Alex Jones

The GOP candidate denied saying conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was a credible source of information. But he did.
A nearly $1 billion defamation judgment against the conspiracy theorist won't be enough to stop the fringe host from spreading his brand of hate.
“We are going to chase Alex Jones to the end of the earth,” said attorney Joshua Koskoff, who called the $965 million judgment "sound and reasonable."
A jury ordered Jones to pay $965 million in damages to families of those slain in the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting.
Greene stood up for her fellow conspiracy theorist after a jury ordered Jones to pay $965 million for spreading lies about the Sandy Hook school massacre.
The late-night host tore into the "despicable and ridiculous" conspiracy theorist.
A former U.S. attorney said the Infowars host is financially doomed even if he tries to wiggle his way out of paying nearly $1 billion in damages.
One Twitter sage noted that Jones is "already a miserable human being" but suggested others should feel assured "that he feels even more miserable."
Multimillion-dollar verdicts keep stacking up against the Infowars host, who used his platform to falsely claim the Sandy Hook shooting never happened.
The notorious conspiracy theorist has been booted from Facebook, Apple and YouTube. Here’s how Alex Jones went mainstream.