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The creator of Pepe the Frog is suing InfoWars

Andrew Knight holds a sign of Pepe the frog, a conservative icon, during a rally in Berkeley, California on April 27, 2017. Conservative firebrand Ann Coulter on April 26, 2017 canceled a planned appearance at the University of California, Berkeley, saying she had lost the backing of the groups that had sponsored her talk. The right-wing commentator had insisted she would show up at Berkeley, a famously progressive campus, on Thursday even though the university said it could not provide a suitable venue because of security threats. But Coulter said she was forced to reconsider her decision after the conservative Young America's Foundation and the Berkeley College Republicans, which had sponsored her talk, backed out, accusing the university of creating a "hostile atmosphere." / AFP PHOTO / Josh Edelson (Photo credit should read JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images)

Pepe the frog, the once-innocent cartoon that was appropriated as a mascot of the alt-right, is at the center of a new legal battle.

Matt Furie, the character’s creator is suing InfoWars, the media company helmed by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.

In the lawsuit, filed Monday, Furie alleges copyright infringement stemming from a stylized poster sold on the Infowars website. The $29.95 poster features a depiction of Pepe alongside other MAGA “heroes” drawn by artist Jon Allen, including Donald Trump, Roger Stone, Milo Yiannopoulos, Ann Coulter and Jones himself.

“The establishment wants this taken down,” the description of the poster reads. “Instead, celebrate the historic victory and frame this conversation starter in your home!”

According to the civil complaint, “Furie did not authorize the use of the Pepe image or character in this poster, and does not approve of the association of Pepe with Alex Jones or any of the other figures shown in this poster, or the ‘MAGA’ slogan.”

In an audio statement published on the InfoWars YouTube channel, Jones calls the lawsuit “frivolous” and part of a larger attempt by media outlets to make Infowars “public enemy number one.”

“We did not create the posters, that are protected speech, that are transformative,” Jones says, stating the use of the frog in an item for sale “is 100% protected by the courts, protected by the first amendment, protected by fair use.”

Furie has tried desperately to rescue his laid-back frog from the swamp of alt-right and neo-Nazi troll patois, even going as far as “killing” the character in a 2017 cartoon. However, like the Hydra (both Lernaean and Marvel-esque), the beheading of the chief Pepe has only resulted in more spawn, as both the cartoon and general frog imagery live on in alt-right and white nationalist circles.

Even Gab, a “free speech social network” that serves as a safe space for such folks, features a frog in its logo.

Furie’s lawsuit seeks unspecified damages and a permanent injunction against any further copyright infringements regarding his beleaguered creation.