Tag: Giuliani

  • Judge to decide whether to hold Rudy Giuliani in contempt of court

    Judge to decide whether to hold Rudy Giuliani in contempt of court


    Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio?

    Former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani is appearing in court in New York on Friday for a hearing on whether he should be found in contempt of court ignoring court orders, including for failing to surrender a signed jersey from the late Yankees’ Hall of Famer.

    The valuable jersey was supposed to be turned over two months ago to help satisfy Ruby Freeman and Wandrea “Shaye” Moss’ $146 million defamation judgment against Giuliani.

    Attorneys for the former Georgia election workers want U.S. District Judge Lewis Liman to find Giuliani in civil contempt for not turning over the jersey and other items he’s repeatedly been ordered surrender.

    Giuliani is expected to testify in the afternoon at the hearing he’d sought to skip a day earlier. His attorney asked the judge in a letter Thursday if his client could appear remotely because he is “having medical issues with his left knee and breathing problems due to lung issues discovered last year,” attributable to his presence at the World Trade Center site in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

    Liman indicated he was skeptical of the eleventh-hour request, noting that Giuliani “does not assert he is unable to travel,” that he submitted “no medical evidence” and that he didn’t follow proper procedure for such a request.

    “He has presented no evidence why for this hearing, where the Court has been asked to hold him in contempt, where his credibility has been called into question, and where Plaintiffs have asked for an opportunity to cross-examine him in person, he should be permitted to deny Plaintiffs that opportunity and to appear remotely,” Liman wrote.

    He didn’t order Giuliani to attend the hearing, but warned him he couldn’t use his recent sworn declarations and deposition transcript as part of his defense at the hearing if he doesn’t.

    Giuliani’s attorney Joseph Cammarata told NBC News Thursday night his client would be attending, and Giuliani was on time for the hearing. He entered the courtroom with a slight limp.

    Freeman and Moss have asked Liman to hold Giuliani in contempt for disregarding court orders directing him to turn over assets to help satisfy their judgment against him.

    “Enough is enough,” they wrote in a court filing urging Liman to slap Giuliani with “appropriate sanctions” to get him to comply with the orders. Their filing doesn’t specify what those sanctions should be; the judge could fine or even jail Giuliani if he finds him in contempt.

    Giuliani has maintained that he has been complying with the judge’s orders.

    “The Court should see that I gave everything that I could give,” he said in a declaration last month.

    Freeman and Moss say that’s not true and that Giuliani has failed to turn over a large number of assets, including the DiMaggio jersey.

    Giuliani said in a court filing that he’s not sure where the jersey is but that he thought it had been in his New York City apartment, which attorneys for Freeman and Moss have searched.

    “There is no Signed Joe DiMaggio shirt that I possess. I believe that the Signed Joe DiMaggio shirt was hanging in the New York Cooperative apartment at the time that the apartment was turned over to Plaintiffs,” Giuliani said.

    An attorney for Freeman and Moss told Liman in a court filing that “Giuliani’s claim to have suddenly lost track of the signed Joe DiMaggio jersey is not credible for multiple independent reasons.”

    One of those reasons is testimony from one of Giuliani’s “oldest friends, Monsignor Alan Placa.”

    Placa “testified under oath during his recent deposition that he had not traveled to New York in seven years but that he had personally seen the framed, signed Joe DiMaggio shirt within the last two years, and specifically ‘at the apartment — actually, it was here in Florida,’” their filing said.

    “That’s certainly where I saw it,” Placa added, according to a transcript. “I’d never seen a Joe DiMaggio shirt before or since.”

    The discrepancy is expected to be among the topics at the hearing. The attorneys for Freeman and Moss argue that the failure to hand over the memorabilia is part of “a consistent pattern of willful defiance of the Court’s Turnover Orders.”

    That includes failing to turn over the proprietary lease and co-op shares to his estimated $6 million Manhattan apartment, cash in his bank account and the paperwork for the 1980 Mercedes-Benz convertible he belatedly surrendered in November.

    “While true that Mr. Giuliani delivered the Mercedes, he has yet to turn over the title document for the car, and does not claim otherwise,” their filing said.

    Rudy Giuliani sits inside a Mercedes convertible outside a polling station in Palm Beach, Fla., on Nov. 5, 2024.
    Rudy Giuliani outside a polling station in Palm Beach on Nov. 5. Ricardo Arduengo / Reuters

    While Giuliani has turned over 18 luxury watches, he hasn’t surrendered eight others he said he owned in a bankruptcy filing last year, including one that he said had belonged to his grandfather that he was expressly ordered to turn over.

    Giuliani suggested to reporters in early November that he doesn’t believe he has to turn that watch over, despite the judge’s ruling.

    “Every bit of property that they want is available if they’re entitled to it. Now the law says they’re not entitled to a lot of it. For example, they want my grandfather’s watch; it’s 150 years old. That’s a bit of an heirloom — usually you don’t get those unless you’re involved in a political persecution,” he said.

    Giuliani has also failed to turn over other Yankees memorabilia, including a signed picture of another Hall of Famer, Reggie Jackson, the lawyers said. Giuliani said he doesn’t have such a photo. “There is no Reggie Jackson picture; the picture was Derek Jeter,” and it has been turned over, Giuliani said.

    The election workers’ attorneys said Giuliani’s claim is “belied by his own Bankruptcy Schedule,” which listed the photo as an asset, and the fact that his former lawyer told the judge the Jackson picture was being kept in a storage facility.

    As for the Manhattan co-op, Giuliani’s attorney acknowledged in a Dec. 24 court filing that Giuliani “has not delivered the shares ‘evidencing Defendant’s interest in’ his New York Apartment or the related ‘proprietary lease’ but states that he ‘did not possess’ them,” the workers’ lawyers said.

    The attorneys said that’s contrary to what Giuliani said three days later at a deposition, “where he confirmed that he has a ‘box’ in Florida with ‘sensitive’ and ‘important papers’ that includes the proprietary lease and ‘probably’ the co-op shares although he hasn’t ‘looked’ in the box in probably ‘six months’ — confirming both that, in his mind, he has withheld documents he was required to deliver and did not even attempt to collect them to be turned over.”

    The contempt proceeding is one of two Giuliani faces relating to Freeman and Moss.

    He has another next week in federal court in Washington, D.C., where U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell will hear arguments that he should be sanctioned for continuing to defame Freeman and Moss on his streaming show, despite a court-ordered agreement that he wouldn’t do so. They’re seeking an unspecified amount in financial penalties at the Jan. 10 hearing.

    Giuliani maintains that his comments on his show weren’t defamatory and that it “is my First Amendment right to talk about the case and my defense.”

    Howell is the judge who found Giuliani liable for defaming Freeman and Moss in 2023 after he repeatedly snubbed court orders to turn over required evidence to the pair, who had sued him over his claims about them in his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results on President Donald Trump’s behalf.

    They said the false accusations forced them out of their jobs and led to a torrent of racist death threats.

    A jury later awarded them $148 million in damages, which the judge reduced to $146 million. Giuliani is appealing the verdict.

    Giuliani has been stripped of his law license in New York and Washington, D.C., and he also faces criminal charges in two states relating to his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. He has pleaded not guilty in both.



    In a recent development, a judge is set to decide whether to hold Rudy Giuliani in contempt of court. The former mayor of New York City and personal attorney to former President Donald Trump has been embroiled in legal battles surrounding his role in promoting baseless claims of election fraud during the 2020 presidential election.

    Giuliani has faced scrutiny for his actions in the aftermath of the election, including his participation in the infamous “Stop the Steal” rally that preceded the deadly Capitol insurrection on January 6th, 2021. He has also been accused of spreading misinformation about the election results, leading to widespread backlash and legal challenges.

    Now, a judge will determine whether Giuliani should be held in contempt of court for his actions. This decision could have significant implications for his legal standing and reputation moving forward.

    Stay tuned for updates on this developing story as the judge prepares to make a ruling on Giuliani’s potential contempt of court charges.

    Tags:

    • Rudy Giuliani contempt of court
    • Judge decision Rudy Giuliani
    • Legal case Rudy Giuliani
    • Contempt of court hearing
    • Lawyer Rudy Giuliani
    • Court ruling Giuliani
    • Legal battle Giuliani
    • Giuliani court case update
    • Law and order Rudy Giuliani
    • Legal consequences Giuliani

    #Judge #decide #hold #Rudy #Giuliani #contempt #court

  • Rudy Giuliani testifies at contempt hearing as lawyers for election workers pursue $148M judgment

    Rudy Giuliani testifies at contempt hearing as lawyers for election workers pursue $148M judgment


    NEW YORK (AP) — Rudy Giuliani testified Friday at a contempt hearing to decide whether he has dodged and deceived lawyers trying to recover a $148 million judgment for two Georgia election workers, lamenting the speedy deadline imposed on him to turn over information about his assets.

    The former New York City mayor testified in Manhattan federal court that the two-week time frame he was given to respond to the requests “was very short,” in comparison to how long he was given to provide information in 15 to 20 other court cases he’s involved in.

    Judge Lewis J. Liman indicated he would not rule immediately on whether Giuliani will face civil sanctions for failing to turn over some assets.

    Giuliani asked Thursday if he could appear remotely at the hearing, but he changed his mind after the judge said his options at the proceeding would be limited if he didn’t show up in person.

    The lawyers claim Giuliani has displayed a “consistent pattern of willful defiance” of Liman’s October order to give up assets, after he was found liable in 2023 for defaming the poll workers by falsely accusing them of tampering with ballots during the 2020 presidential election.

    They said in court papers earlier this week that he has turned over a Mercedes-Benz and his New York apartment, but not the paperwork necessary to monetize the assets. And they said he has failed to surrender valuable watches and sports memorabilia, including a signed Joe DiMaggio shirt, and not “a single dollar from his nonexempt cash accounts.”

    Liman said in an order last week that Giuliani’s lawyer should be ready to explain why Giuliani should not be held in contempt with resulting sanctions that could make it less likely that he gets to keep his Florida residence. A trial over the disposition of the Palm Beach condominium and World Series rings is scheduled for mid-January.

    Giuliani has maintained that the Palm Beach property is his personal residence now and should be shielded from the judgment.

    Giuliani’s lawyers have predicted that Giuliani will eventually win custody of the items on appeal.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Larry Neumeister contributed to this report.





    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, once known as “America’s Mayor” for his leadership after the September 11th attacks, found himself in a different kind of spotlight today as he testified at a contempt hearing. Giuliani, who served as former President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, was called to testify in a case brought by lawyers representing election workers who are seeking a $148 million judgment against him.

    The lawyers for the election workers allege that Giuliani spread false claims about widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election, leading to threats and harassment against them. They argue that Giuliani’s actions were reckless and that he should be held accountable for the harm caused to their clients.

    During the hearing, Giuliani maintained his innocence, claiming that he was simply exercising his First Amendment rights to free speech. However, the judge overseeing the case was not convinced, citing evidence that Giuliani knowingly spread misinformation and incited violence.

    As the hearing continues, the fate of Giuliani and the $148 million judgment hangs in the balance. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Rudy Giuliani
    2. Contempt hearing
    3. Election workers
    4. $148M judgment
    5. Lawyer
    6. Testify
    7. Legal proceedings
    8. Election fraud
    9. Court case
    10. Legal battle

    #Rudy #Giuliani #testifies #contempt #hearing #lawyers #election #workers #pursue #148M #judgment

  • Rudy Giuliani, Slow to Transfer Assets to Election Workers, Could Be Held in Contempt

    Rudy Giuliani, Slow to Transfer Assets to Election Workers, Could Be Held in Contempt


    After several missed deadlines and extensions, Rudolph W. Giuliani, the former mayor of New York, could be found in contempt of court on Friday for failing to deliver assets worth $11 million to two poll workers he defamed after the 2020 presidential election.

    If he is held in contempt, he could face steep penalties, including jail time.

    Mr. Giuliani, 80, appeared in federal court in Lower Manhattan to try to justify the stalled handover of some of his most prized possessions, including a penthouse apartment in Manhattan, a collection of Yankees memorabilia, luxury watches and a vintage Mercedes-Benz convertible.

    Mr. Giuliani’s presence wasn’t assured. A day before, Mr. Giuliani’s lawyer asked if his client could appear virtually, because of medical issues related to his left knee, as well as breathing problems that he attributed to his time spent at the World Trade Center after the Sept. 11 attacks.

    But the judge, Lewis J. Liman, who had a testy exchange with Mr. Giuliani about the case in November, said he would not accept Mr. Giuliani’s testimony unless he attends in person. So the former mayor, in a dark blue suit and glasses, walked into the 15th floor courtroom with a visible limp and a dry cough.

    Mr. Giuliani is expected to take the stand sometime after lunch.

    The transfer was originally scheduled to take place in October, as a down payment on a $148 million judgment that he was ordered to pay to two Georgia election workers, Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Shaye Moss. Mr. Giuliani had claimed, without evidence, that the women had helped steal the presidential election from Donald J. Trump more than four years ago.

    But one deadline after another has passed, and lawyers for the women said they have received only a fraction of the property.

    Mr. Giuliani has argued that he has largely complied with the handover request and said that some of the items sought by the plaintiffs are not in his possession.

    “The Court should see that I gave everything that I could give,” Mr. Giuliani wrote in a personal plea to Judge Liman, on Christmas Eve.

    But lawyers for the women said Mr. Giuliani continues to defy orders, despite repeated warnings from the court.

    The plaintiffs have yet to receive legal possession of his 10-room apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, once listed for over $6 million, in part because paperwork has not been updated since his divorce from his ex-wife, Judith Giuliani, according to court filings. The title to Mr. Giuliani’s 1980 Mercedes convertible, which he said was once owned by Lauren Bacall, has yet to be transferred.

    And the whereabouts of a signed and framed Joe DiMaggio Yankees jersey, which once hung over Mr. Giuliani’s fireplace, are unknown, Mr. Giuliani has said. Lawyers for the plaintiffs said the item was removed from his apartment sometime before they gained access.

    “It is hard to square Mr. Giuliani’s position with reality,” Aaron E. Nathan, one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers, wrote in a letter to the court on Dec. 30. “Enough is enough.”

    The hearing marks a low point in Mr. Giuliani’s many legal battles stemming from his stint as Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer. In November, Mr. Giuliani’s lawyers withdrew from the handover case, citing an undisclosed professional ethics reason.

    In a recently unsealed letter explaining their departure, one of the lawyers, Kenneth Caruso, said Mr. Giuliani was not cooperating in the discovery process related to a condominium he owns in Palm Beach, Fla., and was withholding access to his electronic devices.

    Later this month, Mr. Giuliani also faces the possibility of contempt charges in a Washington, D.C., court, where he has been accused of continuing to publicly make false claims about the two Georgia poll workers.



    Former New York City mayor and personal attorney to former President Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, is facing potential contempt charges for failing to transfer assets to election workers as ordered by a federal judge.

    Giuliani, who has been at the center of controversy surrounding the 2020 presidential election and baseless claims of voter fraud, was ordered to transfer funds to a group of election workers who were suing him for defamation. The workers had alleged that Giuliani had spread false claims about election fraud in an effort to overturn the results of the election.

    Despite the court order, Giuliani has been slow to comply with the judge’s directive, prompting the possibility of contempt charges. This latest development adds to the legal troubles facing Giuliani, who is also facing a $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit from Dominion Voting Systems for spreading false claims about their voting machines.

    As the legal battles continue to mount for Giuliani, it remains to be seen how this latest development will impact his standing in the legal community and his future legal endeavors. Stay tuned for further updates on this ongoing legal saga.

    Tags:

    Rudy Giuliani, election workers, asset transfer, contempt, legal implications, Giuliani investigation, election fraud, legal proceedings

    #Rudy #Giuliani #Slow #Transfer #Assets #Election #Workers #Held #Contempt

  • Rudy Giuliani May Lose His Yankees World Series Rings Instead of Giving Them to His Loser Son

    Rudy Giuliani May Lose His Yankees World Series Rings Instead of Giving Them to His Loser Son


    I bought my twin sons their first Texas Rangers hats when they were just under two years old. It was a huge deal. I’d been the lone Texas Rangers fan in my life up until that point. With my boys in those hats, I had people I could share my love, frustration, disappointment, and excitement with. The Texas Rangers were losers for most of my life and I stuck with them regardless. Then, in a turn that was nothing short of miraculous, the Rangers won their first World Series in 2023.

    I have purchased and been gifted an absurd amount of World Series merchandise over the last year and change. A lot of it, like a couple of hats, will be worn until they fall apart (and then some). Others are being saved for my kids should they want them when they’re older. One such piece is a replica World Series ring. The actual ring my Rangers were given costs around $10,000. Mine was significantly cheaper. Regardless, I’m excited to give that hunk of silver and cubic zirconium to my boys one day, and I will be allowed to because I haven’t defamed anyone to the tune of $148 million.

    Enter Rudy Giuliani, who faced a defamation suit from two former Georgia election workers. To say the former mayor has had a significant fall from grace would be an overstatement, because he has always sucked. Still, the fact that he seemingly has no spot in Trump’s new administration, when white supremacist tattoos and rape allegations won’t sink some of the other candidates, speaks volumes about Giuliani’s toxicity. Giuliani is crumbling, and now he’s trying to hold onto his past.

    Giuliani was the Mayor of NYC when the Yankees won the World Series four times in five years. Then-owner George Steinbrenner wanted to gift Giuliani four rings to commemorate his time as mayor. Rudy ended up paying for them, claiming he wanted to gift them to his failed politician son Andrew. Thanks to the defamation suit, ole Rudy may have to give up his precious rings instead of bequeathing them to his yuppy larva.

    This is already a satisfying story. Giuliani deserves all of this punishment and more. But the added element of it being the Yankees makes it even better. We don’t need to get too much into the quotes, because no one is interested in Giuliani’s lament, but one did stick out to me. It seems Rudy hasn’t worn the rings in twenty years. The reason why is a classic example of a “Yankees” fan. “I stopped wearing them after the Yankees stopped winning because it was no longer working,” he explained at some point. “And then I wasn’t using them anymore.” In addition, Andrew hasn’t worn one since 2009, the last time the Bronx Bombers won the World Series. That sounds like a lack of commitment to me!

    The Yankees appeared in the most recent World Series and the amount of brand spanking new Yankees hats in NYC and NJ popped up overnight. The area is not new to that kind of fairweather fandom, but it gets dialed up to 11 when the Yankees are in the playoffs. However, the pinstriped team lost this year (badly) and the hats disappeared just as quickly. As someone who has worn Rangers hats into the ground, including during a span where we lost two consecutive World Series, I take that kind of shoddy support personally!

    I was already feeling a kind of smug schadenfreude from this story, but seeing Rudy pull a rich man’s version of “I stopped wearing the hat when they lost” makes it even sweeter. He and his (loser) son don’t deserve memorabilia, a place in Yankees history, or even seats in the bleachers. They deserve the public humiliation and fall from grace that we are currently witnessing (much like the 2024 Yankees and, to be fair, the 2024 Rangers. But I haven’t taken my hat off once).



    Former New York City Mayor and personal attorney to former President Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, may soon find himself without his cherished Yankees World Series rings. Instead of passing them down to his son, Andrew Giuliani, who recently announced his bid for Governor of New York, Rudy may be forced to surrender the rings due to his legal troubles.

    Rudy Giuliani has been embroiled in various legal battles, including his involvement in Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results. Additionally, he is facing a $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit from Dominion Voting Systems for spreading false claims about election fraud.

    Given his mounting legal woes, it is possible that Rudy Giuliani may be forced to forfeit his Yankees World Series rings as part of a settlement or court order. This would be a devastating blow to the former mayor, who has long been a fervent supporter of the Yankees and proudly displayed his championship rings.

    As for Andrew Giuliani, the prospect of not inheriting his father’s prized possessions may serve as a harsh reminder of the consequences of Rudy’s actions. It remains to be seen how this potential turn of events will impact the younger Giuliani’s political aspirations.

    In the meantime, Rudy Giuliani’s future remains uncertain, and the fate of his Yankees World Series rings hangs in the balance. It is a stark reminder that even the most cherished possessions can be lost in the face of legal troubles.

    Tags:

    Rudy Giuliani, Yankees World Series rings, son, potential loss, family drama, baseball memorabilia, legal battle, sports controversy, father-son feud

    #Rudy #Giuliani #Lose #Yankees #World #Series #Rings #Giving #Loser #Son

  • Rudy Giuliani fights to save his Yankees World Series rings

    Rudy Giuliani fights to save his Yankees World Series rings


    NEW YORK (AP) — Ruth. Gehrig. DiMaggio. Mantle. Giuliani?

    As Rudy Giuliani’s life gets stripped for parts to satisfy a $148 million defamation verdict, the former New York City mayor is fighting to keep one gleaming set of sports memorabilia in the family: Yankees World Series rings bestowed to him by the team’s late owner, George Steinbrenner.

    A lifelong Bronx Bombers fan, Giuliani contends that the rings — bejeweled behemoths commemorating the team’s four championships in five years while he was mayor — now belong to his son, Andrew, and shouldn’t be given up.

    In sworn testimony made public this week, ahead of a pair of key court dates, Giuliani described the 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000 World Series rings as something of a family heirloom and Yankees good-luck charm.

    He recounted how he and Andrew would each put one on for “a special Yankee occasion,” like the team’s last World Series win in 2009.

    Giuliani testified that when Steinbrenner gave him the rings in 2002, he insisted on paying for them and told the owner, “These are for Andrew.” He said he then invited his son — a teenager at the time — to take one for himself while he held the others for safekeeping.

    Realizing he wasn’t wearing them as much as the Yankees’ fortunes ebbed, Giuliani testified, he decided to give the rest to Andrew at a birthday party in 2018. He estimated that the rings, the same as the players received, were worth about $27,000.

    “They are now yours,” Giuliani recalled saying. “These are your rings. I don’t know what I’m keeping them for. They belong to you.”

    The ex-mayor took his swings at a Dec. 27 deposition, a week before the start of a courtroom doubleheader in a tug-of-war over assets sought by the two former Georgia election workers who sued him over his lies about them in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss. A transcript was posted to the court docket on Monday.

    Up first is Giuliani’s contempt hearing in Manhattan federal court Friday over what lawyers for the Georgia women say was his failure to turn over property in a timely fashion, such as his New York City apartment lease.

    Then, on Jan. 16, Judge Lewis J. Liman will hold a trial to decide what happens not only to Giuliani’s World Series rings but also his condominium in Palm Beach, Florida. Giuliani claims the condo, estimated to be worth more than $3 million, is his primary residence and should be exempt.

    For Giuliani, once heralded as “America’s Mayor” for his post-9/11 leadership, it’s the legal equivalent of two strikes, two out in the bottom of the ninth.

    Lawyers for the former election workers, mother and daughter Ruby Freeman and Wandrea “Shaye” Moss, argue that Giuliani has engaged in a “consistent pattern of willful defiance” of court orders to turn over items.

    In a Monday filing, lawyer Aaron Nathan said Giuliani’s compliance has been spotty, noting that while he finally surrendered a Mercedes previous owned by actor Lauren Bacall, he failed to provide the vehicle’s title.

    After listing 26 watches in a bankruptcy filing, Giuliani now claims without explanation that 18 watches he turned over to Freeman and Moss are all he has, Nathan wrote. He added that Giuliani also claims not to know the whereabouts of a shirt signed by Joe DiMaggio or a photo signed by Reggie Jackson, both Yankees legends.

    Freeman and Moss asked the judge in August to award them the World Series rings, but the judge demurred and scheduled a trial after Andrew Giuliani, now 38, said they belong to him.

    Giuliani’s eight hours of deposition testimony offered a vivid portrait of a still-proud, combative and downtrodden man who has lost almost everything and remains convinced that it has been unjustly taken.

    Recalling his days as a two-term Republican mayor, he boasted that he “cured” homelessness in the city while acknowledging that he is now rejected by most clubs he would like to join, except for two.

    Questioned by Nathan, he spoke at length about the rings, his ties to Trump and the Yankees, and his dismay over his once-beloved Big Apple’s liberal politics — a factor he said drove him to relocate to Florida and register to vote there last May.

    “Frankly, I wanted my vote to count,” Giuliani testified.

    Asked why it was important to him to cast a vote for president, Giuliani replied: “Because I am a very, very strong supporter of Donald Trump, which is the reason why you are doing all of this to me.”

    Before Trump, it was the Yankees. Giuliani, who saw them win 10 titles during his childhood and college years, regularly cheered the team as mayor, often sitting next to the dugout.

    “I was a very ardent Yankee fan,” he testified. “When I was the mayor, I was described as New York’s No. 1 Yankee fan.”

    After the team triumphed in 1996 to snap a 15-year drought, Steinbrenner thought “New York’s No. 1 Yankee fan” deserved a World Series ring — but Giuliani wasn’t having it.

    “I didn’t think it was appropriate that a mayor get a ring,” Giuliani testified.

    By the time he left office in 2002, the Yankees had three more championships.

    At spring training that year in Tampa, Florida, Steinbrenner presented him with a plaque and three World Series rings, Giuliani testified, each engraved with his name.

    “I was very touched and moved by that,” he said.

    The Yankees also gave him the 1996 ring that he turned down, he said. He recalled showing all four rings to his son and telling him: “These are going to be yours.”

    Each ring was bigger and more extravagant than the last, Giuliani testified, so much so that “you’d look crazy wearing it.”

    Giuliani lamented that his rings didn’t bring the Yankees more success, noting their 2003 World Series loss to the Marlins and 2004 playoff collapse against the hated Red Sox.

    “I stopped wearing them after the Yankees stopped winning because it was no longer working,” he said. “And then I wasn’t using them anymore.”





    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is in a legal battle to save his prized possession: his New York Yankees World Series rings.

    Giuliani, a longtime Yankees fan, received the rings as a gift from the team in recognition of his support and dedication to the franchise. However, in recent years, the rings have become a target of controversy as Giuliani faces numerous legal challenges and investigations.

    Now, Giuliani is fighting to keep his rings, arguing that they are a symbol of his love for the Yankees and should not be taken away from him. He has hired a team of lawyers to defend his ownership of the rings and is determined to do whatever it takes to keep them in his possession.

    As the legal battle heats up, Yankees fans and supporters of Giuliani are rallying behind him, showing their solidarity and standing by him in his fight to save his prized possessions. Only time will tell if Giuliani will be successful in his efforts to keep his World Series rings, but one thing is for certain: he is not going down without a fight.

    Tags:

    1. Rudy Giuliani
    2. Yankees
    3. World Series rings
    4. New York City
    5. Baseball
    6. Sports
    7. Championship
    8. MLB
    9. Mayor
    10. Legal battle

    #Rudy #Giuliani #fights #save #Yankees #World #Series #rings

  • Election workers ask judge to hold Giuliani in contempt

    Election workers ask judge to hold Giuliani in contempt


    Rudy Giuliani makes appearance at RNC.

    Rudy Giuliani talks to reporters before the Republican National Convention, on July 16, 2024, in Milwaukee (AP Photo/Paul Sancya).

    Two former Georgia election workers who were defamed by Rudy Giuliani to the tune of $148 million have once again asked a federal judge to hold the former New York City mayor in contempt, accusing him of withholding vital information as they try to collect on the massive judgment.

    As Ruby Freeman and her daughter Shaye Moss continue litigation over how Giuliani will pay off what he owes them, the fate of his multimillion-dollar Florida condominium has yet to be decided. Giuliani earlier this year claimed that the Palm Beach home was his permanent residence, making it eligible for homestead protection and thereby exempting the property from debt collection.

    Attorneys for the Georgia election workers have pushed back on that claim, alleging in court documents that Giuliani treated the Florida condo as a vacation home, not a permanent residence. The duo have been alleging that Giuliani is refusing to answer certain questions required in the discovery process because truthful answers would show he has not been honest about the Florida property.





    In a recent development, election workers are requesting a judge to hold Rudy Giuliani in contempt for his role in spreading baseless claims of voter fraud. The workers argue that Giuliani’s false statements have put their safety at risk and have contributed to the harassment and threats they have faced. Stay tuned for updates on this legal battle as it unfolds. #ElectionWorkers #Giuliani #ContemptCharge

    Tags:

    1. Election workers
    2. Giuliani
    3. Contempt
    4. Judge
    5. Legal action
    6. Election fraud
    7. Legal proceedings
    8. Court case
    9. Voting rights
    10. Legal consequences

    #Election #workers #judge #hold #Giuliani #contempt

  • Rudy Giuliani wouldn’t ‘participate’ in turning over info in defamation case, ex-lawyers say

    Rudy Giuliani wouldn’t ‘participate’ in turning over info in defamation case, ex-lawyers say


    Rudy Giuliani’s former lawyers said they quit working for him because he refused to share records and access to cellphone as part of a defamation lawsuit against him, court records show.

    Attorneys Kenneth Caruso and David Labkowski wanted out of the job of representing the 80-year-old former city mayor in the case which ended with Giuliani ordered to fork over a whopping $148 million to Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss.

    Freeman and Moss are now seeking Giuliani’s assets — including his World Series rings — as part of the massive judgment, but the man once known as America’s Mayor “would not participate” in the case’s discovery process, his former lawyers said.

    Rudy Giuliani “would not participate” with turning over required records, his lawyers claimed when they quit working for him. AP

    The lawyers’ letter begging off the case was heavily redacted, masking the details of the pair’s behind-the-scenes disagreement with Giuliani, the Trump attorney and disbarred former Manhattan US attorney.

    But Manhattan federal Judge Lewis Liman issued a ruling Monday that some of the letter’s redactions should be unsealed to reveal the lawyers’ claims that Giuliani told them “he would not participate in discovery … and that he would not identify or provide access to his electronic devices for purposes of discovery.”

    Giuliani has argued his lawyers were to blame for the fact he missed deadlines for to turn over records in the case, which Liman said was contradicted by Caruso and Labkowski’s letter — which must now be unsealed, Law & Crime first reported.

    Freeman and Moss have asked Liman to hold Giuliani in contempt for repeatedly flouting court orders, including deadlines.

    Giuliani must appear in court on Jan. 3 to explain why he shouldn’t be held in contempt.

    A trial has also been set for Jan. 16 over whether his Yankees World Series rings and his Florida home should be handed over to help pay down his debt to the women.

    Giuliani is set to testify at a trial next month on why his World Series rings and his Florida home shouldn’t be handed over to Moss and Freeman to help pay down his debt to them. REUTERS
    Giuliani is embroiled in a case brought by two Georgia election works who are seeking to recoup a $148 million defamation verdict they won against Giuliani. AP

    Giuliani and his son Andrew are slated to be the two main witnesses at the trial. Andrew has claimed the women can’t collect the World Series rings since his dad gifted them to him in 2018.

    The troubled mayor has already been ordered to relinquish his Mercedes and his Manhattan pad to Freeman and Moss.

    At a November hearing in the case, Giuliani exploded at Liman for allegedly unfairly making implications against him.

    A jury ordered Giuliani last year to pay the whopping sum to Freeman and Moss for defaming them when he falsely claimed the duo tried to swindle Donald Trump out of a 2020 presidential election victory — which was actually won by Joe Biden.

    A spokesperson for Giuliani didn’t immediately return a request for comment Tuesday.



    In a recent development, former lawyers of Rudy Giuliani have revealed that the former mayor of New York City would not “participate” in turning over information in a defamation case. This news comes as a surprise to many, as Giuliani has been embroiled in legal battles and controversies in recent months.

    It remains to be seen how this refusal to cooperate will impact Giuliani’s legal defense and his overall strategy in the defamation case. Stay tuned for more updates as this story unfolds.

    Tags:

    Rudy Giuliani, defamation case, ex-lawyers, participation, turning over information, legal battle, former attorney, lawsuit, court proceedings

    #Rudy #Giuliani #wouldnt #participate #turning #info #defamation #case #exlawyers

  • Rudy Giuliani tells judge ‘I gave everything I have to give’ as he braces for contempt hearing

    Rudy Giuliani tells judge ‘I gave everything I have to give’ as he braces for contempt hearing


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    As he prepares to return to a Manhattan courtroom to face the judge overseeing his transfer of property to women he defamed, Rudy Giuliani is urging him not to hold him in contempt.

    In a series of court filings on Christmas Eve, the former New York City mayor implored District Judge Lewis Liman to reject a demand for sanctions from a pair of election workers who accused Giuliani of repeatedly violating court orders — including blowing past deadlines and throwing up obstacles to hand over his property to satisfy tens of millions of dollars he owes them.

    He also claims that the mother-daughter pair of election workers he defamed in the volatile aftermath of the 2020 presidential election are not even legally entitled to receive any of his property because they failed to file an oath as required under state law.

    Rudy Giuliani will testify at a contempt hearing in a federal courtroom in Manhattan January 3 in the ongoing property turnover case stemming from a massive defamation verdict against him

    Rudy Giuliani will testify at a contempt hearing in a federal courtroom in Manhattan January 3 in the ongoing property turnover case stemming from a massive defamation verdict against him (REUTERS)

    Giuliani is expected to testify at a court hearing set for January 3, where Donald Trump’s former attorney will say that he “did not knowingly and/or intentionally and/or willingly violate or disobey” any court orders, according to a letter to the judge from his attorney Joseph Cammarata.

    In a separate filing to the judge written by Giuliani himself, he swore that he already turned over a long list of property to the women, just as he was ordered to.

    “I respectfully submit that the items which I was required to turn over, I turned over,” he wrote. “The Court should see that I gave everything that I could give.”

    Giuliani has given “everything” that the judge “required me to provide that I possessed, and out of an abundance of caution, additional items were provided to the Plaintiffs,” he added.

    The filings included lists of 42 pieces of property that he says were turned over as ordered by the court, including items removed from a storage facility in Ronkonkoma, New York, to another storage locker in Queens.

    “I have not intentionally or willfully disobeyed any of this Court’s orders or Plaintiffs’ discovery demands,” Giuliani wrote. “If any documents were not produced by me, it was because I did not possess them or was unable to locate them.”

    He wrote that he has “fully or substantially” complied with the court orders, and that he “should not be held in contempt or sanctioned.”

    But he also argues that the “receivership has not yet technically or legally begun” because defamed election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss never signed an oath, which “must have been administered by any person authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds by the real property law of New York State, and then filed with the Court before the Plaintiffs undertook the duties as Receivers.”

    “Even if the Plaintiffs could have filed the Oath at any time, the Plaintiffs failed to do so,” Cammarata wrote in a separate Christmas Eve filing.

    A courtroom sketch depicts Rudy Giuliani during a court hearing in his property turnover case in Manhattan, as a pair of election workers he defamed try to enforce the court-ordered transfer of his valuables after a $150 million judgment

    A courtroom sketch depicts Rudy Giuliani during a court hearing in his property turnover case in Manhattan, as a pair of election workers he defamed try to enforce the court-ordered transfer of his valuables after a $150 million judgment (REUTERS)

    Earlier this month, attorneys for Freeman and Moss argued Giuliani “has not turned over a single dollar,” nor has he turned over a “number of specific items of personal property that he has been unambiguously ordered” to hand over — including the title to his Mercedes Benz convertible, keys to his Manhattan penthouse, valuable sports memorabilia and home furnishings.

    “It is unclear at this point even where those possessions are located,” they wrote in court filings.

    Giuliani has delivered a 1980 Mercedes Benz convertible, more than a dozen watches, and a “single diamond ring,” as well as access to his New York penthouse apartment, “but no keys or ownership documents,” leaving the women “to sort through significant logistical obstacles to a sale, including the presence of his ex-wife’s name on the title,” according to their attorneys.

    He also only delivered “some” of the items in a storage facility he was ordered to open for the women, they argued.

    During a court hearing last month, Liman warned Giuliani that he could face contempt sanctions for failing to meet his “unqualified obligation” to deliver all listed property to the women, but Giuliani “has neither complied with that obligation nor provided any explanation for why he could not do so,” according to attorneys for the women.

    In another hearing in November, Liman criticized Giuliani for “farcical” excuses about his assets.

    Following Trump’s defeat in the 2020 election, Giuliani falsely accused Freeman and Moss of manipulating election results in Georgia. They sued him for defamation in Washington, D.C., and in December 2023, a jury awarded them $148 million in damages.

    He then filed for bankruptcy, but after a protracted legal battle, the case was dismissed earlier this year to let Giuliani and his many creditors battle for control of his assets in separate courtrooms overseeing the lawsuits against him.

    Now, the 80-year-old former mayor faces even more financial penalties — or even jail — in the ongoing legal fallout from his false election claims during his spurious campaign to keep Trump in office.

    He will appear in court in D.C. on January 10, one week after he sits for a similar hearing in Manhattan, for allegedly breaking a court order against repeating defamatory statements about the women.



    Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani is facing a contempt hearing after failing to comply with a subpoena in the ongoing investigation into his dealings in Ukraine. In a recent court appearance, Giuliani told the judge, “I gave everything I have to give,” in a last-ditch effort to avoid being held in contempt.

    Giuliani, who served as former President Donald Trump’s personal attorney, has been at the center of the probe into whether he illegally lobbied on behalf of Ukrainian officials. Despite the subpoena demanding documents and testimony, Giuliani has refused to cooperate, citing attorney-client privilege and claiming that the investigation is politically motivated.

    As the contempt hearing looms, Giuliani’s legal team is scrambling to come up with a defense. However, many legal experts believe that Giuliani’s refusal to comply with the subpoena could land him in hot water.

    The former mayor, once known for his tough-on-crime stance, now finds himself on the other side of the law. Whether Giuliani will be held in contempt or face further legal consequences remains to be seen. But one thing is clear: Giuliani’s once-sterling reputation as a law-and-order advocate has taken a serious hit.

    Tags:

    1. Rudy Giuliani
    2. Contempt hearing
    3. Legal troubles
    4. Trump lawyer
    5. Legal defense
    6. Political news
    7. Judiciary
    8. Court appearance
    9. Giuliani testimony
    10. Legal battle

    #Rudy #Giuliani #tells #judge #gave #give #braces #contempt #hearing

  • IM FROM CNN – Rudi Giuliani Pin Lapel Pin Cute Brooch Pins Badges 0.75″

    IM FROM CNN – Rudi Giuliani Pin Lapel Pin Cute Brooch Pins Badges 0.75″


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