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Alex Jones Files for Personal Bankruptcy

Alex Jones speaks into a microphone
Joe Buglewicz/Getty Images

Alex Jones estimates his assets to be worth between $1 to 10 million, and his liabilities to be between $1 to $10 billion.

(CNN) — Right-wing conspiracy theorist Alex Jones filed for personal Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a Texas court on Friday, according to court documents.

In the documents, Jones estimates his assets to be worth between $1 to 10 million, and his liabilities to be between $1 to $10 billion. The Infowars host's primary company, Free Speech Systems, also filed for bankruptcy protection in July.

Jones' personal filing comes after he lost a bid in Texas to reduce the nearly $50 million damages award handed down by a jury earlier this year over his false claims about the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.

After the 2012 mass shooting, in which 26 people were killed, Jones baselessly repeated that the incident was staged and that the families and first responders were "crisis actors."

A Connecticut attorney representing the families of Sandy Hook victims told CNN that Jones' personal bankruptcy filing "will not work."

"Like every other cowardly move Alex Jones has made, this bankruptcy will not work." attorney Christopher Mattei said in a statement to CNN. "The bankruptcy system does not protect anyone who engages in intentional and egregious attacks on others, as Mr. Jones did. The American judicial system will hold Alex Jones accountable, and we will never stop working to enforce the jury's verdict."

Jones initially lied repeatedly about the 2012 shooting, though he later acknowledged that the massacre had occurred as his lies spawned multiple lawsuits. But he failed to comply with court orders during the discovery process of the lawsuits in Connecticut and Texas, leading the families in each state to win default judgments against him.

The latest Texas judgment adds to a growing list of rulings and trials racking up costs for Jones, who also owes $1.4 billion in a separate Connecticut case brought by eight families of Sandy Hook victims and a first responder. A hearing was expected Friday in Connecticut to discuss Jones' assets.

A trial was held in September and October in Connecticut, and the plaintiffs in that lawsuit throughout the trial described in poignant terms how the lies had prompted unrelenting harassment against them and compounded the emotional agony of losing their loved ones.

Mattei also tweeted Friday in part: "The jury found Alex Jones liable for intentional attacks on the Sandy Hook families, so he can't discharge his debt to them in bankruptcy court."

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