• @BonesOfTheMoon
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    30110 months ago

    How is this not enforced by the court that ordered it? It should be 30 days and you end up in prison.

    • @query
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      10 months ago

      People are kept in prison without a conviction, for not affording bail. Owing a thousand times the lifetime earnings of other people should at the very least mean all your accounts and holdings are frozen, and you can’t spend anything without getting independent approval every time.

      • yamdwich
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        10 months ago

        The settlement payout is on hold pending his bankruptcy case is why they haven’t done something like this. However, lawyers for the families are in fact trying to have his assets placed in a trust or have the bankruptcy case cancelled outright because of his spending. By design it’s a slow, complicated process where Jones has lots of legal (and illegal) avenues to delay paying. Fortunately Jones is so stupid and outlandish that he’s likely hurting his own case so I wouldn’t be surprised if a judge slaps him with more severe sanctions.

        • SuperDuper
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          6010 months ago

          his bankruptcy case

          The fact that he can simultaneously have a bankruptcy case and spend nearly six figures in a single month is absolutely infuriating.

          • @Fedizen
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            2210 months ago

            its almost like our bankruptcy system is built by rich people for rich people.

      • @macrocephalic
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        510 months ago

        They should put him under a conservatorship.

    • @[email protected]
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      2910 months ago

      Welcome to the world of civil court decisions :(

      If it had been a criminal defamation case, then it would be criminally enforcable… but all this really means is “a judge ruled you need to pay” and if you don’t pay, then you could sue them again for not paying, and it just goes in a loop over and over again. I have a friend whose family has been in a loop like this in civil court over a bad real estate venture for decades with someone who simply ignores the rulings.

      It hangs over the head of the person who did it, but in the end it’s mostly just a “it’s on your permanent record” kind of stain which can stop people from working with you and damage your personal life, but it’s not like the kind of people who would work with Alex Jones don’t know who they’re working with.

        • @[email protected]
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          1010 months ago

          It’s a lot harder with rich people, they typically aren’t reimbursed by traditional means, and they can afford to hire people to obscure your assets with your businesses or trust assets.

          What do you think banks do if you don’t pay your loans?

          They typically take what you put up as collateral, this is why banks typically require some sort of collateral even if the person is wealthy.

            • @[email protected]
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              410 months ago

              Yes, and that’s the reason they really don’t hand those out to just anyone, and when they do it’s typically in limited to under 50k.

              • @[email protected]
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                010 months ago

                Your comment was about “rich people”. There are plenty of those defaulting on signature loans larger than $50K.

                • @[email protected]
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                  310 months ago

                  Do you have any sources for that claim? There really isn’t a reason for a bank to lend a significant amount of money via an unsecured loan. Even people like musk and bezos have to levy their stock to secure large loans.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -310 months ago

                    Are you asking for internal bank documents about specific loan defaults over a certain amount? No one is going to share that with you, but yes a bank will definitely loan amounts over $50K with no collateral. It’s usually called a “credit card” or just a large line of credit.

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        Seems to me that failing to pay a proper court ordered civil case should be a crime, at least in the case where you’re just ignoring the court order, not where you can’t actually pay.

    • no banana
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      10 months ago

      There’s a bankruptcy process ongoing. He’s trying to trick it but is failing.