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Nationally known comedian-led PSA sends Sandy Hook Promise message to take school shooting threats seriously – Hartford Courant

  1. Nationally known comedian-led PSA sends Sandy Hook Promise message to take school shooting threats seriously Hartford Courant
  2. Big-Name Comics Tell Disturbing ‘Jokes’ About School Shootings in Sandy Hook Promise PSA Cracked.com
  3. Here’s Why Star Comedians Are Making Grim “Jokes” About School Shootings – Mother Jones Mother Jones
  4. Punchline of Sandy Hook group’s Billy Eichner PSA is to stop taking school shooting threats as jokes Danbury News Times
  5. Comedians say threats are not jokes in new Sandy Hook Promise gun violence PSA ABC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sandy Hook parents continue to push for changes in the decade since the school shooting

Editor’s Note: Watch CNN’s Special Report “Sandy Hook: Forever Remembered” with Alisyn Camerota tonight at 10 p.m.



CNN
 — 

They were living ordinary and full lives in the small New England town of Newtown, Connecticut, unprepared for the devastation that would unfold and occupy the rest of their days.

Mark Barden was a professional musician. Nicole Hockley had recently arrived in Newtown after a corporate marketing career in the United Kingdom.

On the morning of December 14, 2012, after killing his mother, an isolated and violence-obsessed 20-year-old with unfettered access to firearms shot his way into Sandy Hook Elementary School. Over the course of 10 minutes, he shot and killed 20 first-graders and six adults before ending his own life.

The lives of Daniel Barden, 7, and Dylan Hockley, 6, were among those cut painfully short that day. But in the long decade since, their spirit and memory have lived on in their parents’ devoted advocacy for safer communities.

A month after the shooting, Mark Barden, Nicole Hockley and other parents who lost children that day launched Sandy Hook Promise, an organization dedicated to protecting children from gun violence.

“I didn’t know what the change would be, but we would be part of it,” Hockley recently told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota for the CNN Special Report “Sandy Hook: Forever Remembered” airing on the 10-year anniversary of the tragedy.

The Sandy Hook Promise group first set its sights on gun reform. Along with other families, they sought bans on AR-15 assault-style weapons and high-capacity magazines, both of which were legally purchased by the shooter’s mother and used in the Sandy Hook attack.

“There were a lot of guns that our shooter could have chosen,” Hockley said in February 2016. “He chose the AR-15 because he was aware of how many shots it could get out … (and) that it would serve his objective of killing as many people as possible in the shortest time possible.”

Barden, Hockley and other Sandy Hook families found a sympathetic partner in John McKinney, their state senator and the highest-ranking Republican in Connecticut politics at the time.

“My immediate thoughts in terms of my role in the aftermath was, ‘I need to do, and I will do, anything humanly possible to help these families,’” McKinney said. “[I] met with all of the other Republicans in our caucus, and I was very honest with them. I said, ‘I’m going to go negotiate and work with the Democrats.’”

After months of meetings with victims’ families, town halls in the Newtown community and consultations with experts, McKinney and his colleagues unveiled their proposed legislation on April 1, 2013.

When then-Governor Dannel Malloy signed the bipartisan bill three days later, Connecticut had enacted some of the most sweeping gun legislation in the country. The new law expanded the state’s assault weapons ban and banned the sale of high-capacity ammunition; required a state-issued permit to purchase any rifle, shotgun or ammunition; and created the country’s first registry of individuals convicted of an offense with a deadly weapon.

Since 2013, Connecticut is the most populous state without a mass shooting of four or more fatalities, according to a CNN analysis of the Gun Violence Archive.

The Sandy Hook Promise parents set their sights on Washington, DC, to see if their home state’s success could be replicated on the federal level.

“We approached the Connecticut legislature with love and logic, and they listened,” Hockley said in a 2013 speech introducing President Barack Obama. “I believe that with that same approach of love and logic, Congress will be persuaded to act.”

In April 2013, National Rifle Association-endorsed senators Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Pat Toomey, R-Penn., proposed a joint recommendation that would have required criminal background checks on people purchasing firearms at gun shows and online. The policy, known as universal background checks, was supported by more than 80% of Americans, according to a Pew Research poll taken at that time, giving the newly minted leaders of the gun reform movement reason for hope.

“I just thought, ‘OK,this is pretty simple. This is basic. This is what everybody wants. Let’s just get that done,’” Mark Barden said.

Most Republican senators and five Democrats saw things differently, however, and the bill fell six votes short of the threshold needed to break a filibuster.

The bill’s failure struck the families as a disappointment and a betrayal: Barden and Hockley both say multiple senators claimed to stand with them, then voted against the bill. But the two advocates found lessons in defeat and vowed that day to double down on gun violence prevention.

“We’ve always known this will be a long road, and we don’t have the luxury of turning back,” Barden said in the White House Rose Garden. “We will keep moving forward and build public support for common sense solutions in the areas of mental health, school safety, and gun safety.”

Barden and Hockley returned to Connecticut with a deeper passion for their work.

“If that were to have passed, I think there would have been maybe a sentiment of like, ‘OK, we’re done. We’ve got that fixed,’” Barden said. Recalling the words of fellow gun control advocate Sarah Brady, “‘Sometimes you need a good defeat.’ It kind of mobilizes people, catalyzes people. They know what’s going on. It did for me.”

After studying other mass shootings and gun violence, they developed expansive programming to avert tragedies before they begin. That work has produced Know the Signs, a range of programs that train students and educators to identify, report and respond to behaviors that suggest someone might harm themselves or others.

“100% of school shooters give off warning signs before they carry that out,” Barden said. “What if that person giving off those warning signs were surrounded by people who understood how to look for those warning signs, and then had the training and the tools to actually do something?”

That straightforward premise has yielded profound success. Sandy Hook Promise says it has presented Know the Signs to more than 23,000 schools and 18 million people. The training programs have helped districts and students avert threats of violence in West Virginia, California, Massachusetts and other states — not to mention nearly 2,700 students in need of intervention that the organization has connected with crisis counselors.

Hockley credits some of the organization’s success to its early defeat on the Manchin-Toomey bill.

“To fail so quickly was just horrifying to me,” Hockley said. “But when you have a failure, sometimes that makes you look at things in a different way.”

Sandy Hook Promise remains a persistent force in the arena of gun legislation. Barden leads the organization’s policy side and has been active in every major effort for federal gun reform for the last decade.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a leading voice for gun reform, has known Barden’s commitment since he walked off the Senate floor following the universal background check vote in 2013.

“I felt mortified. I felt like a failure. I went out of the chamber and there was a group of the families there,” including Barden, Murphy said. “He said to me something along the lines of, ‘Chris, I’m not an advocate for four months. I’m an advocate for 40 years. This is my child. I’m never giving up.’”

Barden and Murphy have teamed up on countless failed policies over their decade of work together: extended waiting periods, extreme risk protection orders that would remove guns from people in crisis, a requirement on gun manufacturers to incorporate technology allowing only the owner to fire and a repeated pursuit of universal background checks.

“We were building a movement that needed time,” Murphy said. “I gave the same speech a million times over the last 10 years to advocates. I tell them every great social change movement in the country’s history failed a million times before it succeeded.”

In May, another young man armed with an assault-style rifle murdered children in another elementary school, this time in Uvalde, Texas. Once again, the families consoled the new members of a lifelong club as they grappled with their own frustration and grief.

Once again, Murphy took to the Senate floor, begging his colleagues to do anything.

But this time, the “social change movement” was stronger, the gun lobby was weaker and something shook loose. Working with a bipartisan coalition of senators that include Minority Whip John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, Murphy helped pass compromise legislation accepted as the first major federal victory for gun reform advocates in nearly three decades.

Signed by President Joe Biden in June, the law gives authorities 10 days instead of three to conduct background checks on gun purchasers and requires federal agents to ask local law enforcement if purchasers under 21 have a juvenile criminal or mental health history. It also incentivizes states to pass red flag laws like the one Connecticut passed in 1999, the first state in the country to do so.

It’s far from comprehensive and lacks the strength Murphy would have preferred. But he describes the legislation as both the culmination of a hard-fought decade and the opening of a new era in gun policy.

“While this was just the beginning, man, it was a pretty important beginning,” Murphy said.

The long-toiling advocates saw other victories in 2022: In February, insurers for the gun manufacturer Remington Arms agreed to pay $73 million to victims’ families to settle a lawsuit centered on the company’s aggressive marketing of the assault-style rifle used at Sandy Hook.

More important to the families than the payout is access to Remington’s internal communications, including its advertising strategies, and the right to release the documents.

“I’m very much looking forward to understanding what was going on behind the scenes, underneath the veil,” said Barden who, along with the other families party to the suit, plans to release the documents in early 2023.

More recently, a Connecticut judge ordered right-wing broadcaster Alex Jones to pay $473 million in punitive damages to victims’ families and a first responder in a case evaluating damage done by Jones’ repeated lies about the Sandy Hook shooting, including claims that it was staged and the grieving parents were “crisis actors.”

That order increases Jones’ tab across multiple cases to nearly $1.5 billion, a number that the families hope discourages other conspiracy theorists from spreading harmful lies that lead to harassment.

“My focus was getting the truth out there and stopping that bad behavior,” said Scarlett Lewis, a party to one of the cases, whose 6-year-old son Jesse was killed at Sandy Hook. “And I think with bullying behavior, you first try to ignore it, and then when it doesn’t stop, you have to find the courage to stand up to it.”

But for the coalition of parents who have spent 10 years standing up to misinformation, powerful lobbies and the seemingly endless march of American tragedy, victories are simply followed by more work.

Jones has publicly rebuked the idea of paying “any money” to the families he has mocked and vowed to appeal his ruling. Since the bipartisan gun bill became law, 332 people have died in mass shootings in the United States, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive.

But Barden and Hockley show no signs of slowing down. In between their separate interviews for this report, they excused themselves for a conference call. They discussed the guest list for an upcoming gala. They eagerly tended to the details of their no-longer-new and not-by-choice careers, persistently maintaining the momentum they have drawn from the worst day of their lives.

“I used to laugh that we’re going to put ourselves out of business, but there will always be a need for people to feel acknowledged and visible, and to know that there are others around them that are going to be keeping an eye out,” Barden said. “There will always be a need for that, and so there will always be a need for this beautiful little, little project of ours.”

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Newtown marks 10 years since Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting killed 20 children, 6 adults

Back on Dec. 14, 2012, 20 children and six staff members did not return home after a gunman walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. and opened fire. 

“We try to avoid kind of the pressure around the big milestones and the annual day of remembrance for us. But the 10 years is significant. There’s no way around that,” parent Michele Gay told CBS2. 

Those who survived were forever shaped by what they saw, heard, and lost that tragic day. 

Gay said her 7-year-old daughter Josephine left behind a legacy of joy when she was taken from her 10 years ago. 

“I think we have learned as a family that it’s very much a journey and you do have to take stops along the way, take care of yourself along the way. And sometimes you’re doing better than other times, but we are moving forward,” she said. “We’re never moving on. We’re always keeping our little girl, our little sister with us.”

The tragic day was half a lifetime ago for those who were students, such as Liv Doscher. 

“I feel like the further and further we move away from it, the more I feel I’m scrambling to just remember. So I really do think that the way I’m going to cope with that is just making, through people, kind of making sure I’m staying close to my best friend, making sure when I come home for breaks that I meet up with old teachers that I’m close with,” she said. 

Nicole Hockley lost her 6-year-old son Dylan. She says she’s proud to have turned her grief into advocacy. Through her organization Sandy Hook Promise, Hockley says they have prevented 11 school shootings and hundreds of suicides by training students and educators to report early warning signs of violence. 

“It has to become better with fewer shootings. I think it’s in the last ten years one of the numbers I’ve seen is that we’re at 1 million people impacted by gun violence. This year alone, I think we’re already over 40,000 deaths,” she said. “It’s the number one cause of death for children under the age of 19. We’re averaging two mass shootings a day.”

Last month, Newtown opened a new $3.4 million memorial to the 20 first graders and six educators killed. It’s located near the rebuilt Sandy Hook Elementary School. 

Former Gov. Dannel Malloy was in office at the time and is now reflecting on the way the town has moved forward since 2012. 

“The other children were their child’s classmate, the other teacher or teachers’ aide was their spouse’s friend. Just compounds itself, making it extraordinarily difficult to overcome,” he told CBS2. “But I think so many of these parents have done such an outstanding job of trying to care for a broader society. It really is quite impressive.”

Later this morning, U.S. Senators from Connecticut Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy are set to honor the memory of those lost on the Senate floor. They also plan to call on Congress to take further steps to address America’s gun violence epidemic. 

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Sandy Hook memorial opens to public, nearly 10 years after 26 killed in elementary school shooting



CNN
 — 

A memorial honoring the 20 first graders and six educators killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting opened to the public on Sunday, nearly a month before the 10-year commemoration.

The Sandy Hook Permanent Memorial, designed by Dan Affleck and Ben Waldo, was unveiled publicly in Newtown, Connecticut where the mass shooting took place on December 14, 2012.

The memorial consists of a “circling network” of paths that lead visitors through woodland, across ponds and meadows to the center – a fountain that sits in a granite basin engraved with the names of the victims, according to its description on the designers’ website.

“Water flows spiral inwards towards a planter at the center, where a young sycamore is planted to symbolize the young age of the victims. The motion of the water embraces the tree and captures the energy, form, and cycle of the landscape around it,” the website says.

“Visitors are encouraged to give a candle or a flower to the water, which will carry the offering across the space in an act of bridging the deceased and the living,” it continues.

The design was selected out of 189 submissions by the Sandy Hook Permanent Memorial Commission after a five-year process.

Jennifer Hubbard, whose daughter Catherine Violet Hubbard was six years old when she was killed in shooting, told CNN on Sunday that she first viewed the memorial a few weeks ago and then again on Saturday for the memorial’s official dedication for the victims’ loved ones.

“I’m grateful that Catherine is a part of the memorial because it is a shared and sacred loss of 26 families,” Hubbard told CNN.

Hubbard said she appreciates the Newtown Memorial Commission and those involved for creating the tribute.

She describes the quiet space as “beautifully appointed” to reflect on the lives taken and affected by the shooting.

“This memorial goes beyond being a marker of all that we’ve been through,” Hubbard said.

“It’s a reminder of all that we as a community have come together to accomplish. This is a collective space for reflection where all who visit are reminded of the healing, love and compassion we’ve sought to bring to the world,” she continued.

Hubbard founded an animal sanctuary in her daughter Catherine’s honor. She hopes projects such as hers and that of the public memorial may show “humanity and human[s] are good.”

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Alex Jones: Jury decides conspiracy theorist should pay nearly $1 billion in damages to Sandy Hook families for his lies about the school massacre



CNN Business
 — 

Far-right talk show host Alex Jones should pay eight families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims and one first responder $965 million in compensatory damages, a Connecticut jury decided Wednesday, capping a wrenching weeks-long trial that put on display the serious harm inflicted by the conspiracy theorist’s lies.

With its punishing award, the decision could shrink or even doom Jones’ Infowars media empire, which has been at the center of major conspiracy theories dating back to former President George W. Bush’s administration and was embraced by President Donald Trump.

The plaintiffs and their attorneys were visibly emotional when the jury’s decision were read. The decision marks a key moment in the years-long process that began in 2018 when the families took legal action against Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, the parent of the fringe media organization Infowars.

Jones baselessly said again and again after the 2012 mass shooting, in which 26 people were killed, that the incident was staged, and that the families and first responders were “crisis actors.” The plaintiffs throughout the trial described in poignant terms how the lies had prompted unrelenting harassment against them and compounded the emotional agony of losing their loved ones.

Plaintiffs in the trial included family members of eight school students and employees, in addition to one FBI agent who responded to the scene. The three cases were all condensed into the single trial.

Jones was not in the courtroom for the verdict. He was streaming live when the jury’s decision was read in court, mocked the decision on his Infowars show and used it to fundraise.

It’s unclear when or how much of the money the plaintiffs will ultimately see. Jones has said that he will appeal the decision and during his Wednesday broadcast said that there “ain’t no money” to pay the massive figure the jury awarded the plaintiffs.

Christopher Mattei, an attorney for the plaintiffs, had urged jurors to award at least a half a billion dollars for having permanently mangled the lives of his clients. The figure, he said, would represent the more than 550 million online impressions Jones’ Sandy Hook lie allegedly received online.

“You may say that is astronomical. It is,” Mattei said. “It’s exactly what Alex Jones set himself up to do. That’s what he built. He built a lie machine that could push this stuff out. You reap what you sow.”

Mattei praised the jurors after the verdict was reached.

“The jury’s verdict is a testament to that courage, in a resounding affirmation that people of goodwill, dedicated to the truth, mindful of their responsibilities to their fellow citizens can come together to protect the innocent, to reveal lies masquerading as truth, and to set right a historic wrong,” Mattei told reporters outside the courthouse.

The decision in Connecticut comes two months after a separate jury in Texas determined that Jones and his company should award two Sandy Hook parents who sued in that state nearly $50 million. Later this month, the judge in that case will consider whether to reduce the punitive damages awarded under Texas law.

While Jones initially lied about the 2012 shooting, he later acknowledged that the massacre had occurred as he faced multiple lawsuits. But he failed to comply with court orders during the discovery process of the lawsuits in Connecticut and Texas, leading the families in each state to win default judgments against him.

During the latest trial, families of the Sandy Hook victims offered emotional testimony, telling the jury in haunting terms how Jones’ lies about the shooting had permanently altered their lives and compounded the pain of losing their loved ones.

Jones, who was cross-examined by the plaintiffs’ attorneys, but chose not to testify in his own defense as was originally planned, sought to portray himself as a victim of an elaborate “deep state” conspiracy against him.

In a particularly explosive moment in the trial, Jones tangled with an attorney for the plaintiffs, accusing him of “ambulance chasing,” before descending into an unhinged rant in court about “liberals.”

The judge overseeing the case admonished Jones several times during his testimony, warning him even at one point that he could be held in contempt of court if he violated her rules moving forward.

Jones has attacked the judicial process, even acknowledging in court that he had referred to the proceedings as those of a “kangaroo court” and called the judge a “tyrant.” He has already indicated that he plans to appeal.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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Alex Jones should pay damages to Sandy Hook families, jury decides

(Pool/WFSB)

Robbie Parker, the father of 6-year-old Emilie Parker who was killed during the Sandy Hook shooting, said he was proud to stand among his fellow plaintiffs who got on the stand and told the truth.

“Everybody that took the stand told the truth, except for one. The one who proclaims that that’s what he does,” Parker said, referring to Alex Jones.

He credited his lawyers with helping to give him “the strength to finally find my voice and to fight and to stand up to what had been happening to me for so long.”

Speaking to the media after the verdict, Parker continued: “I let my voice be taken away from me and my power be taken away from me. At the expense of my daughter and at the expense of my family. So I have to thank them for helping me get the strength. And the families that I’ve been associated with for 10 years through this tragedy are the most beautiful people you’ll ever encounter, and their children and their moms and their wives are the most beautiful people you could ever get to know.”

“All I can really say is that I’m just proud that what we were able to accomplish is just to simply tell the truth and it shouldn’t be this hard, and it shouldn’t be this scary.”

Parker thanked the jury, not only because of the verdict, “but for what they had to endure, what they had to listen to.”

The jury awarded Parker $120,000,000 in compensatory damages in the case. 

Some background: In emotional testimony, Parker recounted the violent threats and harassment he and his family have suffered in the years after Jones called him a crisis actor.

The day after Emilie was murdered in the mass shooting, Parker gave a statement to the press. Hours later, Jones was on his InfoWars show describing Parker as a crisis actor to his audience of millions.

Later that night, unable to sleep, Parker said he saw the start of a deluge of hateful messages about the press conference on the Facebook memorial page for Emilie. Parker said he removed Emilie’s Facebook memorial page weeks after the shooting because the harassment was too much to control.

“I felt like I couldn’t protect Emilie’s name, or her memory anymore so I had to get rid of it,” Parker said through tears.

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Alex Jones lashes out at trial over Sandy Hook hoax claims

Infowars founder Alex Jones lashed out as he testified in a tense Connecticut courtroom on Thursday as part of a defamation trial that will determine how much he should pay to the relatives of victims of the 2012 Sandy Hook elementary school massacre.

The far-right conspiracy theorist and host, known for emotional outbursts on his shows, appeared frustrated at several points and said he would not make further apologies for popularizing the false claim that the shooting in Newtown, Conn., was a hoax.

“Is this a struggle session? Are we in China?” Jones asked, referring to Maoist rallies where people were publicly humiliated, after an attorney for the plaintiffs, Chris Mattei, pointed out the victims’ family members in the courtroom. “I’ve already said I’m sorry hundreds of times, and I’m done saying I’m sorry.”

The fatal shooting of 26 people, including 20 children, sustained headlines for years on Infowars and other fringe websites that propagated the baseless assertion that the victims’ family members were “crisis actors” involved in a government “false-flag operation” designed to curtail Second Amendment rights. Jones has subsequently acknowledged that the massacre was “100 percent real” and that it was irresponsible to say otherwise.

Jones was ordered in August in a separate Texas trial to pay more than $45 million in damages to parents of a Sandy Hook victim. He lost the Connecticut trial after Judge Barbara Bellis ruled in November that he was liable by default after refusing to turn over financial records and other documents ordered by the court. Infowars and its parent company, Free Speech Systems LLC, filed for bankruptcy protection this year as the Sandy Hook families pursued civil litigation.

Though Jones was even-tempered for much of his testimony, he sometimes verbally jousted with Mattei. His own lawyer also struggled to stop him from providing elaborate answers when roused.

Bellis repeatedly asked jurors to leave the courtroom so that the scope of Jones’s answers could be discussed with the lawyers. The frequency of their departures led her to joke that they were getting their exercise for the day.

In the hours-long session, Jones used one of Mattei’s questions to plug the address of a website accepting cryptocurrency contributions. He also answered “no” to the question of whether his credibility was the most important thing to his audience, insisting that his focus was on “crushing the globalists.”

“Alex Jones is probably the most unsympathetic litigant I’ve seen in quite a long period of time,” said Jessica Levinson, a law professor at Loyola Marymount University.

“This is a case about punishment, deterrence and making people whole,” she said.

A representative for Infowars could not be immediately reached early Friday.

How the right built up Alex Jones — even after his Sandy Hook comments

In one exchange, Mattei accused Jones of putting targets on Sandy Hook parents’ backs, in an apparent reference to his claim that they were crisis actors. The attorney referenced parents in the courtroom, calling them “real people,” to which Jones responded: “Just like all the Iraqis you liberals killed and loved.”

“You’re unbelievable. You switch on emotions, on and off, when you want. You’re just ambulance chasing,” Jones added.

The size and scope of damages awarded by the jury will be closely watched at a time of heightened concern about online misinformation and disinformation.

“It matters what these verdicts are because it tells us how much we think people are harmed by this type of speech,” Levinson said. “It tells us that this might be an effective way to try to shut down the Alex Joneses of the world.”

Details of the case — such as whether the jury is convinced that Jones’s false statements were deliberate lies — will help determine the type and the size of damages, said Eugene Volokh, a law professor at the University of California at Los Angeles.

“If you’re going to try to persuade the jury toward punitive damages, you’ve got to show that it’s more than just an honest mistake,” said Volokh, an expert on free-speech law.

An attorney for Jones had argued that damages should be limited and that the victims’ relatives had exaggerated the harm that his client’s false assertions had caused, the Associated Press reported.

Several relatives of the Sandy Hook victims took the stand this week to share stories of being forced to travel under false names for security purposes and being told they would go to hell by those falsely claiming the shooting was a hoax.

Jennifer Hensel, whose daughter Avielle was killed in the shooting and whose husband took his own life in 2019, testified that some conspiracy theorists said they believed that she helped fake the tragedy and that her child was still alive.

“God, if she were, wouldn’t that be amazing?” she said, her voice cracking.

The trial is set to resume Friday, and Jones is scheduled to continue testifying.

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Alex Jones lashes out at critics at trial over Sandy Hook hoax claims

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Sept 22 (Reuters) – Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones ignited a courtroom shouting match on Thursday, railing against critics as he testified in a trial to determine how much he owes families of victims who died in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting, which he falsely claimed was a hoax.

Tensions boiled over after roughly four hours of testimony in the Waterbury, Connecticut courtroom, not far from Newtown, the town where the massacre took place. Jones fulminated against “liberals” and refused to apologize to a packed gallery of victims’ families.

“These are real people, do you know that Mr. Jones?” a lawyer for the families, Chris Mattei, asked.

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“Just like all the Iraqis you liberals killed and love,” retorted Jones, a Texas-based webcast host who is being sued because he said no one was killed at Sandy Hook and the families were merely actors. Many of his followers then tormented and threatened the families.

The defamation trial concerns only how much Jones and the parent company of his Infowars site must pay in damages for spreading lies that the U.S. government staged the killing of 20 children and six staff members as a pretext for seizing guns.

The testimony triggered a three-way shouting match between Jones, Mattei and Jones’ lawyer, Norman Pattis, who repeatedly objected to Mattei’s questioning.

After jurors left for the day, Judge Barbara Bellis told the attorneys that she would enforce a “zero tolerance” policy for disruptions and would hold contempt-of-court hearings for anyone who “steps out of line,” including Jones.

Jones also tested the judge’s patience after Mattei played a video clip in which he praised his followers for placing Infowars stickers around the Connecticut courthouse.

“Conservatives put up stickers and we’re bad, I know, we all need to go to prison,” Jones said in a mocking tone on the witness stand, prompting the judge to briefly clear the courtroom and hold a discussion with attorneys. Jones does not face any criminal charges.

The clip was played as Mattei presented evidence that Jones’ followers had harassed Sandy Hook families online and in person, including at memorials for victims.

Jones also acknowledged calling Bellis a “tyrant” after Mattei displayed an image posted on Infowars depicting Bellis with red lasers shooting from her eyes. He said he was not responsible for the post.

Bellis has largely barred discussion of politics and conspiracy theories at the trial.

Jones is also not permitted to dispute his liability for damages, after Bellis issued a default judgment last year because he repeatedly failed to comply with court orders.

Jurors must decide only what Jones and Infowars’ parent Free Speech Systems must pay the plaintiffs, who also include an FBI agent, for the pain and suffering they say he caused.

A month ago, the conspiracy theorist was hit with a $49.3 million verdict in a similar case in Texas, where Free Speech Systems is based.

Jones’ lawyers hope to void most of the payout, calling it excessive under Texas law.

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Reporting by Jack Queen in New York; Editing by Amy Stevens, Mark Porter and Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Alex Jones set to take the stand in second Sandy Hook defamation trial over his false ‘hoax’ claims

It’s unclear what Jones will say in court, but he derided the court process during an appearance outside the courthouse on Tuesday, going as far as to refer to the judge overseeing the case as a “tyrant.”

The trial is taking place a month after a Texas jury determined that Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems, the parent of the fringe media organization Infowars, should award two parents nearly $50 million.

Jones baselessly told his audience in the aftermath of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting that the incident was staged. He has since acknowledged the shooting occurred, but only after the lawsuits were filed. He said in a 2019 sworn deposition that a “form of psychosis” caused him to make his false comments.

In the Connecticut case, where Jones is being sued by eight more Sandy Hook families, Judge Barbara Bellis issued a default judgment against the Infowars founder in November 2021 after he failed to comply with court orders.

Because the judge already ruled that Jones is liable, the jury is determining the amount in damages to award the plaintiffs. While the families have not specified a dollar figure, an attorney for the families asked jurors last week to “send a message” to the public with its decision.

Plaintiffs in three Connecticut lawsuits against Jones, including family members of eight school students and employees and one FBI agent who responded to the scene, have all been condensed into the trial that commenced earlier this month.

Christopher Mattei, a lawyer for the Sandy Hook families has argued during the trial that Jones pushed the Sandy Hook lie because it was profitable.

Norman Pattis, Jones’ attorney, has argued that the claims made by the Sandy Hook plaintiffs are “exaggerated.” Pattis has also said the Sandy Hook families have “become partisans” and said the defense will argue the harm has been overstated “because they want to silence [Jones] for political reasons.”

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Sandy Hook families’ quiet presence in Alex Jones defamation trial permeates first week of testimony

Attorneys who are trying to win a “substantial” award for the FBI agent and eight Sandy Hook families who Jones defamed last year want the jury of six in Waterbury Superior Court to be the first to hear the “devastating” and “crippling” role hoax conspiracies spread by Jones had on the victims’ grieving process.

“I have a lot of respect for these families being here,” said Mark Bankston, the lead attorney for the parents of a slain Sandy Hook boy who won a $49 million defamation settlement against Jones in Texas in August, attending the Connecticut trial as casually dressed observer.

While it may seem to the world watching the livestreamed trial that the family members involved in the lawsuit are assuming a low profile until they take the witness stand and make their impact on the jury, the reality is family members have played a prominent role during the first week of testimony, not only by participating in their attorneys’ trial strategy, but by their quiet presence each day in court.

There each day for the jury to see in the first three rows of Judge Barbara Bellis’ sunlight courtroom have been six-to-12 members of the Sandy Hook families, their expressions alternating between edge-of-their seat attentiveness and somber resignation to burying their heads in their hands and wiping tears away with tissue.

“Are you able to use your powers of perception to tell this jury whether Benjamin Wheeler was an actor?” the families’ lead attorney Chris Mattei asked a corporate representative from Jones’ Infowars conspiracy and merchandising platform, referring to a boy slain in the Sandy Hook massacre.

“No,” Brittany Paz replied from the witness stand as Francine Wheeler, the mother of the slain boy, looked ahead stoically from the courtroom gallery.

With the same grave cadence Mattei questioned whether Paz thought slain first-graders Avielle Richman, Dylan Hockley, Daniel Barden and Emilie Parker were actors, as Jones claimed when he called the massacre of 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School “staged,” “synthetic,” “manufactured,” “a giant hoax,” and “completely fake with actors.”

“No,” replied Paz each time to Mattei’s question as the courtroom’s attention shifted to the somber faces of Jennifer Hensel, Ian and Nicole Hockley, Mark Barden and Robbie Parker, the parents of the slain children.

The effect on the jury of the family members’ presence in court each day was not immediately clear to observers during the first week of the trial, as jurors tended to focus their eyes mostly on the witness, on the attorney asking the questions, and on the evidence being displayed on three large monitors in the 50-seat courtroom.

While it was the families’ attorneys’ strategy to make sure the jury knew who the family members were in the gallery — Mattei asked the family members to stand during his opening arguments on Tuesday, for example — Jones’ defense attorney Norm Pattis seemed equally intent on highlighting the presence of the family members.

In addition to the parents of the five slain children, the families members of three educators slain in the massacre are due defamation damages in the Connecticut lawsuit as well: family members of first-grade teacher Victoria Soto, the daughter of principal Dawn Hochsprung, and the husband of school psychologist Mary Sherlach.

“Not all the parents and family members of (Sandy Hook massacre) victims chose to be here today,” Pattis told the jury during his opening statement on Tuesday. “Each of the folks who chose to be here today want you to compensate them for their grief, and to make an example of Alex Jones. Money is their weapon of choice.”

While it is too early to say what impact the family members’ presence will have on the amount of compensatory and punitive damages the jury awards, it seemed clear during the first week that being in the crosshairs of publicity had an impact on some of the family members themselves as they heard their horror retold from the witness stand.

“It was horrible — just horrible,” said a broken-up William Aldenberg, the FBI agent Jones defamed, describing the mass school shooting scene he responded to on Dec. 14, 2012, during the first day of testimony on Tuesday. “It overwhelmed the senses.”

Family members were already red-faced from crying in the press-packed courtroom on Tuesday when Carlee Soto-Parisi took the stand to cheerfully speak about her fun-loving sister, who considered teaching at Sandy Hook Elementary School her dream job.

When asked about the day that changed everything in Newtown, Soto-Parisi succumbed to sobbing, as family members in the gallery cried and consoled each other. Compounding her grief, Soto-Parisi testified, was the harassment of Sandy Hook deniers.

“It’s devastating. Its crippling,” Soto-Parisi said through tears. “You can’t breathe properly because you are constantly defending yourself and your family.”

Quiet before the storm

The emotional opening day for the Sandy Hook families was in contrast to the somber resolve family members showed and the low profile they kept for much of the rest of the week in the courtroom. It is unlikely that the family members will be able to stay out of the headlines much longer — especially if Alex Jones flies into Connecticut to testify next week as his attorney indicated.

The reason: if the Texas trial that concluded in August is any indication, Jones’ presence could ignite confrontations in Connecticut. In Texas, for example, Jones engaged with the parents he defamed multiple times during the second week of the trial. In one instance Jones responded out-of-turn in court to the mother of a Sandy Hook boy he defamed, saying, “No, I don’t think you’re an actress.”

And to the father of the slain boy Jones said after the jury had been dismissed for the day, “I let your son down and I apologize about everything.”

Moreover, Jones’ Connecticut attorney has already told the jury in Waterbury that he will argue that the families themselves are partly to blame for the harassment they’ve suffered at the hands of Sandy Hook deniers.

“You will learn that each of the parents and family members here transformed their grief and rage over the death of a loved one into a powerful and effective motive for opposing gun violence and promoting school safety,” Pattis told the jury during opening arguments, referring in part to Nicole Hockley and Mark Barden, the co-founders of the influential nonprofit Sandy Hook Promise. “They have formed foundations, held road races, testified before state lawmakers and Congress, met with presidents and authored opinion pieces.”

The families’ attorneys promised to tell a different story.

“They were defenseless,” Mattei said of the families during his opening argument. “They didn’t have the platform Alex Jones had. Ask yourself what it means when you’re lost in grief trying to find your way through it, knowing there is a whole army sent by Alex Jones who says that you are an actor.”

rryser@newstimes.com 203-731-3342

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