Google CEO Sundar Pichai was confronted by Alex Jones outside Pichai's hearing with the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday.

Jones, the founder of Infowars, accused Pichai and Google of making "censorship systems" for China's Communist Party, which he alleged "killed five times what Hitler did."

In a video shared on Twitter, Jones can be heard chanting "Google is evil" as Pichai walks to his hearing.

Read a full report of the hearing, which focused on reports that Google plans to reenter the Chinese market with a heavily censored search engine known as Dragonfly.

The Intercept reported in August that Pichai met with a Chinese government official in December 2017 to discuss the project. On Tuesday, Pichai denied that he had.

The Intercept said Dragonfly would "blacklist websites and search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protest."

Alex Jones, the founder of Infowars, followed Google CEO Sundar Pichai around Congress on Tuesday, chanting "Google is evil" and accusing the company of building a censored search engine in China for a party that "killed five times what Hitler did."

Pichai appeared before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday to answer questions on reports about Google's plans to make a censored search engine in China known as Dragonfly and discuss allegations of anti-conservative bias.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai turning around as Jones begins chanting "Google is evil." Twitter/Rob Drew

Jones' former associate Rob Dew filmed him following Pichai down a corridor outside the hearing.

Jones, who is well known for his conspiracy theories, podcasts, and for being kicked off iTunes and Twitter for his views, can be heard accusing Pichai of "helping build censorship systems in China for a global social score they've tested there: to totally control every aspect of our lives."

"They're working with the Communist Chinese," he said, "that killed five times what Hitler did."

Jones also accused Google of "helping arrest Chinese dissidents, Christians, and Buddhists."

When cautioned by a security guard to quiet down, he said, "They're going to talk about me in this committee."

Jones talking to reporters after Pichai enters the hearing. Twitter/Rob Drew

Pichai did not respond to any of Jones' comments but appeared to grimace as he passed Jones in the corridor.

In the hearing, Pichai was asked by Rep. David Cicilline whether Google was talking to the Chinese government about launching a search engine there, in response to an article published by the investigative-journalism website The Intercept in August that said Pichai met with a Chinese government official in December 2017 about Google's reentry into China.

Pichai denied that Google was talking to the Chinese government about the project but said it had taken steps toward such a product in "an internal effort" and that he was happy to be transparent about that process.

Cicilline then asked, "Will you, Mr. Pichai, rule out launching a tool for surveillance and censorship in China while you are CEO of Google?"

"It's in our duty to explore possibilities to give users access to information," Pichai replied, adding, "We'll be very thoughtful, and we will engage widely as we make progress."

Pichai also said that at one point, more than 100 Google staff members were working on the Dragonfly project, which The Intercept reported would take the form of an Android app.

Democratic Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode Island. Fox News/YouTube

The Intercept said the search engine would "blacklist websites and search terms about human rights, democracy, religion, and peaceful protest" — news that generated an outpouring of criticism from human-rights groups and politicians.

The Intercept reported in September that progress on the search-engine project had been top secret and that Google executives were furious when a memo detailing plans for Dragonfly circulated among employees, who were told to delete it immediately.

Last month, Google employees submitted a petition to scrap the search-engine project.

"We are Google employees, and we join Amnesty International in calling on Google to cancel project Dragonfly, Google's effort to create a censored search engine for the Chinese market that enables state surveillance," it said.

Google did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.