whew. I’ve been in a lot of these rooms, as well. And there’s such sadness in being the last ones left to remember everything about this child.

    Steve Hartman: And that’s why they can’t surrender the rooms, because you surrender the rooms and that’s just another piece of their kid that’s gone.

    Steve Hartman’s project is now the subject of an upcoming documentary on Netflix. It follows him and Lou Bopp as they travel across the country, visiting rooms, including Dominic Blackwell’s and Gracie Muehlberger’s.

    When Bryan and Cindy Muehlberger received Steve’s letter in 2024, they were considering moving — but didn’t know how they could leave their daughter’s room behind. 

    Anderson Cooper: How much of the discussion was about, “What do we do with the room?”

    Bryan Muehlberger: I would say that was the primary driver of– of us not moving sooner. I mean, after the– the shooting we– we wanted to get outta town.

    Anderson Cooper: But you didn’t want to leave that room.

    Cindy Muehlberger: Right–

    Bryan Muehlberger: But we didn’t want to leave that room, yeah. You know, it’s, like, do you take a lotta pictures of it and then try to recreate it somewhere else? We didn’t know what to do with it. And it really wasn’t until this opportunity to work with Steve on this film that we started feeling a peace about it.

    Earlier this year, the Muehlbergers felt ready. They sold their house and packed up Gracie’s room. They found mementos, artwork, and cards she made they hadn’t seen in years.

    For now, they’ve placed them in a storage unit, while they build a new home, and a new life in Georgia.

    Anderson Cooper: When you found this did you– did you know how you wanted to kind of incorporate Gracie?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Not initially.

    In September, they showed us the plot of land where they’ll live, and an area they are going to create called “Gracie’s Point.” 

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie's Point

    Anderson Cooper with the Muehlbergers at Gracie’s Point

    60 Minutes


    Anderson Cooper: So this is going to be Gracie’s Point?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Yeah, this kinda area right here. Where when you’re out here you know all you’ve got is nature and the water.

    Anderson Cooper: And a place for a fire pit, a place where people can come together?

    Bryan Muehlberger: Yeah, come together. She loved doin’ s’mores and things like that.

    Anderson Cooper: It could not be a more beautiful spot.

    Cindy Muehlberger: So peaceful, which is what we were lookin’ for.

    Anderson Cooper: Is this project over for you? 

    Steve Hartman: No. If parents want us to, we’ll continue to document the rooms, just so they have the pictures. I wish this project would end, but I don’t anticipate it will.

    Back in Nashville, Chad and Jada Scruggs have no plans to change Hallie’s room but they did send some of her drawings and journals to an artist, Brenda Bogart, who created this collage portrait of her. 

     Jada Scruggs: Everything on this canvas is something that was made by Hallie’s hand. Brenda went through and noticed a theme of, “I am happy. I am happy. I am happy.”

    Anderson Cooper: Wow.

    Jada Scruggs: She pretty much ended every journal entry with, “I am happy.” She wanted to make sure that that got put on Hallie.

    Anderson Cooper: When people see the photos, of Hallie’s room, what would you like them to take away?

    Chad Scruggs: This is not a generic person, you know? It’s someone that uniquely bore God’s image in the world and–irreplaceable. And we just want you to know her, you know? She’s worth being known. We don’t have a lot of aspirations, beyond that. We want you to come step inside of our world for a moment, so.

    Anderson Cooper: Step inside the sadness?

    Chad Scruggs: Yeah.

    Jada Scruggs: And feel it. 

    Chad Scruggs: People can talk about solutions. But until they feel the weight of the problem, I don’t know how to really talk about solutions.

    If you or someone you know is struggling with the loss of a child, support networks are available.  

    Produced by Katie Brennan. Associate producer, Matthew Riley. Broadcast associate, Grace Conley. Edited by Matthew Lev.

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  • More Minnesota schools embracing

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    It’s a topic that’s top of mind for many parents and teachers right now: How can we ensure our children are safe at school?

    For some Minnesota school districts, one answer comes from a nonprofit started after the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

    Reminders are posted in the halls of St. Francis Middle School: “Say Something.”

    “There’s signs all over the school about it that have the phone number and like there’s a QR code,” said student Beverly Shepherd Flores.

    The idea behind the anonymous reporting system: see it, report it. 

    “If students are having, you know, some problems with their mental health and you feel that a student is unsafe, then you can use the app to, you know, get help from a trusted adult, or you know, really any issues that could cause the student mental or physical harm,” said student Addison Cain.

    These eighth graders say classmates value the anonymity.

    “That was like I think a big thing for some students because they don’t want to like start anything with anyone,” said student Adriana Osei. “And you just like say what’s happening, the student, everything and the somebody handles it.”

    School leaders implemented the program three years ago. It’s offered by Sandy Hook Promise at no cost to districts.

    “With a free tip line that we can use it to prevent any kind of school violence, whether that’s self-harm or bullying or fighting or, you know, something more tragic,” said Chris Lindquist, St. Francis Area Schools’ director of community education. “At least we have an opportunity to have kids take a real investment in their own safety and their own security and the culture of our buildings, and to look out for one another.”

    Eight districts representing 100 schools in Minnesota use the Say Something program. Across the country, that number climbs.

    “More than 8 million youth and adults have been trained in the system, and so they know how to identify warning signs and report them,” said Crystal Garrant, Sandy Hook Promise’s chief program officer. “And since inception, more than 320,000 tips have been reported anonymously through our anonymous reporting system.”

    And Garrant says they’re seeing results.

    “We’ve averted at least 18 school shootings,” Garrant said. “These have been tips, we were the first to be notified of the information. There was a detailed plan of attack, and weapons were before recovered. Credible shootings prevented through our efforts.”

    In St. Francis, they’re seeing results, too — building upon relationships educators have with students and offering another option to say something.

    “If we get a tip that maybe we wouldn’t have because of the culture that we’re creating here, which is, say something, reach out, ask for help,” said principal Heidi Critchley. “The more we can do that, the more we can help people receive the assistance that they need, the more that we’re going to intervene for and maybe stop something major from happening.”

    “A lot of the tips we get that are life safety don’t come during the day. They come at night. They come in the evenings, they come at 2 in the morning,” Lindquist said. “They come when kids are really in crisis and when they don’t have an adult that they can lean on to support them.”

    They say having the information, big or small, allows them to act.

    “We’re checking in with the families, checking in with the students when all of these come in to make sure that they’re OK, or what do they need, what do their families need,” said school counselor Lindsay Pakola.

    And allows the school to better support students.

    “Most of the time there’s a plan, and most of the time when we have a school shooting or a major violent, critical incident, most of the time somebody else knows something,” Lindquist said. “And so you know, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

    Shepherd Flores, Cain and Osei are also part of a club called WEB, short for “Where Everybody Belongs.” It pairs eighth graders with incoming sixth graders to welcome them and build trust throughout the school year. 

    Folded into WEB are initiatives behind SAVE Promise Clubs or Students Against Violence Everywhere.

    SandyHookPromise.org has all the information you need to know about setting up a club or utilizing the Say Something program. It all comes at no cost to the school district.

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    Jennifer Mayerle

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  • Mom of Sandy Hook shooting victim says Minneapolis Catholic school attack was preventable

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    As everyone navigates through life following Wednesday morning’s mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, people are turning to those who have been through it for advice.

    Nicole Hockley lost her son Dylan 13 years ago in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. Twenty first-grade students and six educators were killed in the incident, igniting a movement in our country that has snowballed since.

    “I always want to talk about my son,” Hockley told WCCO. “He was incredibly cuddly and loved to laugh and giggle. He admired and adored his older brother, Jake. He ate fish fingers and garlic bread all the time, and loved chocolate and the color purple. I only had six years with him, but he’s still with me in my heart every single day.”

    WCCO asked Hockley what helped her in the first few weeks and months following the shooting.    

    “Healing is an interesting word and one I don’t tend to use a lot because I’m nearly 13 years after Dylan’s murder and I am not healed, and I don’t think I ever will be healed. It’s about moving through and forward, not moving on,” she said. “I think the things that I remember being helpful are friends who were able to hold me up and support me. Whether it was a meal train, whether it was taking me to the florist to choose flowers for Dylan’s memorial service or his urn. Getting relatives in and offering homes for people to stay at. If it hadn’t been for friends taking charge to lead things, like his funeral, I had no idea what to do, where to go. You can’t think in those times.”

    Hockley is the CEO of Sandy Hook Promise, a group that is changing laws and advocating for training. She says Wednesday’s shooting was preventable.

    “I do have significant outage that this keeps happening, especially because there are so many solutions to prevent these acts, and this school shooting was a preventable tragedy, as was sandy hook, as was almost every single school shooting you can think of, and the fact that we have the solutions but dont necissarily have the courage or will to put them into place across the country is frustrating. I get outraged as well when people just point to politicians not doing their jobs. I don’t think this is just about policy. I think this is about all of us. And whether that’s advocating for policy change, violence prevention programs in school, recognizing warning signs and saying something, we all have a role to play. If we’re left in hopelessness or thinking someone else is going to take care of it, then we are allowing this problem to continue. Our children are dying, and if that can’t compel you to action, I’m not quite sure what would.”

    Hockley says Sandy Hook Promise advocates for extreme risk protection orders. That allows certain people to request an order from the court to temporarily stop someone from purchasing or possessing a firearm during a period of crisis when they can hurt themselves or others. She said time will tell whether that could have been used to help prevent Wednesday’s shooting.

    “We also advocate for suicide prevention and school violence prevention,” she said. “We’ve been incredibly successful. We’ve stopped, as a direct result of our training, 18 school shootings already, but then, things like yesterday [Wednesday] happen, and we realize that no matter how fast and hard we work, we still have a long way to go to keep all children safe.”

    She added that someone knew the shooter needed help and was in crisis.

    “Helping people understand what the signs are and that they need to act immediately and to take it seriously and to tell someone when they see it, that could have prevented this,” Hockley said.

    35 million people in the U.S. have been through training with Sandy Hook Promise. 

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    Erin Hassanzadeh

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  • Alex Jones files for personal bankruptcy; owes nearly $1.5 billion to Sandy Hook families for hoax lies

    Alex Jones files for personal bankruptcy; owes nearly $1.5 billion to Sandy Hook families for hoax lies

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    Infowars host Alex Jones filed for personal bankruptcy protection Friday in Texas, citing debts that include nearly $1.5 billion he has been ordered to pay to families who sued him over his conspiracy theories about the Sandy Hook school massacre.

    Jones filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in Houston. His filing listed $1 billion to $10 billion in liabilities and $1 million to $10 million in assets.

    Jones acknowledged the filing on his Infowars broadcast, saying the case will prove that he’s broke, and asking viewers to shop on his website to help keep the show on the air.

    “I’m officially out of money, personally,” Jones said. “It’s all going to be filed. It’s all going to be public. And you will see that Alex Jones has almost no cash.”

    Newtown Shooting-Infowars
    FILE – Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones takes the witness stand to testify at the Sandy Hook defamation damages trial at Connecticut Superior Court in Waterbury, Conn. Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022.

    Tyler Sizemore/Hearst Connecticut Media via AP


    Jones, who sells dietary supplements and other items on his Infowars site, and promotes them during his shows, said he would not be commenting further on the bankruptcy.

    For years, Jones described the 2012 massacre as a hoax. A Connecticut jury in October awarded victims’ families $965 million in compensatory damages, and a judge later tacked on another $473 million in punitive damages. Earlier in the year, a Texas jury awarded the parents of a child killed in the shooting $49 million in damages.

    The bankruptcy filing temporarily halted all proceedings in the Connecticut case. A judge was forced to cancel a hearing scheduled for Friday on the Sandy Hook families’ request to secure the assets of Jones and his company to help pay the more than $1.4 billion in damages awarded there.

    Chris Mattei, an attorney for the Sandy Hook families in the Connecticut case, criticized the bankruptcy filing.

    “Like every other cowardly move Alex Jones has made, this bankruptcy will not work,” Mattei said in a statement. “The bankruptcy system does not protect anyone who engages in intentional and egregious attacks on others, as Mr. Jones did. The American judicial system will hold Alex Jones accountable, and we will never stop working to enforce the jury’s verdict.”

    An attorney representing Jones in the bankruptcy case did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

    In the Texas and Connecticut cases, some relatives of the 20 children and six adults killed in the school shooting testified that they were threatened and harassed for years by people who believed the lies told on Jones’ show. One parent testified that conspiracy theorists urinated on his 7-year-old son’s grave and threatened to dig up the coffin.

    Newtown Commemorates One Month Anniversary Of Elementary School Massacre
    Photos of Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre victims sits at a small memorial in Newtown, Connecticut, just a month after the 2012 shooting. 

    John Moore / Getty Images


    Erica Lafferty, the daughter of slain Sandy Hook principal Dawn Hochsprung, testified that people mailed rape threats to her house.

    Jones has laughed at the awards on his Infowars show, saying he has less than $2 million to his name and won’t be able to pay such high amounts. Those comments contradicted the testimony of a forensic economist at the Texas trial, who said Jones and his company Free Speech Systems have a combined net worth as high as $270 million. Free Speech Systems is also seeking bankruptcy protection.

    In documents filed in July in Free Speech Systems’ bankruptcy case in Texas, a budget for the company for Nov. 26 to Dec. 23 estimated product sales will total nearly $3 million, while operating expenses will be nearly $739,000. Jones’ salary is listed at $20,000 every two weeks.

    Sandy Hook families have alleged in another lawsuit in Texas that Jones hid millions of dollars in assets after victims’ relatives began taking him to court. Jones’ lawyer denied the allegation.

    A third trial over Jones’ comments on Sandy Hook is expected to begin within the next two months in Texas, in a lawsuit brought by the parents of another child killed in the shooting.

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  • Sandy Hook memorial opens nearly 10 years after 26 killed

    Sandy Hook memorial opens nearly 10 years after 26 killed

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    NEWTOWN, Conn. — A memorial to the 20 first graders and six educators killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting opened to the public Sunday, a month before the 10th anniversary of the massacre.

    No ceremony was planned at the site a short distance from the school. It has become a custom in Newtown on anniversaries and other remembrances of the shooting to mark them with quiet reflection.

    A small but steady stream of people visited the memorial Sunday, including Kevin and Nora Smith from nearby Monroe.

    “It just takes your breath away,” Nora Smith said. “It’s something that you hold close to your heart because you feel so bad for these families.”

    Flower bouquets floated counterclockwise in the water feature, which is surrounded by a cobblestone walkway and a few benches.

    The new Sandy Hook School, built after the former one was torn down on the same property, can be seen through the woods now that the leaves have fallen.

    Some victims’ relatives were given a private tour of the grounds on Saturday.

    “I think they deserve not to have the bright lights of the world on them,” said Newtown First Selectman Dan Rosenthal, the town’s top elected official.

    The memorial was designed as a peaceful place of contemplation. Paths with a variety of plantings lead to a water feature with a sycamore tree in the middle and the victims’ names engraved on the top of a surrounding supporting wall.

    The water flow was engineered so floatable candles, flowers and other objects will move toward the tree and circle around it.

    Like some other victims’ relatives, Jennifer Hubbard saw the memorial in a private appointment before this weekend. Her daughter, Catherine Violet Hubbard, 6, was one of the children who died in the shooting on Dec. 14, 2012.

    “It took my breath away in the sense that to see Catherine’s name and to see what has been created in honor of those that lost … the families, those that survived — they’ve lost their innocence,” she said. “And the community. We all suffered because of Dec. 14.

    “I think that the memorial is so perfectly appointed in honoring and providing a place of contemplation and reflection for a day that really changed the country,” she said.

    Nelba Marquez-Greene, whose 6-year-old daughter, Ana Grace Marquez-Greene, was killed, took to Twitter on Saturday to thank those who worked on the memorial planning for years.

    “Ten years. A lifetime and a blink,” she wrote. “Ana Grace, we used to wait for you to come home. Now you wait for us. Hold on, little one. Hold on.”

    Town voters approved $3.7 million for the cost of the memorial last year. Part of the cost was offset when the State Bond Commission approved giving the town $2.5 million for the project.

    The project faced several challenges after the town created a special commission to oversee the memorial planning in the fall of 2013. Some proposed sites were rejected, including one near a hunting club where gunshots could be heard, and officials cut the cost of the project down from $10 million because of concerns voters would not approve it.

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  • Alex Jones trial moves to punitive damages phase

    Alex Jones trial moves to punitive damages phase

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    HARTFORD, Conn. — Infowars host Alex Jones is facing the possibility of having more penalties heaped onto the amount he already owes for spreading conspiracy theories about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, as the punitive damages phase of his Connecticut trial is set to begin Friday in a lawsuit filed by the victims’ families.

    A jury last month ordered Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, to pay nearly $1 billion in compensation to the Sandy Hook families for the harm they suffered when he persuaded his audience that the 2012 shooting that killed 26 people was a hoax perpetrated by “crisis actors.”

    The jury also said punitive damages should be awarded. That amount will be determined by Judge Barbara Bellis following evidentiary hearings set for Friday and Monday.

    The plaintiffs’ lawyers, in court filings, suggested punitive damages could total $2.75 trillion based on one hypothetical calculation, but have not asked for a specific amount.

    “Justice requires that the Court’s punitive damages award, punish and deter this evil conduct,” attorneys Alinor Sterling, Christopher Mattei and Joshua Koskoff wrote in a motion. “Only a punitive damages assessment of historic size will serve those purposes.”

    Jones’ lawyer, Norm Pattis, is arguing that any punitive damages should be minimal, in part because the $1 billion compensatory damages award is the functional equivalent of punitive damages due to its extremely large amount.

    “Few defendants alive could pay damages of this sum,” Pattis wrote. “Indeed, most defendants would be driven into bankruptcy, their livelihood destroyed, and their future transformed into the bleak prospect of a judgment debtor saddled for decades with a debt that cannot be satisfied. To regard this as anything other than punishment would be unjust.”

    Pattis did not return a message seeking comment. Mattei declined to comment.

    All the plaintiffs, including relatives of eight of the shooting victims and an FBI agent who responded to the school, gave emotional testimony during the trial, describing how they have been threatened and harassed for years by people who believe the shooting didn’t happen.

    Strangers showed up at some of their homes and confronted some of them in public. People hurled abusive comments at them on social media and in emails. And some said they received death and rape threats.

    Jones was found liable last year for damages to the families for defamation, infliction of emotional distress and violating Connecticut’s Unfair Trade Practices Act. Although punitive damages are generally limited to attorneys’ fees for defamation and infliction of emotional distress, there are no such limits for punitive damages under the Unfair Trade Practices Act.

    In a calculation in a plaintiffs’ court filing, they said Jones’ comments about Sandy Hook were viewed an estimated 550 million times on his and Infowars’ social media accounts from 2012 to 2018. They said that translated into 550 million violations of the Unfair Trade Practices Act.

    “If each of the 550 million violations were assessed at the $5,000 statutory maximum, the total civil penalty would be $2,750,000,000,000 ($2.75 trillion),” their attorneys wrote.

    They also said punitive damages for violations of the unfair trade practices law typically are multiple times more than compensatory damages.

    As for legal fees, the plaintiffs and their lawyers have a retainer agreement stipulating the law firm, Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder, will get one-third of any compensatory damages recovered from Jones and Free Speech Systems. The firm says its legal costs in the case have been nearly $1.7 million so far.

    Jones has said on his Infowars show that it doesn’t matter how large the damages awards are, because he doesn’t have $2 million to his name and he wouldn’t be able to pay the full amounts.

    That contradicted testimony at a similar trial in Texas in August, when a jury ordered Jones to pay nearly $50 million to the parents of one of the children killed in the Sandy Hook shooting due to his lies about the massacre.

    A forensic economist testified that Jones and Free Speech Systems, Infowars’ parent company, have a combined net worth as high as $270 million, which Jones disputes. Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy protection in the middle of the trial in Texas, while a third trial over the hoax conspiracy is planned around the end of the year.

    Jones hawks nutritional supplements, survival gear and other products on his show. Evidence at the Connecticut trial showed his sales spiked around the time he talked about the Sandy Hook shooting — leading the plaintiffs’ lawyers to say he was profiting off the tragedy.

    In documents recently filed in Free Speech Systems’ bankruptcy case, a budget for the company for Oct. 29 to Nov. 25 estimated product sales would total $2.5 million, while operating expenses would be about $740,000. Jones’ salary was listed at $20,000 every two weeks.

    Jones has vowed to appeal all the verdicts against him related to Sandy Hook.

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  • Is Alex Jones verdict the death of disinformation? Unlikely

    Is Alex Jones verdict the death of disinformation? Unlikely

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    NEW YORK — A Connecticut jury’s ruling this week ordering Alex Jones to pay $965 million to parents of Sandy Hook shooting victims he maligned was heartening for people disgusted by the muck of disinformation.

    Just don’t expect it to make conspiracy theories go away.

    The appetite for such hokum and narrowness of the judgments against Jones, who falsely claimed that the 2012 elementary school shootings were a hoax and that grieving parents were actors, virtually ensure a ready supply, experts say.

    “It’s easy to revel in Alex Jones being punished,” said Rebecca Adelman, a communications professor at the University of Maryland. “But there’s a certain shortsightedness in that celebration.”

    There’s a deep tradition of conspiracy theories across American history, from people not believing the official explanation of John F. Kennedy’s assassination to various accusations of extraterrestrial-visit coverups to unfounded allegations of the 2020 presidential election being rigged. With the Salem witch trials in 1692, they even predated the country’s formation.

    What’s different today? The internet allows such stories to spread rapidly and widely — and helps adherents find communities of the likeminded. That in turn can push such untrue theories into mainstream politics. Now the will to spread false narratives skillfully online has spread to governments, and the technology to doctor photos and videos enables purveyors to make disinformation more believable.

    In today’s media world, Jones found that there’s a lot of money to be made — and quickly — in creating a community willing to believe lies, no matter how outlandish.

    In a Texas defamation trial last month, a forensic economist testified that Jones’ Infowars operation made $53.2 million in annual revenue between 2015 and 2018. He has supplemented his media business by selling products like survivalist gear. His company Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in July.

    To some, disinformation is the price America pays for the right to free speech. And in a society that popularized the term “alternative facts,” one person’s effort to curb disinformation is another person’s attempt to squash the truth.

    Will the Connecticut ruling have a chilling effect on those willing to spread disinformation? “It doesn’t even seem to be chilling him,” said Mark Fenster, a University of Florida law professor. Jones, he noted, reacted in real time on Infowars on the day of the verdict.

    “This will not impact the flow of stories that are filled with bad faith and extreme opinion,” said Howard Polskin, who publishes The Righting, a newsletter that monitors the content of right-wing websites. He says false stories about the 2020 election and COVID-19 vaccines remain particularly popular.

    “It seems to me that the people who peddle this information for profit may look upon this as the cost of doing business,” Adelman said. “If there’s an audience for it, someone is going to meet the demand if there’s money to be made.”

    Certainly, the people who believe that Jones and those like him are voices of truth being suppressed by society aren’t going to be deterred by the jury verdict, she said. In fact, the opposite is likely to be true.

    The plaintiffs awarded damages in the Sandy Hook case were all private citizens, an important distinction in considering its impact beyond this case, said Nicole Hemmer, a Vanderbilt University professor and author of “Partisans: The Conservative Revolutionaries Who Remade American Politics in the 1990s.”

    The case is reminiscent of Seth Rich, a young Democratic Party aide killed in a Washington robbery in 2016, she said. Rich’s name was dragged — posthumously — into political conspiracy theories, and his parents later sued and reached a settlement with Fox News Channel.

    The message, in other words: Be wary of dragging private citizens into outlandish theories.

    “Spreading conspiracy theories about the Biden administration is not going to get Fox News Channel sued,” Hemmer said. “It is not going to get Tucker Carlson sued.”

    Tracing the history of outlandish theories that sprout and thrive in the web’s murky corners is also difficult. Much of it is anonymous. It’s still not clear who is responsible for what is spread on QAnon or who makes money off it, Fenster says.

    If he was a lawyer, he said, “Who would I go after?”

    Despite any pessimism about what the nearly $1 billion Sandy Hook judgment might ultimately mean for disinformation, the dean of the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania says it still sends an important message.

    “What this says is we can’t just make up truths to fit our own ideological predilections,” John Jackson said. “There is a hard and fast ground to facts that we can’t stray too far from as storytellers.”

    Consider the lawsuit filed against Fox News Channel by Dominion Voting Systems, a company that makes election systems. It claims Fox knowingly spread false stories about Dominion as part of former President Donald Trump’s claims that the 2020 election had been taken from him. Dominion has sought a staggering $1.6 billion from Fox, and the case has moved through the deposition phase.

    Fox has defended itself vigorously. It says that rather than spreading falsehoods, it was reporting on newsworthy claims being made by the president of the United States.

    A loss in a trial, or a significant settlement, could impose a real financial hardship on Fox, Hemmer said. Yet as it progresses, there’s been no indication that any of its commentators are pulling punches, particularly concerning the Biden administration.

    Distrust of mainstream news sources also fuels the taste among many conservatives for theories that fit their world view — and a vulnerability to disinformation.

    “I don’t think there’s any incentive to move toward well-grounded reporting or to move in the direction of news and information instead of commenting,” Hemmer said. “That’s what they want. They want the wild conspiracy theories.”

    Even if the crushing verdict in Connecticut this week — coupled with the $49 million judgement against him in August by the Texas court — muzzles or minimizes Jones, Adelman says others are likely to take over for him: “It would be wrong to misinterpret this as the death knell of disinformation.”

    ———

    David Bauder is the media writer for The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/dbauder

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  • Is Alex Jones verdict the death of disinformation? Unlikely

    Is Alex Jones verdict the death of disinformation? Unlikely

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    NEW YORK — A Connecticut jury’s ruling this week ordering Alex Jones to pay $965 million to parents of Sandy Hook shooting victims he maligned was heartening for people disgusted by the muck of disinformation.

    Just don’t expect it to make conspiracy theories go away.

    The appetite for such hokum and narrowness of the judgments against Jones, who falsely claimed that the 2012 elementary school shootings were a hoax and that grieving parents were actors, virtually ensure a ready supply, experts say.

    “It’s easy to revel in Alex Jones being punished,” said Rebecca Adelman, a communications professor at the University of Maryland. “But there’s a certain shortsightedness in that celebration.”

    There’s a deep tradition of conspiracy theories across American history, from people not believing the official explanation of John F. Kennedy’s assassination to various accusations of extraterrestrial-visit coverups to unfounded allegations of the 2020 presidential election being rigged. With the Salem witch trials in 1692, they even predated the country’s formation.

    What’s different today? The internet allows such stories to spread rapidly and widely — and helps adherents find communities of the likeminded. That in turn can push such untrue theories into mainstream politics. Now the will to spread false narratives skillfully online has spread to governments, and the technology to doctor photos and videos enables purveyors to make disinformation more believable.

    In today’s media world, Jones found that there’s a lot of money to be made — and quickly — in creating a community willing to believe lies, no matter how outlandish.

    In a Texas defamation trial last month, a forensic economist testified that Jones’ Infowars operation made $53.2 million in annual revenue between 2015 and 2018. He has supplemented his media business by selling products like survivalist gear. His company Free Speech Systems filed for bankruptcy in July.

    To some, disinformation is the price America pays for the right to free speech. And in a society that popularized the term “alternative facts,” one person’s effort to curb disinformation is another person’s attempt to squash the truth.

    Will the Connecticut ruling have a chilling effect on those willing to spread disinformation? “It doesn’t even seem to be chilling him,” said Mark Fenster, a University of Florida law professor. Jones, he noted, reacted in real time on Infowars on the day of the verdict.

    “This will not impact the flow of stories that are filled with bad faith and extreme opinion,” said Howard Polskin, who publishes The Righting, a newsletter that monitors the content of right-wing websites. He says false stories about the 2020 election and COVID-19 vaccines remain particularly popular.

    “It seems to me that the people who peddle this information for profit may look upon this as the cost of doing business,” Adelman said. “If there’s an audience for it, someone is going to meet the demand if there’s money to be made.”

    Certainly, the people who believe that Jones and those like him are voices of truth being suppressed by society aren’t going to be deterred by the jury verdict, she said. In fact, the opposite is likely to be true.

    The plaintiffs awarded damages in the Sandy Hook case were all private citizens, an important distinction in considering its impact beyond this case, said Nicole Hemmer, a Vanderbilt University professor and author of “Partisans: The Conservative Revolutionaries Who Remade American Politics in the 1990s.”

    The case is reminiscent of Seth Rich, a young Democratic Party aide killed in a Washington robbery in 2016, she said. Rich’s name was dragged — posthumously — into political conspiracy theories, and his parents later sued and reached a settlement with Fox News Channel.

    The message, in other words: Be wary of dragging private citizens into outlandish theories.

    “Spreading conspiracy theories about the Biden administration is not going to get Fox News Channel sued,” Hemmer said. “It is not going to get Tucker Carlson sued.”

    Tracing the history of outlandish theories that sprout and thrive in the web’s murky corners is also difficult. Much of it is anonymous. It’s still not clear who is responsible for what is spread on QAnon or who makes money off it, Fenster says.

    If he was a lawyer, he said, “Who would I go after?”

    Despite any pessimism about what the nearly $1 billion Sandy Hook judgment might ultimately mean for disinformation, the dean of the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania says it still sends an important message.

    “What this says is we can’t just make up truths to fit our own ideological predilections,” John Jackson said. “There is a hard and fast ground to facts that we can’t stray too far from as storytellers.”

    Consider the lawsuit filed against Fox News Channel by Dominion Voting Systems, a company that makes election systems. It claims Fox knowingly spread false stories about Dominion as part of former President Donald Trump’s claims that the 2020 election had been taken from him. Dominion has sought a staggering $1.6 billion from Fox, and the case has moved through the deposition phase.

    Fox has defended itself vigorously. It says that rather than spreading falsehoods, it was reporting on newsworthy claims being made by the president of the United States.

    A loss in a trial, or a significant settlement, could impose a real financial hardship on Fox, Hemmer said. Yet as it progresses, there’s been no indication that any of its commentators are pulling punches, particularly concerning the Biden administration.

    Distrust of mainstream news sources also fuels the taste among many conservatives for theories that fit their world view — and a vulnerability to disinformation.

    “I don’t think there’s any incentive to move toward well-grounded reporting or to move in the direction of news and information instead of commenting,” Hemmer said. “That’s what they want. They want the wild conspiracy theories.”

    Even if the crushing verdict in Connecticut this week — coupled with the $49 million judgement against him in August by the Texas court — muzzles or minimizes Jones, Adelman says others are likely to take over for him: “It would be wrong to misinterpret this as the death knell of disinformation.”

    ———

    David Bauder is the media writer for The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/dbauder

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  • Jury indicates it has reached a verdict in Alex Jones’ defamation trial over false hoax claims

    Jury indicates it has reached a verdict in Alex Jones’ defamation trial over false hoax claims

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    Jurors indicated Wednesday they have reached a verdict in conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Connecticut defamation trial.

    Their decision was expected to be announced shortly.

    Jones and his company were found liable for damages last year. The six-person jury is tasked with determining how much the Infowars show host should pay to 15 plaintiffs — including victims’ families and an FBI agent — for calling the 2012 massacre a hoax.

    The jury has been instructed to arrive at two compensatory damages amounts per plaintiff: one sum for defamation damages and another for emotional distress damages. Jurors also will decide whether Jones should pay punitive damages; the judge would decide the amounts later.

    Each compensatory damages amount has to be at least $1, but there is no cap. The plaintiffs’ lawyers have suggested total damages could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Jones has bashed the trial as a “kangaroo court,” described it as an affront to free speech rights, and called the judge a “tyrant.” His lawyer told the jury that any damages awarded should be minimal.

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  • Jury indicates verdict reached in Alex Jones’ trial

    Jury indicates verdict reached in Alex Jones’ trial

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    WATERBURY, Conn. — Jurors indicated Wednesday they have reached a verdict in conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Connecticut defamation trial.

    Their decision was expected to be announced shortly.

    Jones and his company were found liable for damages last year. The six-person jury is tasked with determining how much the Infowars show host should pay to 15 plaintiffs — including victims’ families and an FBI agent — for calling the 2012 massacre a hoax.

    The jury has been instructed to arrive at two compensatory damages amounts per plaintiff: one sum for defamation damages and another for emotional distress damages. Jurors also will decide whether Jones should pay punitive damages; the judge would decide the amounts later.

    Each compensatory damages amount has to be at least $1, but there is no cap. The plaintiffs’ lawyers have suggested total damages could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Jones has bashed the trial as a “kangaroo court,” described it as an affront to free speech rights, and called the judge a “tyrant.” His lawyer told the jury that any damages awarded should be minimal.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

    WATERBURY, Conn. (AP) — Jurors revisited testimony from the husband of a Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victim as a third full day of deliberations began Wednesday in conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ Connecticut defamation trial.

    At the jury’s request, court began with a replay of a roughly hourlong audio recording of William Sherlach’s trial testimony. His wife, school psychologist Mary Sherlach, was among the 26 people killed in the 2012 shooting.

    Her husband is among the lawsuit’s 15 plaintiffs, who include victims’ relatives and an FBI agent. All testified about being harassed by people who say the shooting was staged in a plot for more gun control.

    Jones and his company were found liable for damages last year. The six-person jury is tasked with determining how much the Infowars show host should pay to the plaintiffs victims’ families and the FBI agent for calling the massacre a hoax.

    William Sherlach, who goes by Bill, testified that he worried for his and his family’s safety because of the shooting deniers’ vitriol.

    Sherlach testified that he saw online posts falsely positing that the shooting was a hoax; that his wife never existed; that she didn’t have the credentials to be a school psychologist; that his family was actually named Goldberg and lived in Florida; and that he was part of a financial cabal and somehow involved with the school shooter’s father.

    Sherlach didn’t testify about receiving any harassing messages directly, though he also said that he didn’t have social media accounts or use email. Nor did he mention anything that Jones said specifically.

    The jury has been instructed to arrive at two compensatory damages amounts per plaintiff: one sum for defamation damages and another for emotional distress damages. Jurors also will decide whether Jones should pay punitive damages; the judge would decide the amounts later.

    Each compensatory damages amount has to be at least $1, but there is no cap. The plaintiffs’ lawyers have suggested total damages could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

    The plaintiffs include an FBI agent who responded to the shooting and relatives of eight victims who died. Twenty children and six educators were killed.

    Jones has bashed the trial as a “kangaroo court,” described it as an affront to free speech rights, and called the judge a “tyrant.” His lawyer told the jury that any damages awarded should be minimal.

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  • Jurors deliberate for a 2nd full day in Alex Jones’ trial

    Jurors deliberate for a 2nd full day in Alex Jones’ trial

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    WATERBURY, Conn. — A Connecticut jury deliberated Tuesday but has reached no verdict so far in its effort to decide on how much conspiracy theorist Alex Jones should pay for spreading the lie that the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting was staged by “crisis actors.”

    The jurors ended their second full day of discussions by asking to revisit testimony Wednesday from William Sherlach, who lost his wife, Mary, in the massacre. He is one of the plaintiffs in the defamation lawsuit.

    Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, were found liable for damages last year to 15 plaintiffs for broadcasting a conspiracy theory that no children died in the shooting and that the victims’ relatives were part of an elaborate hoax.

    Twenty-six people died in the attack at the school in Newtown, Connecticut. Jones repeatedly told his millions of followers on his Infowars website show that the shooting didn’t happen.

    In often-emotional and tearful testimony in a Waterbury courtroom, victims’ relatives and the FBI agent said they have been tormented and threatened — in person, by mail and on social media — by people who believed those lies.

    The plaintiffs’ lawyers have suggested to the jury that a just verdict could be in the hundred of millions of dollars. Jones’ lawyer has said any damages awarded should be minimal.

    Jurors asked Tuesday morning for help interpreting a sentence in their instructions on determining damages. In response, they were advised to consider the lengthy instructions as a whole.

    The trial began Sept. 13. On the witness stand, Jones said he was “done saying I’m sorry” for calling the shooting a hoax. Outside the courthouse, he’s called the legal proceedings a “show trial” aimed at putting him out of business.

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  • Jury resumes deliberations in Alex Jones’ Sandy Hook trial

    Jury resumes deliberations in Alex Jones’ Sandy Hook trial

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    WATERBURY, Conn. — Jurors resumed deliberating Friday on how much conspiracy theorist Alex Jones should pay for spreading the lie that the 2012 Sandy Hook School shooting was a hoax.

    Deliberations in the civil trial began late Thursday afternoon but soon broke up for the day. The panel began its work Friday with a request for a dry-erase easel, markers, an eraser and a copy of the jury instructions.

    Last year, Jones was found liable for damages. The jury’s task is to decide how much Jones and his company Free Speech Systems should pay to relatives of eight Sandy Hook victims and to an FBI agent who responded to the massacre.

    The plaintiffs testified they have been tormented and threatened by people who believed that one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history was a con staged to build support for gun restrictions. Jones repeatedly publicized that false notion his “Infowars” show.

    Twenty children and six adults were killed when a gunman stormed Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, on Dec. 14, 2012.

    Jones testified in the trial, saying he was “done saying I’m sorry” for calling the school shooting a hoax. His lawyers have argued that he’s not responsible for the deeds of anyone who tormented the victims’ families, and that they are overstating how much harm the conspiracy theory caused them.

    Outside court, Jones has bashed the trial as a “kangaroo court” that aims to stomp on his free speech rights and put him out of business.

    In a similar trial in Texas in August, a jury ordered Jones to pay nearly $50 million in damages to the parents of one of the children killed in the shooting, because of the hoax lies.

    ———

    Find AP’s full coverage of the Alex Jones trial at: https://apnews.com/hub/alex-jones

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  • EXPLAINER: Jurors weigh cost of Alex Jones’ Sandy Hook lies

    EXPLAINER: Jurors weigh cost of Alex Jones’ Sandy Hook lies

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    WATERBURY, Conn. — For a decade, the parents and siblings of people killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting have been tormented and harassed by people who believe the mass shooting was a hoax.

    How do you put a price tag on their suffering?

    That’s part of the task faced by a Connecticut jury that has been asked to decide how much Infowars host Alex Jones and his company should pay for spreading a conspiracy theory that the massacre never happened.

    The six jurors deliberated for less than an hour Thursday before breaking for the evening. Their work was set to resume Friday.

    Jones now acknowledges his conspiracy theories about the shooting were wrong, but says he isn’t to blame for the actions of people who harassed the families. His lawyers also say the 15 plaintiffs have exaggerated stories about being subjected to threats and abuse.

    Here are some questions and answers about the deliberations.

    COULD THE JURY DECIDE THAT WHAT JONES DID IS PROTECTED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT?

    No. A judge has already ruled that Jones is liable for defamation, infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy and violating Connecticut’s unfair trade practices law. The jury’s job is to decide how much he owes for harming the people who sued him over his lies.

    HOW MUCH COULD JONES PAY?

    Jones, who lives in Austin, Texas, could be ordered to pay as little as $1 to each plaintiff or potentially hundreds of millions of dollars to them. The decision will be based on whether the jury determines the harm to the families was minimal or extensive.

    Christopher Mattei, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said the jury should award the plaintiffs at least $550 million. Jones’ lawyer, Norm Pattis, says any damages awarded should be minimal.

    HOW DOES THE JURY COME UP WITH THE DOLLAR FIGURES?

    In her instructions to the jury, Judge Barbara Bellis said there are no mathematical formulas for determining dollar amounts. Jurors, she said, should use their life experiences and common sense to award damages that are “fair, just and reasonable.”

    The jury, however, heard evidence and testimony that Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, made millions of dollars from selling nutritional supplements, survival gear and other items. A company representative testified it has made at least $100 million in the past decade.

    WHAT KIND OF DAMAGES ARE THE JURY CONSIDERING?

    Jurors could award both compensatory and punitive damages.

    Compensatory damages are often meant to reimburse people for actual costs such as medical bills and income loss, but they also include compensation for emotional distress than can reach into the millions of dollars.

    Punitive damages are meant to punish a person for their conduct. If the jury decides Jones should pay punitive damages, the judge would determine the amount.

    DOES CONNECTICUT CAP DAMAGES?

    No, and yes. The state does not limit compensatory damages, while punitive damages are limited in many cases to attorney’s fees and costs. So if the jury says Jones should pay punitive damages, he would potentially have to shell out hundreds of thousands of dollars for the Sandy Hook families’ lawyers’ costs.

    IS THIS THE FIRST TIME JONES HAS FACED A VERDICT LIKE THIS?

    No. At a similar trial in Texas in August, a jury ordered Jones to pay nearly $50 million to the parents of one of the children killed in the school shooting for pushing the hoax lie on his Infowars show.

    But legal experts say Jones probably won’t pay the full amount. In most civil cases, Texas law limits how much defendants have to pay in “exemplary,” or punitive, damages to twice the “economic damages” plus up to $750,000. But jurors are not told about this cap. Eye-popping verdicts are often hacked down by judges.

    A third trial in Texas involving the parents of another child slain at Sandy Hook is expected to begin near the end of the year.

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  • Jones won’t re-take stand in Sandy Hook defamation trial

    Jones won’t re-take stand in Sandy Hook defamation trial

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    WATERBURY, Conn. — The father of a boy killed at the Sandy Hook elementary school tried Tuesday to describe for a jury the distress he felt when he learned conspiracy theorists planned to dig up his 7-year-old son’s grave to prove the mass shooting never happened.

    Mark Barden, whose son Daniel was among the 26 victims, was the final family member to testify at a trial to determine how much Infowars host Alex Jones should pay for fueling a bogus theory that the massacre was a hoax.

    “This is so sacrosanct and hallowed a place for my family and to hear that people were desecrating it and urinating on it and threatening to dig it up, I don’t know how to articulate to you what that feels like,” Barden told the jury. “But that’s where we are.”

    Jones, who argued outside the courthouse that he has never been linked to threats against the families, was initially expected to re-take the stand Wednesday in the civil trial. But his attorney indicated his client was heading home and the defense would call no witnesses.

    A judge last year found Jones liable by default for spreading lies about the massacre that harmed the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, who include the parents and siblings of some victims. The six-member jury is now deciding how much Jones and Free Speech Systems, Infowars’ parent company, should pay for defaming them and intentionally inflicting emotional distress.

    The plaintiffs attorneys said they planned to rest their case Wednesday after about 20 minutes of video testimony.

    Barden and his wife, Jackie, were among 15 family members to take the stand in the defamation trial, which is being held in Waterbury, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the site of the school shooting in Newtown.

    Those witnesses have testified over several days about receiving death and rape threats, mail from conspiracy theorists that included photos of dead children, and in-person confrontations with people telling them their children or wives or mothers never existed and that they are “crisis actors.”

    Jackie Barden testified Tuesday that the hoax believers started harassing them in the weeks after the massacre and terrified her family. Mark became nervous about his surroundings and family’s safety, she said. And their daughter, now a 20-year-old college student, has anxiety and fears being alone in the family’s home.

    “It’s terrible to think that your 20-year-old daughter is afraid,” she said.

    Francine Wheeler, whose son Ben was killed, recounted an exchange with another shooting victim’s mother at a conference on gun violence in which that woman called her a liar.

    She told the jury it has been hard enough to live with the death of her son.

    “It’s quite another thing when people take everything about your boy, who is gone, and your surviving child and your husband and everything you ever did in your life that is on the Internet and harass you and make fun of you,” she said.

    Relatives said the harassment has not stopped in the nearly 10 years since the shooting.

    Jones testified earlier in the trial — a contentious appearance in which he called an attorney for the victims families an ambulance chaser and said he was “done saying I’m sorry,” for saying Sandy Hook was a hoax.

    His lawyers had earlier indicated they would call him back to the stand Wednesday to bolster his arguments that the damages awarded to the plaintiffs should be minimal.

    But in a sidebar with the judge Tuesday, Jones’ attorney, Norm Pattis said his client was leaving Connecticut and had no plans to testify, though he couldn’t say for sure.

    “What if (Jones) calls me tonight and says, ‘I’ve changed my mind,’” Pattis said during a sidebar with the judge and the plaintiffs attorneys. “What then?”

    Earlier in the day, Jones told reporters outside the courthouse that he believed that if he said what he wanted to during his testimony, the judge might hold him in contempt of court.

    “Not because I’m guilty,” Jones said, “but because she said that if I tell the truth, she’ll put me in the Waterbury jail for sixth months. That’s what she can do.”

    Because Jones has already been found liable, the judge has sought to limit his testimony before the jury, saying he can’t argue, for example, that his statements were protected free speech. Jones was found liable without a trial by the judge after he repeatedly violated court orders to share financial documents with the plaintiffs.

    Jones in recent years has acknowledged the shooting happened, but claims the families are being used to push a gun-control and anti-free speech agenda.

    In a similar trial last month in Austin, Texas, home to Jones and Infowars, a jury ordered him to pay nearly $50 million in damages to the parents of one of the children killed in the shooting, because of the hoax lies. A third such trial in Texas involving two other parents is expected to begin near the end of the year.

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