Over several years, Mr. Jones gave Mr. Halbigs views an audience by inviting him to be a guest on Infowars, his radio and online show. Infowars gave Mr. Halbig a camera crew and a platform for fund-raising, even as Mr. Halbig repeatedly visited Newtown, demanding thousands of pages of public records, including photos of the murder scene, the childrens bodies and receipts for the cleanup of bodily fluids, brain matter, skull fragments and around 45 to 60 gallons of blood.
Given practical support and visibility by Mr. Jones, Mr. Halbig hounded families of the victims and other residents of Newtown, and promoted a baseless tale that Avielle Richman, a first grader killed at Sandy Hook, was still alive.
The deposition and its details about Mr. Joness operation and his interactions with Mr. Halbig was made public on Friday, days after Avielle Richmans father, Jeremy Richman, killed himself in Newtowns Edmond Town Hall, where Avielle Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to brain science that the family established in their daughters name, had an office.....
The heightened profile Mr. Halbig gained through Mr. Jones and his skepticism about mass shootings drew him into the orbit of the National Rifle Association, as well. On Feb. 15, 2018, the day after 17 people died in a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., Mark Richardson, a program officer for the N.R.A., emailed Mr. Halbig to stir doubts about the facts of the shooting, according to a document in the Texas lawsuit that was first reported by HuffPost.
Referring to Sandy Hook, Mr. Richardson wrote to Mr. Halbig that there is so much more to this story, wrongly speculating in the message that the Parkland shooter was not alone.