After three decades on air, Infowars goes dark on Thursday, April 30, 2026, by court order. The state proceeding, which followed the conclusion of a long-running federal bankruptcy process, directs the cessation of the network’s electrical service and internet connectivity at the close of business that day. The Onion has secured court approval for a licensing deal that will reconstitute the Infowars website as a satirical comedy property under the direction of Tim Heidecker. The transition is scheduled to take effect immediately upon the shutdown.
How Infowars Lost the Brand
The collapse of Infowars as a going concern traces to the 2022 defamation judgement of approximately $1.4 billion against Alex Jones and his company, in connection with his repeated false claims that the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre had been staged. The families of the murdered children prevailed in court. The judgement triggered Chapter 11 proceedings, which converted to liquidation. The court has now approved the sale of the brand and assets to Global Tetrahedron, parent company of The Onion.
The Onion’s Plan
Tim Heidecker, the comedian and writer best known for the absurdist series Tim and Eric Awesome Show, will steer the editorial direction of the new entity. Communications previewed during the bankruptcy proceedings indicate the site will retain the Infowars brand, the URL and the visual identity, and use them as the platform for satirical content – a complete inversion of the property’s original use. Mainstream coverage has framed the move as a poetic commercial outcome. Civil-liberties commentators have framed it as the structural elimination of an alternative-media voice via tort law and procedural attrition.
The Free-Speech Question
Whatever one’s view of Alex Jones – and no serious person disputes the harm caused by the Sandy Hook claims – the precedent being set is not narrow. A privately-held media operation has been driven from existence by civil judgement, with state-level enforcement of utility cut-offs, and its name and platform handed to its political opposite. The architecture of how it was done – defamation suit, judgement larger than the company’s market value, bankruptcy, liquidation, sale to a hostile party – is now in the precedential file.
For supporters of Jones, the closure is final. For his critics, the closure is overdue. For everyone else, the question is whether the same architecture can, under the next administration, be deployed against an outlet whose conduct is less obviously unsafe.




