“…the groups that sued me in these kangaroo courts told me in mediation, they said ‘we want you to come out against the Second Amendment and we’ll drop all this,’” he said during a clip, from his Infowars broadcast, that was posted on Twitter on Thursday by account user David Edwards.

He then laughed at the idea of meeting that alleged demand by the families.

“Oh, I can sit in your lap and then you’ll be nice to me, you oily, gross lawyers,” he said before adding, “I am happier and more alive than I have ever been, being under savage attack by the scum of the Earth.”

“You could put a gun to my head, you filth, and I wouldn’t back down one inch,” Jones added.

A Connecticut jury in October ordered Jones to pay $965 million to the family members of eight Sandy Hook victims and an FBI agent, who responded to the school shooting in 2012, for describing the massacre as a hoax.

Twenty students and six school administrators were killed in the shooting, but still, Jones repeatedly described the incident as a hoax and accused the victims involved of being actors complicit in staging the fatal tragedy.

The defamation case included 15 plaintiffs, including Robbie Parker who received $120 million alone. Parker’s 6-year-old daughter was killed in the shooting.

In August, Jones was ordered to pay $4.1 million in compensatory damages and $45.2 million in punitive damages to another set of parents who lost their child in the Sandy Hook shooting.

Jones reportedly called the verdict “a joke” that is meant to “scare people” and said he’d appeal to “keep them in court for years.”

Jones had previously called the shooting a “cover-up” and “a giant piece of theater” that was meant to advocate for gun control. However, he eventually admitted during trial that he believed the shooting was real but refused to apologize to the victims’ families.

The families of the victims said they have been confronted and faced in-person harassment because of Jones’ hoax conspiracy. They also said that they have received death threats and abusive comments on social media.

“I can’t even describe the last nine and a half years, the living hell that I and others have had to endure because of the recklessness and negligence of Alex Jones,” Neil Heslin, a father of one of the victims, testified during Jones’ defamation trial in Texas.

Newsweek reached out to Jones’ attorney, Norm Pattis, for comment.