Report: Infowars' Alex Jones 'Holding Firearms' for Capitol Riot Participants

© AP Photo / Jose Luis MaganaConspiracy theorist Alex Jones walks at the Conservative Political Action Conference, CPAC 2020, at the National Harbor, in Oxon Hill, Md., Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020
Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones walks at the Conservative Political Action Conference, CPAC 2020, at the National Harbor, in Oxon Hill, Md., Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020 - Sputnik International, 1920, 17.02.2023
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On 6 January 2021, a crowd of protesters supporting former US President Donald Trump made an unauthorized entrance to the US Capitol by authorities. After breaking through security, rioters occupied various parts of the federal building for several hours.
Newly surfaced legal documents have revealed that Infowars podcast founder Alex Jones is "holding firearms" for individuals who participated in the January 6 riot that saw thousands violently stormed the US Capitol.
The revelation was made by The Washington Post, which obtained copies of Jones' financial statements attached to his recent bankruptcy filing.
"Holding firearms for certain January 6th participants to be provided," the legal filing reads. However, the publication's staff notes the reason and location for holding the weapons are not specified.
The legal documents obtained by the outlet also note that Jones:
possesses several boats, has lifetime access to a helicopter
had a gross income in 2021 of $617,143.02 and $639,000 in 2020
has total assets worth an estimated $10 million
Jones' bankruptcy filing was issued shortly after he was ordered by judges to pay a total of about $1.5 billion in damages to the families of Sandy Hook victims, although the podcast founder and his lawyers have already said they would appeal.
According to the publication, Jones has so far paid more than $700 million to creditors, with his own estimated business debts ranging from $1 billion to $10 billion and the total number of creditors ranging from 50 to 99.
Prior to this, payments totaling $1.3 million were also made to "insiders" that included any relatives or business partners. According to information available to the publication, Jones also paid $680 million to his wife under the terms of a "premarital agreement."
“Just because someone is making alternative plans to support their family does not necessarily mean that they’re abandoning ship,” Vickie L. Driver, Jones’s personal bankruptcy attorney, said, according to US media. “It’s just that I think any prudent person would think about how they would take care of their family or make a living if they weren’t going to be able to do so at their current place of work.”
Driver also said Jones had made a "solemn promise" not to release new episodes of his latest project, "Alex Jones Live," following fears by Sandy Hook parents that Jones could bankrupt his current firm to avoid paying a fine for defamation relating to the Sandy Hook massacre.
Jones has repeatedly claimed the events of the 2012 school shooting were faked by the US government to take away the right to own guns from US citizens, and that some of the victims were hired actors. The victim's relatives sued him for making such statements.
The Sandy Hook massacre ended with the murder of 20 children and six adults at the hands of shooter Adam Lanza, who later committed suicide. In total, 27 people were killed as Lanza had preceded the shooting by killing his mother.
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