The losing bidder in last week’s bankruptcy auction for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ assets, including his infamous Infowars website, filed an emergency motion on Monday morning to disqualify The Onion’s winning bid.
The losing bidder in last week’s bankruptcy auction for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’ assets, including his infamous Infowars website, filed an emergency motion on Monday morning to disqualify The Onion’s winning bid.
Losing bidder sounds like a sore loser.
Sounds like a front man for Jones.
Wasn’t that company owned by his parents or something? I think John Oliver or somebody did a story on all the shell companies he’s been embezzling money into to scam the sandy hook victims.
Owned by his dad and setup so that Jones could just step in and keep operating it
Surely, bankruptcy courts must be familiar with the tactic of “using shell companies to buy your own stuff back at bankruptcy auction for pennies on the dollar.”
They are, and it’s definitely fraud. The question is whether they’ll do anything about it
They went over this in the latest knowledge fight and it appears to be owned by one Chase Brandon Geiser, an employee of Alex’s.
*Brendan
Ah yes! How could I forget the further home movies connection!
“Brendan put down the camera and I’m kick the ball-onet burger,” a bother with a slice of Baloney and Dijon mustard… Is what I WOULD be eating if you DIDN’T FILL THE FRIDGE WITH YOUR PROTEIN DRINKS CYRIL.
First United American Companies sounds like a totally legit company. What are you talking about?
/s
Maybe its owned by AEJ Holdings, a real company that could be owned by anyone.
It is.
They were supposed to buy InfoWars to keep Alex Jones on air. Obvious satirists The Onion weren’t supposed to be the winning bid.
Not to play Devil’s advocate, but didn’t the onion basically pay with an IOU?
More like a UOML
Not quite. Although the “losing bid” here was of a higher payment amount. However, the trustee chose the onion bid because the families who are owed assets out of the settlement were willing to forgo some of the payments they are owed to back the onion bid. That would lead to more being paid back to Jone’s creditors than with the straight cash bid.
So it is a bit of a unique situation and the court is right to verify that the trustee made the right call. Ultimately the onion bid should be the winner since bankruptcy proceedings should prioritize paying creditors.