Lawyers for families of those killed in the 2012 school shooting won rulings finding that litigation debts Jones accrued through “willful and malicious injury” to their clients cannot be discharged through bankruptcy.
Oct 27, 2023 View in Browser

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Analyzing the Intersection of Litigation and the Business of Law

Good morning, everyone. It’s Friday, Oct. 27, and I’m Litigation Daily editor and columnist Ross Todd. One quick bit of business before we move on to Litigator of the Week Runners-Up and Shout Outs: I am out of the office today, so you will be receiving a briefing from one of my Law.com colleagues in place of your normal Lit Daily newsletter on Monday. Enjoy! In the meantime, you can reach me at rtodd@alm.com. 

 

Runners-up honors go to a team at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom that won a ruling knocking out antitrust claims against their client, Caesars Entertainment Inc., as well as Wynn, MGM, and Treasure Island alleging the companies conspired to adopt algorithmic pricing suggestions provided by the Rainmaker Group subsidiary of software company Cendyn for Las Vegas strip hotel rooms. Chief U.S District Judge Miranda Du in Las Vegas this week granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss in the first algorithmic pricing case to reach this stage. The judge found the complaint had “numerous pleading deficiencies,” including that it failed to plausibly allege that the hotelier defendants adopted prices suggested by Rainmaker’s algorithms. The Skadden team included Boris Bershteyn, who argued the motion to dismiss on behalf of all defendants, Michael Menitove, Kenneth Schwartz, Samuel Auld and Thomas (T.J.) Smith. The rest of the defense line-up includes Munger, Tolles & Olson and Pisanelli Bice for MGM, Latham & Watkins and Campbell & Williams for Cendyn, Goodwin Procter and Holley Driggs for The Rainmaker Group, McDonald Carano for Caesars, Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck for Treasure Island, and Kirkland & Ellis and Snell & Wilmer for Wynn.

 

A BraunHagey & Borden trial team lands runners-up honors for winning a $21 million verdict in California state court for Smashmallow, a snack brand launched in 2016. Jurors in Sonoma County Superior Court found last week that Dutch company Tanis Food Tec B.V. breached its contract with Smashmallow by providing a faulty custom machine that was aimed at scaling up production. Smashmallow instead ceased operations and terminated its employees. Jurors awarded Smashmallow $6.66 million in past losses, including costs for the Tanis production line, and nearly $14.3 million in future losses. The trial team included Ellen Leonida, who acted as lead counsel, David Kwasniewski, Shirley Chan and paralegal Winni Yan. 

 

Gary Sorden and the trial team he led at Cole Schotz get a runners-up spot for securing a $45.4 million verdict for a subsidiary of SkyBell Technologies in a patent infringement showdown with home security company Vivint Inc. Jurors in Sherman, Texas, this week found that Vivint willfully infringed two patents related to video doorbell technology. The Cole Schotz trial team also included firm members Timothy Craddock, Aaron Davidson, Christopher Evans, Brian King, Donald Ottaunick, Vishal Patel, James Perkins, and Kumar Vinnakota, as well as associates Amanda DeGroote, Arjun Padmanabhan, Ian Phillips and Seokin Yeh. 

 

An Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe trial team gets runners-up honors for getting a defense win for Zynga in patent ligation brought by gambling technology company IGT. In what was initially a six-patent case that was whittled down pre-trial, jurors in Austin, Texas last week found that Zynga’s casino slot games, including Game of Thrones and Hit it Rich, didn’t infringe IGT’s last patent standing. What’s more, jurors found IGT’s patent was invalid due to obviousness. The Orrick team included partners Clem Roberts, Alyssa Caridis, Bas de Blank and Will Stute and associates Sarah Mullins and Will Melehani. 

 

Shout out to Michael Celio, Jessica Valenzuela, Josh Krevitt and Jeff Lombard of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. After they filed a motion to dismiss a securities complaint against electric aircraft company client Archer Aviation Inc. earlier this month, the plaintiff this week agreed to voluntarily dismiss the suit. 

 

Shout out to teams at Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, who represent Ripple CEO Bradley Garlinghouse, and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, who represent Chris Larsen, the company’s co-founder and executive chairman. After scoring an earlier summary judgment win dismissing the Securities and Exchange Commission’s primary liability claims against their clients in the closely-watched cryptocurrency case, the agency last week voluntarily dismissed with prejudice aiding-and-abetting claims against Garlinghouse and Larsen. The Cleary team is led by partners Matt Solomon and Nowell Bamberger, and includes partner Rahul Mukhi, counsel Alex Janghorbani and associates Sam Levander, Michael Schulman, Caleb Robertson, Ben Rosenblum, Jackie Brune, Olivia Everton, Jessica Cuddihy, Ruthie Wu and Joe Wakeford. The Paul Weiss team is led by of counsel Marty Flumenbaum and partners Mike Gertzman and Meredith Dearborn, and also includes associates Kristina Bunting, Sarah Prostko, Michael Pisem, Eli Adelman, Connor Ritschard and Jacob Humerick.


Shout out to a Winston & Strawn team led by partner Samuel Mendenhall. Last week U.S. District Judge Thomas Durkin dismissed a lawsuit brought against the firm’s client, the Chicago Housing Authority, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development challenging the lease of a vacant parcel of land to the Chicago Fire soccer team for a new training facility on the city’s Near West Side. The judge found that the community groups who had sought an injunction blocking the deal under civil rights statutes and the Administrative Procedure Act lacked standing. The Winston team on the matter also included partner Sean Suber, associates Katherine Kyman and Sydney Latimore, and paralegal Carol Abing.

 

Litigators of the Week: A Bankruptcy Win for Sandy Hook Families Against Alex Jones

 

Last year we recognized the good work that litigators at Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder and Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison have been doing in Connecticut for families of those killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting in Newtown.

 

Part of that work includes litigating against conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who for years claimed the shooting was a hoax by the government. Last week the Connecticut team and lawyers pursuing parallel claims in Texas got key wins from U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez in Houston who found that Jones cannot use his bankruptcy filing to discharge debts accrued through “willful and malicious injury” to the families. 

 

Having previously acknowledged the work of the Koskoff and Paul Weiss teams, this week we highlight the Texas team, who in the bankruptcy court have been headed by Stuart Lombardi and Jennifer Hardy of Willkie Farr & Gallagher, working pro bono, as well as Avi Moshenberg of McDowell Hetherington and Jarrod Martin of Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams & Aughtry.

 

Litigation Daily: Who were your clients and what was at stake?

 

Avi Moshenberg: The clients are parents of children murdered in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. They obtained judgments in Texas state court for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress against Alex Jones, who claimed the mass shooting was a hoax and that they were crisis actors. In bankruptcy, Jones tried to have those judgments discharged—i.e., erased. The clients argued the judgments were nondischargeable under bankruptcy law. And the court agreed.

 

How did this matter come to you and your firms?

 

Moshenberg: When the lawyers who sued for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress discovered that Jones was siphoning away assets to avoid paying the families, I was added to the team to prosecute fraudulent-transfer claims against Jones. After Jones and his companies filed for bankruptcy, my role expanded to advocate for the families in the bankruptcy process.

 

Jarrod Martin: Avi and I have known each other for about five years, having worked with each other at McDowell Hetherington prior to me joining Chamberlain Hrdlicka. When Alex Jones caused the first Infowars entities to file for chapter 11 in April of 2022, I followed the cases closely, discussing strategy with Avi behind the scenes. When the primary Infowars entity, Free Speech Systems, filed for bankruptcy, I jumped at the chance to work with Avi and the Sandy Hook families in a more official capacity.

 

Jennifer Hardy: With respect to Willkie, counsel to the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors reached out to our firm’s co-chairman, who is also a practicing bankruptcy attorney. We put together a team, were interviewed by litigation counsel for the Texas plaintiffs, and were ultimately engaged pro bono.

 

Who is on the team and how have you divided the work? More specifically, how has the bankruptcy team coordinated with counsel representing these clients at the trial courts?

 

Moshenberg: The bankruptcy team includes core-bankruptcy attorneys Jennifer Hardy and Jarrod Martin and bankruptcy litigators Stuart Lombardi and Willkie associate Ciara Sisco. The trial team consists of Mark Bankston and his partners at Farrar & Ball. The bankruptcy team and the trial-court team work closely, which was key to the nondischargeability ruling. The bankruptcy court granted summary judgment on nondischargeability without any discovery by applying collateral estoppel to the robust underlying state-court record. That was only possible because of the collaboration by these incredibly talented professionals.

 

Stuart Lombardi: Avi is on both the bankruptcy team and the state trial court team. So he was the coordination between those teams. That was key. 

 

Within Willkie, we staffed this like any complex bankruptcy litigation. It’s a collaboration between the bankruptcy and litigation departments, as always. I lead the litigators, Jenn leads bankruptcy, and we work together and with our partner Rachel Strickland on strategy. A team of brilliant, hardworking associates is essential to the team’s success, as always. Associates like Ciara Sisco (who was a lead author of our complaint and briefs), Deanna Drenga and Courtenay Cullen (who were key contributors of research and drafting), and many more in both New York and Houston.

 

We also coordinated with counsel to the Connecticut plaintiffs, who filed their own complaint and motion and achieved a tremendous win for their clients.

 

Martin: From my perspective, the coordination between the three firms involved in the bankruptcy and trial counsel in the state court has been seamless. As Stuart mentioned, Avi is on both teams. He is both a fantastic litigator and also had all of the institutional knowledge from the underlying state court litigation. Willkie’s retention really helped shift the playing field for us, bringing significant expertise in both restructuring and complex commercial litigation. Chamberlain’s role is three-fold. First, we have significant experience appearing in front of Judge Lopez, especially in subchapter V bankruptcy cases. Second, we bring expertise in the subchapter V arena, given my role as a subchapter V trustee. Third, we bring litigation experience in 523 litigation.

 

Hardy: The bankruptcy and litigation teams have very much acted as a single team. We discuss matters relating to the case collectively at least weekly, and usually more often. We each attend the hearings, review and comment on the various filings, and coordinate on overall strategy.

 

How often do these issues of “willful and malicious injury” come up in bankruptcy proceedings? Have you ever dealt with anything similar to this matter?

 

Hardy: Because my bankruptcy work is primarily in the complex corporate bankruptcy space, in which section 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code tends not to come up, this is not a provision that any of us at Willkie had ever litigated. While there is some case law on the subject, it does not come up very often.

 

Martin: It’s unusual for willful and malicious injury litigation to be litigated in bankruptcy. As Jenn said, it’s not commonly litigated. But the Alex Jones bankruptcy is not a common case, so it makes sense that the uncommon would be litigated. When I was a law clerk for a bankruptcy judge, I drafted an opinion on section 523 and willful and malicious injury. I’ve also participated in a couple 523 lawsuits, but never through summary judgment or trial.

 

Tell me about the hearing in front of Judge Lopez. Looking back at it with this ruling in hand, does anything stick out?

 

Lombardi: Three things. First, Judge Lopez gave each side the time it wanted to make whatever points it wanted. Second, that meant that we had to spot for ourselves the issues we thought the court would have to grapple with most in its opinion, and allocate our airtime accordingly. Third, everyone did a good job tailoring the message to the audience. This is an emotionally-charged case with really gut-wrenching facts, but we knew we had a sharp judge who wanted to focus on the law. It was a much different presentation than we would have given to a jury. I think the same was true for Kyle Kimpler of Paul Weiss, who did a great job arguing for the Connecticut plaintiffs. And to their credit, the Jones team really focused on and engaged with the law as well.

 

Moshenberg: Judge Lopez had clearly prepared for the hearing beforehand by educating himself on the facts, the law, and the parties’ briefing. And he gave the advocates the room to advocate. The lawyers for all the parties seized that opportunity, arguing at the highest level.

 

What now? Where does this leave the existing judgments? And what is left to be determined through further proceedings?

 

Lombardi: The state court judgments stand, they’re entitled to both full faith and credit and preclusive force in bankruptcy, and Jones can’t relitigate the findings. He owes nondischargeable debt to each of our movant clients. What’s left is to determine the damages that Jones owes our clients and cannot discharge in bankruptcy. More generally, in and beyond the bankruptcies, we are focused on achieving the best outcomes and recoveries for our clients.

 

Moshenberg: Now we need to hold Jones accountable by making him pay the judgments the families obtained against him. Since the beginning, Jones has tried to defy the law. He defamed the families and intentionally inflicted emotional distress. When they sued, he hid evidence and refused to participate in discovery (and tried to hide his assets). At trial, he lied on the witness stand repeatedly. And after judgments were rendered against him, he went to bankruptcy court seeking to have those judgments discharged. All throughout, the guardrails of the legal system have held. But Jones has yet to do what juries in Texas and Connecticut have determined he must—pay these families for the harm that he has caused.

 

What can others take from this decision?

 

Hardy: The biggest takeaway is that those, like Alex Jones, that use their platforms to defame others, cannot then use bankruptcy as a means to escape from their responsibilities to the people they have injured. Bankruptcy is meant as an escape valve for the honest but unfortunate debtor, but it does not, and should not, provide an unqualified right to get rid of all debt. 

 

Martin: I echo what Jenn said about not being able to use bankruptcy to escape responsibility for his lies. I think from a more practical perspective, practitioners should be aware that collateral estoppel can come into play when trying a 523 action. We obtained summary judgment on the 523 action relying solely on the state court record.

 

What will you remember most about this matter?

 

Moshenberg: That lawyers seldom get an opportunity to take on a case of such importance. And that comes with a lot of weight. Weight from knowing who the clients are and what they’ve been through. Weight from knowing who Alex Jones is and what he’s said and done. Weight from knowing about all those watching, listening, and reporting on this—all wondering if Jones will get away with it. And while the burden is heavy, we’re honored to have been trusted to carry it.

 

Martin: The best memories are yet to come. This was one important step toward getting justice for the families, and there are additional battles to fight as the negotiations and litigation shift in light of these rulings. Setting that aside, I’ll most remember the initial UCC Zoom calls with certain family representatives in attendance. It was moving to see how much this meant to them. 

 

Hardy: It’s rare to have the opportunity to work on cases so personally meaningful. My oldest child was in elementary school at the time of the Sandy Hook shooting, and, like most Americans, I will never forget the visceral horror of that day and others like it. If we are able to bring any amount of comfort to the families that went through that immense tragedy and the subsequent grief and trauma from the way they were portrayed, then that’s something I will take with me for the rest of my life.

 

Lombardi: The community of folks that collaborated to represent the victims in Alex Jones’s personal bankruptcy and the bankruptcy of his company, FSS. For the Texas plaintiffs, us four and the Willkie team. For the Connecticut plaintiffs, Paul Weiss and Koskoff. For the Committee, Akin.

 

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