The theory of the current batch of civil lawsuits against Alex Jones and InfoWars goes like this: he claimed on multiple occasions that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting didn't happen. He also posited the alternative theory that it did happen, but was a false flag.
To be sure, there were lots of strange goings-on surrounding the case and the shooter. Here are just a handful:
Even mainstream outlets reported that the FBI and CIA visited the shooter Adam Lanza's house, discussed his "fascination" with mass shootings with agents who then declined to take further action.
In 2014, two years after the Sandy Hook massacre, one of the deceased victims' photographs appeared on a poster at a vigil for a Pakistan school massacre, ostensibly indicating him as a victim there as well.
One day after the shooting, a parent of a murdered child appeared on camera at a press conference laughing and smiling before taking a deep breath and assuming a more businesslike, somber tone to deliver his remarks. The rapid change in demeanor is startling and not at all what one would expect of a grieving father.
There are many more anomalies not included here for the sake of brevity.
While none of the above curiosities, alone or in combination, proves government collusion, they certainly warrant further scrutiny. And they're fair game to examine with a skeptical eye.
Which Jones did.