Kelly Presses Jones On Sandy Hook Denial

Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones never gave a direct answer in a segment on NBC's Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly when pressed repeatedly by Megyn Kelly to admit he was wrong to call the massacre at Newtown, Conn., a hoax. The segment with Jones combined Kelly's interview with background on his history of false remarks, his relationship with Trump and comments from Newtown parent Neil Heslin, whose 6-year-old son, Jesse Lewis, was killed in the shooting

NEW YORK (AP) — Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones hemmed and hawed when pressed repeatedly by Megyn Kelly to admit he was wrong to call the massacre at Newtown, Connecticut, a hoax.

Jones never gave a direct answer in a segment on NBC’s “Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly.” Kelly has been criticized intensely for giving a platform to Jones, who has also called the Sept. 11 attacks an inside job and promoted the false story that a pizza place in Washington, D.C. was the site of a child sex ring.

She has defended her decision by noting that his influence has grown with the rise of President Donald Trump, who has praised Jones and appeared on his radio program.

“Here’s the thing, Alex Jones isn’t going away,” she said Sunday night.

The “Infowars” host said at one point that he was playing “devil’s advocate” in denying the 2012 mass shooting at the Sandy Hook Elementary School. But he added that he remained skeptical after he “watched the footage” of children leaving the building.

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“Some of it looks like it’s real but then what do you do when they’ve got the kids going in circles in and out of the building with their hands up. I’ve watched the footage,” he said. “That looks like a drill.”

The segment with Jones combined Kelly’s interview with background on his history of false remarks, his relationship with Trump and comments from Newtown parent Neil Heslin, whose 6-year-old son, Jesse Lewis, was killed in the shooting. When Kelly asked him whether he had anything to say to Jones for Father’s Day, he responded, “I think he’s blessed to have his children to spend the day with, to speak to. I don’t have that.”

Last week, Jones leaked an audio recording of what he said was a phone conversation with Kelly, heard promising she would not portray him as “some kind of boogeyman.” Shortly before Sunday’s night interview, Jones released a Father’s Day video in which he offered condolences to families who had lost children in the “horrible tragedy” of Newtown, but did not refer to his previous comments disputing the killings.

“Parents should never have to bury their own children,” Jones said.

NBC O&O WVIT Hartford, Conn., said Friday it wouldn’t air the report. In an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press, NBC Connecticut staff members were told station executives made the decision after listening to concerns from employees, Sandy Hook families and viewers and considering “the deep emotions from the wounds of that day that have yet to heal.”

Lawyers who represent 12 people who lost loved ones at Sandy Hook urged NBC News officials not to air the interview. NBC News Chairman Andy Lack told the AP that the Jones story would be edited with its critics in mind.

The interview also was seen as a test of the interviewing skills of Kelly, the former Fox News star whose questions two weeks ago for Vladimir Putin were widely panned for being too easy on the Russian leader. An unaired segment obtained by Huffington Post showed Kelly telling him that “virtually every person we have met on the street says what they respect about you is they feel that you have returned dignity to Russia.”

Kelly challenged Jones from the start, introducing him as a “radical conspiracy theorist” and promising to confront him on his “notorious lie” about Sandy Hook. The two frequently interrupted each other as Kelly kept asking if he would admit to his wrongdoing and a visibly tense Jones kept deflecting her questions, blaming the media for distorting his remarks or veering between acknowledging and disputing the tragedy.

“I will sit there on the air and look at every position and play devil’s advocate,” he said.

Answered Kelly: “Of course, there is no evidence on the other side.”

Jones also downplayed his connection to Trump, who has spoken warmly of him and at times seemed to use conspiracies aired on Infowars in his campaign speeches.

“I think my influence on Trump is way, way lower than what MSM (mainstream media) has said,” he commented, saying he and the president were “friendly,” but not friends.

After spending more than a decade at Fox, Kelly signed a multimillion dollar contract with NBC earlier this year. Her star power had grown after she challenged Trump during a 2015 Republican debate on his history of sexist remarks and the candidate responded with a series of angry tweets and other comments, sometimes crude and personal, and boycotted a later debate because she was one of the moderators.

She then was a key figure in the downfall of former Fox News chief Roger Ailes, telling in-house investigators of inappropriate conduct by Ailes that supported Gretchen Carlson and other women who had made similar accusations. Kelly wrote of her battles with Trump and Ailes in her best-selling memoir from 2016, “Settle for More.”

Kelly’s old employer needled her over the weekend, sending a tweet headlined “Megyn Kelly and Alex Jones: NBC News under fire for ‘botched’ rollout.”


Comments (12)

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kendra campbell says:

June 19, 2017 at 8:21 am

After all is said and done – this sorry episode shows how far NBC News has fallen off the journalism cliff. Tom Brokaw’s prostitution makes it even worse.

Gregg Palermo says:

June 19, 2017 at 8:57 am

Proving to all of us that you can never again be correct about anything if you’ve ever been wrong about one thing. Seems like an impossible standard, but because Alex Jones is deemed a wingnut (by most people) then refuting him is enough to discredit him permanently. That may be the problem with the mainstream news report: They have been shown to be wrong once too often and have lost the public trust. The Viet Cong generals wrote in their memoirs that they were ready to give up, right after the Tet Offensive, until they learned that Walter Cronkhite convinced the public we were losing in Vietnam, so they decided to press on to victory.

    Stephen Bernard & David K. Randall says:

    June 19, 2017 at 2:11 pm

    There’s “being wrong” and there’s what Jones does/did. Guy just made stuff up out of thin air to aggrandize his career and inflame the low-intelligence folks who chose to listen. I’m not going to propose charging him with anything (still believe in a free press, even when “press” is a tortured definition) but he should be mocked and sidelined for the rest of his public life. Not for being inaccurate, but for being maliciously and irresponsibly inaccurate. That’s not a condemnation of his skills as a journalist (if any), it speaks to his character (or lack thereof).

Geoffrey Miller says:

June 19, 2017 at 9:55 am

Megan Kelly exposed Alex Jones as a fraud. Instead of criticizing her she should be praised.

Snead Hearn says:

June 19, 2017 at 10:28 am

Sad that Alex Jones received his 15 minutes and in a weird way Megyn Kelly received her 15 minutes. Feel sorry for the families as this attempt at ratings only reveals where we are today.

Sergio Rataus says:

June 19, 2017 at 10:48 am

This is an Op-Ed story and shouldn’t headline on TVNewsCheck. Both parties are bad, but what’s worse it this platform playing politics, left biased politics, AGAIN. TVNC – You just can’t stop, can you?

Cheryl Thorne says:

June 19, 2017 at 12:43 pm

This was the worst investigative piece / interviews in years. If she worked on commission she’d be paying back her draw. NBC cut your losses ..

Andrea Rader says:

June 19, 2017 at 4:27 pm

About what one might expect from the network that brought you Richard Jewell and exploding gas tanks.

Ellen Samrock says:

June 19, 2017 at 6:42 pm

The ratings speak for themselves. This show had approximately half the viewers her debut show had. Ms. Kelly is on a trajectory to career destruction.