Current:Home > MyCourt overturns suspension of Alex Jones’ lawyer in Sandy Hook case that led to $1.4B judgment -GlobalInvest
Court overturns suspension of Alex Jones’ lawyer in Sandy Hook case that led to $1.4B judgment
View
Date:2025-04-26 12:25:54
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A Connecticut court on Thursday overturned a six-month suspension given to a lawyer for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones for improperly giving Jones’ Texas attorneys confidential documents, including the medical records of relatives of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
The state Appellate Court ruled that a judge incorrectly found that attorney Norman Pattis violated certain professional conduct rules and ordered a new hearing before a different judge on possible sanctions. The court, however, upheld other misconduct findings by the judge.
Pattis defended Jones against a lawsuit by many of the Sandy Hook victims’ families that resulted in Jones being ordered to pay more than $1.4 billion in damages after a jury trial in Connecticut in October 2022.
The families sued Jones for defamation and emotional distress for his repeated claims that the 2012 school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, was a hoax. Twenty first graders and six educators were killed. The families said Jones’ followers harassed and terrorized them.
The trial judge, Barbara Bellis, suspended Pattis in January 2023, saying he failed to safeguard the families’ sensitive records in violation of a court order, which limited access to the documents to attorneys in the Connecticut case. She called his actions an “abject failure” and “inexcusable.”
Pattis had argued there was no proof he violated any conduct rules and called the records release an “innocent mistake.” His suspension was put on hold during the Appellate Court review.
“I am grateful to the appellate court panel,” Pattis said in a text message Thursday. “The Jones courtroom was unlike any I had ever appeared in.”
Bellis and the state judicial branch declined to comment through a spokesperson.
The Sandy Hook families’ lawyers gave Pattis nearly 400,000 pages of documents as part of discovery in the Connecticut case, including about 4,000 pages that contained the families’ medical records. Pattis’ office sent an external hard drive containing the records to another Jones lawyer in Texas, at that attorney’s request. The Texas lawyer then shared it with another Jones attorney.
The records were never publicly released.
veryGood! (76896)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Why Beyoncé Just Canceled an Upcoming Stop on Her Renaissance Tour
- California Released a Bold Climate Plan, but Critics Say It Will Harm Vulnerable Communities and Undermine Its Goals
- Frustration Simmers Around the Edges of COP27, and May Boil Over Far From the Summit
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Ice-T Defends Wife Coco Austin After She Posts NSFW Pool Photo
- What the debt ceiling standoff could mean for your retirement plans
- Warming Trends: Heat Indexes Soar, a Beloved Walrus is Euthanized in Norway, and Buildings Designed To Go Net-Zero
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- The Nation’s Youngest Voters Put Their Stamp on the Midterms, with Climate Change Top of Mind
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- One Candidate for Wisconsin’s Senate Race Wants to Put the State ‘In the Driver’s Seat’ of the Clean Energy Economy. The Other Calls Climate Science ‘Lunacy’
- Lululemon’s Olympic Challenge to Reduce Its Emissions
- Elizabeth Holmes loses her latest bid to avoid prison
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Group agrees to buy Washington Commanders from Snyder family for record $6 billion
- In Portsmouth, a Superfund Site Pollutes a Creek, Threatens a Neighborhood and Defies a Quick Fix
- LA's housing crisis raises concerns that the Fashion District will get squeezed
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
A Tennessee company is refusing a U.S. request to recall 67 million air bag inflators
Kyra Sedgwick Serves Up the Secret Recipe to Her and Kevin Bacon's 35-Year Marriage
Inside Clean Energy: In the New World of Long-Duration Battery Storage, an Old Technology Holds Its Own
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Supreme Court unanimously sides with Twitter in ISIS attack case
In Georgia, Bloated Costs Take Over a Nuclear Power Plant and a Fight Looms Over Who Pays
A Natural Ecology Lab Along the Delaware River in the First State to Require K-12 Climate Education