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The Misadventures of Rudy Giuliani


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Future earnings. 

 

The new request for an injunction for Giuliani to persist in talking lies about these women is contempt of court, fines, and possible jail time. 

 

Personally, I'd love to see his ass in jail and being hauled in a prison van to all of his upcoming court appearances. That should put fear into all the rest of the Georgia defendants for a starter. Seeing that stupid, lying old man in jail.

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1 hour ago, LadySkinsFan said:

Future earnings. 

 

The new request for an injunction for Giuliani to persist in talking lies about these women is contempt of court, fines, and possible jail time. 

 

Personally, I'd love to see his ass in jail and being hauled in a prison van to all of his upcoming court appearances. That should put fear into all the rest of the Georgia defendants for a starter. Seeing that stupid, lying old man in jail.

 

Thanks. And yeah, at some point people need to start going to ****ing jail. 

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18 minutes ago, @DCGoldPants said:

his earning potential is minimal and whatever money he does get, you know it's not going to be documented anywhere. His whole game now is avoiding anything and hoping Trump gets elected AND doesn't throw him under the bus, so he can get paid for access to that admin. 

 

Hope Trump is elected is something that's unfortunately for him not going to happen.

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Giuliani’s Financial Quagmire Deepens As He Can’t Escape Paying Defamed Election Workers

 

In the wake of a recent high-profile verdict, former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani finds himself ensnared in a legal and financial maelstrom. A jury has determined that Giuliani owes a staggering $148 million to election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, whom he defamed during the tumultuous 2020 presidential election. The burning question now: Can Giuliani, citing financial difficulties, escape the hefty financial repercussions?

 

Despite Giuliani’s claims of fiscal strain, his legal team has failed to provide a comprehensive overview of his net worth, with Giuliani notably ignoring subpoenas requesting this crucial information. The four-day trial concluded with a jury awarding compensatory and punitive damages, excluding an additional $200,000 in court sanctions that Giuliani has yet to pay.

 

Some legal experts cast doubt on Moss and Freeman’s chances of recovering the full amount. Ryan Goodman, a former special counsel at the US Department of Defense, suggests they might only receive a “fraction” of the damages, contingent on the revelation of Giuliani’s actual assets. However, former US Attorney Barb McQuade underscores that intentional torts, such as defamation, cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, signaling that Giuliani may be held accountable irrespective of his financial predicament.

 

“Intentional torts, like defamation, are not dischargeable in bankruptcy,” she asserted. “And so it may be that Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss are able to chase Rudy Giuliani to his grave to catch every penny they can out of his pockets.”

 

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1 minute ago, TheGreatBuzz said:

Outside of the Moss verdict, I'm shocked how little debt he has.

 

Well, he was a high priced lawyer for a long time so probably had a bunch of money combined with his recent grift work.  That's been slowly wittled away, plus his multi-million dollar property being put up for sale means he's got nothing left.

 

Although, I thought that he can't use bankruptcy to be discharged from his obligation to pay in the Moss and Freeman case.

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Judge orders immediate enforcement of Georgia election workers' $148M judgment against Giuliani

 

A federal judge on Wednesday granted former Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss' request to expedite their $148 million judgment against Rudy Giuliani, saying that the mother and daughter have "good cause" to fear Giuliani may attempt to avoid paying them.

 

Following a week-long trial, a federal jury last week ordered Giuliani to pay nearly $150 million to the two women for defaming them with false accusations that they committed election fraud while counting ballots in Georgia's Fulton County on Election Day in 2020.

 

Freeman and Moss subsequently asked the judge to "permit immediate enforcement" of the judgment out of concern that the former New York City mayor could attempt to "find a way to dissipate [his] assets before plaintiffs are able to recover."

 

Judge Beryl Howell agreed Wednesday that Giuliani's record as an "unwilling and uncooperative litigant" provides the plaintiffs "good cause to believe that he will seek to dissipate or conceal his assets" before paying them.

 

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'So humiliating'; Morning Joe panel laughs at Giuliani's desperate cash-making 'grift'

 

During a report on Rudy Giulaini's decision to file bankruptcy on Thursday in response to a $148 million judgment in the Georgia election employees defamation lawsuit, the entire "Morning Joe" panel couldn't contain their laughter at one of the ways he is attempting to rake in much-needed cash.

At issue is a decision by the man formerly known as "America's mayor" to do Cameo videos for pay, one of which was shown by the hosts where he recited the "I'm a little teapot" children's nursery rhyme to make a few dollars.

 

https://www.rawstory.com/giuliani-cameo-2666787085

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27 minutes ago, EmirOfShmo said:

'So humiliating'; Morning Joe panel laughs at Giuliani's desperate cash-making 'grift'

 

During a report on Rudy Giulaini's decision to file bankruptcy on Thursday in response to a $148 million judgment in the Georgia election employees defamation lawsuit, the entire "Morning Joe" panel couldn't contain their laughter at one of the ways he is attempting to rake in much-needed cash.

At issue is a decision by the man formerly known as "America's mayor" to do Cameo videos for pay, one of which was shown by the hosts where he recited the "I'm a little teapot" children's nursery rhyme to make a few dollars.

 

https://www.rawstory.com/giuliani-cameo-2666787085

 

Those few dollars should go directly to the woman who beat him in court. Direct deposit. 

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Rudy Giuliani's 11 court cases, ranked in order of how screwed he is

 

The future for Giuliani does not look good, and his bankruptcy filing won't get rid of his legal problems. Here are his 11 major ongoing court cases, ranked in order of how much of a threat they are.

 

11. The $2 million grocery store employee lawsuit
In 2022, while Giuliani was campaigning for his son Andrew Giuliani's failed campaign for governor in New York, he got into a kerfuffle with a grocery store employee on Staten Island.

 

According to Giuliani, he "got hit" by the employee, Daniel Gill, "as if a boulder hit me." Giuliani talked to police, who kept Gill behind bars for a day and brought assault charges, which were ultimately dropped.

 

Gill sued Giuliani in 2023, alleging defamation and false arrest. Security video shows that Gill — who admits he's no fan of Giuliani — merely patted him on the back and verbally insulted him.

 

10. The blueberry farmers and a Ukraine film
While Giuliani was working as a personal lawyer for Donald Trump, he raised funds for a would-be "documentary" in Ukraine about Joe and Hunter Biden.

 

Two California farmers, Baldev and Kewel Munger, plowed $1 million into the project, which never happened. In August, they sued Giuliani, asking for their money back.

 

9. Hunter Biden's laptop
Giuliani has proudly peddled the salacious contents of Hunter Biden's laptop, attempting to tie it to his father, President Joe Biden, and fueling an impeachment inquiry in the House of Representatives.

 

In 2023, Hunter Biden struck back. He filed lawsuits against Giuliani and other allies, accusing them of hacking and tampering with his data, which he says was stolen.

 

8. Unpaid legal bills
Giuliani retained the law firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron to represent him in criminal investigations related to his 2020 election interference efforts.

 

But, according to a lawsuit from the firm, Giuliani never paid everything he owed. Giuliani paid only $214,000 of the $1.5 million owed, the lawsuit claims.

 

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Insiders Say Rudy Giuliani’s Knighthood Should Be Stripped

 

Shortly after receiving his honorary knighthood at Buckingham Palace on Feb. 13, 2002, Rudy Giuliani was asked by a reporter what Queen Elizabeth II had said to him during the ceremony. Giuliani—recently transfigured into America’s Mayor for his leadership after the 9/11 terror attacks—said the British monarch had conveyed sympathy. “She said it must have been hard and awful,” he said at the time. “She said that she had watched a lot of what happened and what I had done, and that she wanted to express her admiration.” Giuliani said he told the queen that he was receiving one of the U.K.’s highest honors “on behalf of not myself, but all of the police officers and firefighters and rescue workers and heroic people in New York.”

 

Since that distinguished day, arguably the high-water mark of Giuliani’s international reputation, things have changed. His latest public disgrace came this month, when a jury ordered him to pay $148 million to a pair of former election workers whom Giuliani defamed with lies of election fraud. But that’s just one of many humiliations in recent years. 

 

Nevertheless, Giuliani’s honorary knighthood remains. Because he isn’t a British citizen, he’s never been able to style himself “Sir Rudy,” but he can use the post-nominal letters “KBE” for “Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire”—the highest honor the British sovereign can give to a foreigner. Now, almost 22 years later, the honor could be taken away from him.

 

But in Britain, losing a knighthood—or an honor of any kind, for that matter—is rare. According to government figures, there were just 12 “forfeitures” between 2019 and 2022 (all of which came in 2020). Losing an honorary knighthood, those lofty awards given to non-Brits, is a feat so rare that, to achieve it, you’ve typically got to have offended the U.K. so severely that they’re willing to risk any diplomatic fallout that could potentially arise from your honor being stripped.

 

When Brits have their honors revoked, it works like this. An ad hoc body known as the Forfeiture Committee is convened by the Cabinet Office, the government department responsible for the administration of the honors system, and the committee will consider recommendations for removals. In turn, the committee will give its recommendations for forfeitures through the prime minister to the monarch, who has the final say—the idea being that the sovereign awards the honor, and ultimately has the power to take it away.

 

Asked by The Daily Beast if the Forfeiture Committee would automatically consider stripping Giuliani of his knighthood in the event that he’s sentenced to more than three months in prison, or if the committee would consider him to have brought the honors system into disrepute in the event of any kind of criminal conviction, a Cabinet Office spokesperson said only: “It would be inappropriate to comment on any individual [honors] recipient.”

 

Still, when asked if they thought Giuliani should lose his honor in the event of his conviction, the official told The Daily Beast: “Yes, I do, but I don’t think it would follow automatically.”

 

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Rudy Giuliani Says He Regrets Not Getting Pension

 

Even former mayor Rudy Giuliani admits he should’ve saved for retirement. Giuliani, who landed himself in hot water after facing legal bills for his $148 million civil court ruling, failed to apply for post-office benefits and had to forego the pension. Asked why he didn’t take the money, he said “Giving back to the city I love. Although I would like to take it now,” adding, “I don’t know how to go about it.” With the pension, Giuliani could have collected $442,000 in the last 17 years. He also isn’t getting a pension for his six years as the U.S. attorney for Manhattan or other government work.

 

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Rudy Giuliani blames one man for all his legal woes… but it’s not himself

 

Did Rudy Giuliani take any time out during the holidays to reflect on the downfall of his career and reputation? It seems he did…. And he came to some wild conclusions.

In a tweet, Giuliani says there’s one man to blame for the bankrupt, disgraced state in which he finds himself.

 

That’s right… it’s himself Joe Biden.

 

 

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