AUSTIN, Texas – Free Speech Systems, the main company owned by Austin-based conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, has filed for bankruptcy – but a Jones lawyer said the action is not expected to affect a trial underway in Austin in a lawsuit by the parents of a child killed in the 2012 attack on Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Free Speech Systems, which operates Jones’ InfoWars media system, listed $14.3 million in assets, including almost $1.16 million in cash and almost $1.6 million in property and equipment, as of May 31.

But the Austin corporation’s bankruptcy filing also listed $79 million in liabilities, including a $54 million debt owed to PQPR Holdings.

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A separate lawsuit filed by two Sandy Hook families earlier this year in state court accused Jones of systematically hiding millions of dollars in assets and called the $54 million debt dubious, saying PQPR is a Nevada-registered company that is owned “directly or indirectly by Jones, his parents and his children through an alphabet soup of shell entities.” That lawsuit is still in the early stages.

Jones is in the middle of a two-week trial in Austin to determine how much money he must pay the parents of 6-year-old Jesse Lewis, one of 20 children and six educators killed in the mass shooting at the Newtown, Conneticut, grade school.

Jones has been found to have defamed and caused intentional emotional distress to the parents, Scarlett Lewis and Neil Heslin, for labeling the school shooting a hoax and the parents as liars or government conspirators in a plot to crack down on gun rights.

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The parents have asked for $150 million, with the possibility of additional punitive damages that jurors will be asked to assess after testimony about the net worth of Jones and Free Speech Systems at the end of the trial.

Andino Reynal, Jones’ lawyer, revealed the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing after jurors had left for the day Friday, saying the bankruptcy lawyers “assured me there would be no interference with the progress of our trial.”

A hearing has been set for 8:30 a.m. Monday in a Houston federal bankruptcy court to consider Free Speech Systems’ emergency request to lift an automatic stay that would otherwise block the Austin trial.

The idea behind the bankruptcy is to have the dollar amount in damage awards from the Austin trial to present to the bankruptcy court, Reynal told state District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble.