Judgment for Alex Jones, protest of Proud Boys founder and a big new Jan. 6 hearing

  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

Conspiracy theorist and huckster Alex Jones has been ordered by a Connecticut court to pay almost a billion dollars to people who suffered from his lies. Meanwhile, another notorious conspiracy theorist, the founder of the extremist gang the Proud Boys will appear at an event at Penn State University later this month. And there was a pretty explosive Jan. 6 committee hearing, too.

It's the week in extremism.

InfoWars founder Alex Jones speaks to the media outside Waterbury Superior Court during his trial on September 21, 2022 in Waterbury, Connecticut. Jones is being sued by several victims' families for causing emotional and psychological harm after they lost their children in the Sandy Hook massacre. A Texas jury last month ordered Jones to pay $49.3 million to the parents of 6-year-old Jesse Lewis, one of 26 students and teachers killed in the shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.

Curtains for Alex Jones?

It was a bad week for Jones, who has made a living by lying to his audience and feeding Americans a steady stream of conspiracy theories and propaganda via his platform "Infowars." In the second civil case he has faced this year, Jones was ordered to pay almost $1 billion to victims who suffered from his  lies about the Sandy Hook massacre.

  • In August, Jones was ordered to pay victims almost $50 million after a similar civil trial. The cases stream from his years-long spreading of lies about the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting that led to years of harassment and suffering for the families of the victims.

  • Jones responded to the judgment in typical fashion, asking on his televised Infowars show: "Do these people actually think they're getting any money?"

  • Infowars' parent company has filed for bankruptcy protection, but an expert told the Texas court Jones and his company could be worth as much as $270 million.

Next: Jones still faces a third trial in Texas.

Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes, left, discusses a lawsuit he filed against the Southern Poverty Law Center during a news conference in Montgomery, Ala., on Monday, Feb. 4, 2019. His attorney, Baron Coleman, listens on the right. McInnes contends the nonprofit organization wrongly labeled the far-right Proud Boys a hate group. (AP Photo/Kim Chandler) ORG XMIT: ALKC101

Proud Boys founder at Penn State

Gavin McInnes, the right-wing provocateur who founded the extremist street gang the Proud Boys, is set to appear at an event at Penn State University later this month. Students at the university are not impressed and have launched a petition to have the event canceled.

  • McInnes, a Canadian citizen, allegedly quit the Proud Boys in 2018 after the group became increasingly notorious for its street violence and political activity. He has claimed the creation of the gang was largely a joke.

  • Despite their insistence they are a harmless drinking club, exposés from inside the Proud Boys show that they are a hateful and racist organization. Proud Boys have also driven protests on far-right touchstone issues including drag events and school board meetings.

  • High-profile members of the group were charged with seditious conspiracy for their role at the Jan. 6 insurrection.

  • The petition to have McInnes' event canceled had almost 1,700 signatures by Thursday afternoon. Local anti-fascist groups announced on Twitter they were organizing a "direct action" against the event.

More: They joined the Wisconsin Proud Boys looking for brotherhood. They found racism, bullying and antisemitism.

Leader? McInnes has recently shown signs he is taking a more active role in the Proud Boys again, posting on Telegram about the group.

Bombshell Jan. 6 committee meeting

Thursday's meeting of the house select committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection was a wild one. The headline is that the committee voted to subpoena former President Donald Trump for questioning. But plenty of other revelations came out of the meeting, including:

  • Some Trump supporters were armed on Jan. 6, committee members said, and the US Secret Service knew in advance that some of the pro-Trump protesters were carrying firearms.

  • If he's ever forced to testify to the committee, Trump is likely to assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. If so, he would join 30 other individuals who have pleaded the Fifth to the committee, according to Rep. Liz Cheney.

  • The committee showed footage that had previously not been viewed publicly showing several senior politicians including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi pleading with law enforcement and military officials to secure the Capitol during the attack.

  • Trump himself wanted to join the protesters. If that had happened, one Secret Service official told the commission, "this would move from a normal, democratic, public event into something else."

What now? It was the last scheduled meeting of the committee. Trump will almost certainly fight the subpoena in court.

Friday morning update:

We're monitoring last night's shooting spree in Raleigh, N.C. which left five people dead including a police officer.

  • Police have not released the identity of the 15-year-old suspect.

  • Extremism experts tell us they have not — so far — found online evidence of postings or extremism behavior that has been seen in other recent mass shootings.

  • Follow USA TODAY's updates here.

Last week in extremism: Extremists cheer Musk Twitter deal; Oath Keepers trial heats up & more LGBTQ harassment

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alex Jones, Gavin McInnes and Donald Trump Jan. 6 hearings