The U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, Houston division, has issued a court filing, shared by Alex Jones on X / Twitter,
exposing the fraudulent sale of
Infowars to
The Onion.
The filing is a major bombshell exposing the corruption behind the politically motivated takedown of Jones via the Sandy Hook scandal that he talked at length about for years before the families involved sued him.
Jones, as you may recall, was ordered to pay $1.5 billion in damages to the Sandy Hook families and his
Infowars site was put up for "auction," the word
auction being in quotes because the court filing shows that it was rigged from the beginning.
"HUGE," tweeted the Health Ranger about this latest revelation. "The full details, when they come out, will shock everyone."
(Related: Have you checked out our
earlier report about how the
Infowars website went down immediately after the phony "auction" purchase by
The Onion?)
The Onion CEO lied when asked about Infowars bidding
ABC News' George Stephanopoulos brought
The Onion CEO Ben Collins and Everytown for Gun Safety President John Feinblatt on his "Good Morning America" program to talk about the issue, only to have Collins accidently spill the beans about the scam.
While claiming to now "own"
Infowars, Collins stumbled over his words when he point-blank lied about being the highest bidder at the auction, which is false. There was a higher bidder that was rejected and that remains unknown, and
The Onion's bid amount has not been revealed.
Feinblatt chimed in to also admit that the Sandy Hook families who are receiving $1.5 billion from Jones' empire "were behind" the alleged purchase of
Infowars, which seems to now be in question because of the fraud.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez was brought on Stephanopoulos' show as well to discuss the bankruptcy case and the halting of the
Infowars sale due to the bankruptcy fraud scandal.
"No one should feel comfortable with the results of this auction," Judge Lopez said point-blank about the highly questionable nature of the bankruptcy proceedings.
"Yeah, look: we won the bid," Collins then interjected. "We own
Infowars and we are very excited about that.
"But, is it true that you didn't have the highest bid?" Stephanopoulos then asked.
"Uh, we, we did," Collins nervously and deceptively responded. "We did have the highest bid when you take into account the families' concessions here. They made a concerted effort to make this the best and highest bid for everybody involved."
Collins then proceeded in the interview to explain that
The Onion's plans for
Infowars, assuming the bankruptcy goes through as the Sandy Hook families are planning, represent "the best way to stop Alex Jones" from continuing to report on world affairs.
"I used to be a disinformation reporter," Collins then said, claiming, apparently, to be a former supporter of Jones. "I used to cover him from the other side of this."
"You can present as many facts as you want to Alex Jones and he's just not gonna listen. But, if you make fun of these people in a way that cuts through and maybe show a funhouse mirror, basically, to what he's trying to do. He's trying to get you really afraid so you can buy some supplements."
More related news about the villains behind all this can be found at
Corruption.news.
Sources for this article include:
X.com
Drive.Google.com
NaturalNews.com
Infowars.com