Alex Jones will be allowed to remain in control of InfoWars—at least for the time being—after a federal judge blocked its sale to the satirical news site The Onion late Tuesday night. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez found in favor of Jones, determining that the auction trustee failed to ensure the maximum value was secured.
While hinting at potential collusion, Judge Lopez insisted the trustee had made a good faith error in not reopening the auction to more bids, including from the second-place bidder, First American United Companies—affiliated with Alex Jones’s supplement business. “This should have been opened back up, and it should have been opened back up for everybody,” Lopez said, continuing: “It’s clear the trustee left the potential for a lot of money on the table.”
“You got to scratch and claw and get everything you can for them,” the bankruptcy judge added.
The National Pulse reported in November that The Onion had initially won the auction, which was intended to settle Jones’s outstanding debt stemming from a civil lawsuit brought against him by Sandy Hook school shooting victims’s families.
Along with the Jones-affiliated First American United Companies, other bidders and individuals believed to have considered purchasing InfoWars included Angelo Carusone, president of the George Soros-funded Media Matters for America.
It appears Jones will continue to own InfoWars for the time being. Judge Lopez ordered trustee Christopher Murray to resolve financial claims between Jones’s creditors first before making another attempt to auction Infowars to settle any debts.