Alex Jones Says the DOJ Needs to Seize His $2,000 Cat


The hits carry on coming for Alex Jones, the disgraced radio host who peddled lies and conspiracy theories on his present Infowars following the Sandy Hook Elementary Faculty capturing. Now having declared chapter following his repeated trials for his misinformation concerning the mass capturing, Jones is sounding the alarm in opposition to the Division of Justice, who he claims needs to take his costly cat away from him.
Jones says his ragdoll cat Mushu is value roughly $2,000 and claims that the Division of Justice spent 5 minutes out of a three hour assembly discussing the feline. Within the video uploaded to Twitter by Jones’ spouse, Jones elaborates that the Division of Justice requested Jones if there have been belongings hidden within the cat on account of its $2,000 price ticket. Assuming Jones is telling the precise reality (uncertain), seizing Mushu from him would solely put a microscopic dent within the $1.5 billion Jones owes to the households of the Sandy Hook Elementary Faculty capturing victims.
“This isn’t a joke, that is actual. This actually occurred,” Jones stated within the video. “[The Justice Department] needed to know if belongings have been hidden within the cat…They need the cat for the Sandy Hook households. So the deal’s broke, you guys aren’t getting the cat.”
“That is harassment,” Jones decries in his video. Oh, what a delightfully oblivious assertion coming from him.
Jones has been the topic of two trials concerning his claims concerning the Sandy Hook Elementary Faculty capturing, the place a perpetrator murdered 26 college students and school on the Connecticut faculty in December 2012. Jones repeatedly referred to the mass capturing as a conspiracy and false flag operation on his radio present Infowars, which the households of the sufferer’s sued over.
The primary trial, in Texas this previous summer time, noticed Jones ultimately proclaim that the capturing was “100% actual” earlier than he was hit with $45.2 million tremendous. The second trial, in Connecticut again in September, noticed Jones going through $965 million in damages.