Rudy Giuliani - 16 million monetary damages per plaintiff... 20 million emotional distress per plaintiff....75 million punitive.....148 MILLION TOTAL

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
230710202539-rudy-giuliani-091122.jpg


(CNN)-- Rudy Giuliani is negotiating a possible resolution in his ongoing court dispute with former Georgia election workers Wandrea “Shaye” Moss and Ruby Freeman, after they accused him of defaming them following the 2020 election and already won nearly $90,000 from him for attorneys’ fees.

The lawsuit from Moss and her mother, Freeman, presents a significant risk to Giuliani financially. It also comes at a time when the former New York mayor and Manhattan prosecutor is attempting to fend off two disbarment proceedings, as well as interest from special counsel Jack Smith’s office, which is criminally investigating Donald Trump’s response to the 2020 vote, of which Giuliani was a central player.

In a court filing late Friday, Moss and Freeman’s legal team disclosed that Giuliani’s lawyer approached them on Thursday “to discuss a potential negotiated resolution of issues that would resolve large portions of this litigation and otherwise give rise to Plaintiffs’ anticipated request for sanctions.”

“Counsel for both parties have worked diligently to negotiate a resolution and believe they are close,” Moss and Freeman’s lawyer wrote.

The negotiation is over “certain factual issues regarding Defendant Giuliani’s liability,” the court filing also said.

Another update on the negotiations is expected in court on Tuesday.

Previously, Giuliani was ordered to pay $89,172 to Freeman and Moss’ lawyers by July 7 after they had had to go to court to force him to respond to part of their demands for evidence in the case.

Moss and Freeman accuse Giuliani of scapegoating them in a fabricated effort to undermine how votes were counted in Georgia in 2020.

They seek an unspecified amount in damages, saying Giuliani’s public false statements about them in 2020 caused severe emotional distress and put them in danger.




 
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lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor

Giuliani must pay $148 mln to Georgia election workers in defamation trial​


WASHINGTON, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Rudy Giuliani must pay more than $148 million in damages to two former Georgia election workers he defamed through false accusations that they helped rig the 2020 election against Donald Trump, a jury decided on Friday.

The jury in federal court in Washington, D.C., found that Giuliani owes the workers, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss and her mother Ruby Freeman, roughly $73 million to compensate them for the reputational and emotional harm they suffered and $75 million to punish the former Trump lawyer and one-time New York major for his conduct.

A federal judge determined before the trial that Giuliani was liable for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy. The only question before the jury was how much in damages to impose on Giuliani, who helped Republican former President Trump advance his false claims of a stolen 2020 election.

The verdict was reached after an emotional three days of testimony in which Moss and Freeman, who are Black, recounted the deluge of racist and sexist messages, including threats of lynching, they received after Trump and his allies spread false claims that they were engaged in voter fraud.

“Mr. Giuliani thought he could get away with making Ruby and Shaye the face of election fraud because he thought they were ordinary and expendable,” the workers’ lawyer Michael Gottlieb said during his closing argument. “He has no right to offer defenseless civil servants up to a virtual mob in order to overturn an election.”

The plaintiffs requested at least $48 million on the defamation claim and an unspecified sum for emotional distress and punitive damages.

Joseph Sibley, a lawyer for Giuliani, acknowledged that his client had caused harm, but said the penalty the plaintiffs sought would be “catastrophic” for his client. He told the jury Giuliani was a “good man,” referencing his role as mayor of New York following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

“Rudy Giuliani shouldn’t be defined by what’s happened in recent times,” Sibley said during his closing argument.

Giuliani, who publicly claimed he would testify during the trial, ultimately opted not to take the witness stand.

Giuliani made repeated false claims that a surveillance video showed Moss and Freeman concealing and counting “suitcases” filled with illegal ballots at a basketball arena in Atlanta that was used to process votes during the 2020 election.

Trump also singled out Freeman by name in a highly publicized January 2021 phone call during which he pressured Georgia’s top election officer, Brad Raffensperger, to “find” votes to overturn his narrow defeat in the state.

A state investigation found that the woman were legally and properly processing ballots. Lawyers for the two women alleged that the claims were part of a conspiracy that involved Trump, his legal team and a right-wing media outlet to help Trump sow doubt about the election and reverse his defeat to Democrat Joe Biden.

Giuliani has faced a series of civil and criminal woes – and mounting legal fees -- since helping to spearhead Trump’s efforts to overturn the election.

Giuliani has been criminally charged in the Georgia racketeering case against Trump and several of his allies, in part for targeting Moss and Freeman. He has pleaded not guilty.



 

michigantoga

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
They deserve more than that & his shit should be taken ASAP


Washington — A federal jury on Friday ordered former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani to pay a total of $148 million to two former Georgia election workers who were at the center of baseless claims he spread in the wake of the 2020 presidential election, a stunning award worth nearly $100 million more than the women had sought.

The jury of eight Washington, D.C., residents deliberated for roughly 10 hours across Thursday and Friday before reaching a decision. Jurors heard four days of emotional testimony in the civil trial against Giuliani, who served as former President Donald Trump's personal lawyer toward the end of his presidency.

The case was brought by Ruby Freeman and Wandrea ArShaye "Shaye" Moss, her daughter, who sued Giuliani for falsely claiming they engaged in a fake ballot processing scheme while they served as election workers for Fulton County in the last presidential election.

A federal judge in Washington determined earlier this year that Giuliani was liable for defaming Freeman and Moss, and the jury was tasked with determining how much in compensatory and punitive damages to award the mother-and-daughter pair. Freeman sought compensatory damages of $23.9 million for defamation, while Moss was asking for $24.7 million.

The jury awarded the following:

  • $16,171,000 to Freeman in compensatory damages for defamation;
  • $16,998,000 for Moss in compensatory damages for defamation;
  • $20 million each, or $40 million total, in compensatory damages for emotional distress;
  • $75 million in punitive damages for both
Giuliani remained defiant after the verdict was read in court. Speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, he said the threats the women received in the wake of the election were "abominable" and "deplorable" but continued to stand by his baseless claims of voter fraud and vowed to appeal the ruling.

"The absurdity of the number merely underscores the absurdity of the entire proceeding," Giuliani said. "I'm quite confident that when this case gets before a fair tribunal, it will be reversed so quickly it'll make your head spin, and the absurd number that just came in will help that."

Giuliani's net worth and assets have fluctuated over the years, but they were currently believed to be less than the $48.6 million the women were seeking, based on a comment from his attorney earlier in the week. Joe Sibley told the jury that an award of that amount would be the "civil equivalent of the death penalty" for his client.

The Giuliani defamation trial​

Rudy Giuliani speaks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023.
Rudy Giuliani speaks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023.JOSE LUIS MAGANA / AP
Throughout the trial, the jurors heard directly from Freeman and Moss as they described the terror they felt after they were thrust into the public eye after the 2020 election.

Moss said Tuesday that the absentee ballot processing team that she oversaw — which included her mother — did a "perfect job" examining the votes that came into their facility, State Farm Arena in Atlanta, during the election. The mother and daughter both said their lives changed when a conservative website and Giuliani identified them in security camera footage of the ballot processing facility and falsely tied them to voter fraud.

Giuliani claimed the video showed Freeman and Moss adding fake ballots to the vote count in Joe Biden's favor and inserting a USB drive into election machines. What followed, according to Freeman and Moss, was a barrage of racist threats. An investigation by the Georgia secretary of state later concluded that "[a]ll allegations made against Freeman and Moss were unsubstantiated and found to have no merit."

"Every single aspect of my life has changed," Moss said. "I'm most scared of my son finding me or my mom hanging in front of our house."

Freeman, through tears, testified Wednesday about the hate-filled calls, emails, texts and letters she and her small business received after being targeted online.

"I took it as they were gonna cut me up, put me in a trash bag and take me out to my street," she said of one note she received. "I felt as if I was terrorized."

"Ruby Freeman, I hope the Federal Government hangs you and your daughter from the Capitol dome you treasonous piece of s***! I pray that I will be sitting close enough to hear your necks snap," one individual wrote to Freeman in a message to her business.

Moss was passed up for a promotion and missed out on another job, while Freeman had to close her business and sell her house. The pair testified that they felt as if they lost their identities.

Ruby Freeman speaks with reporters outside federal court, Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C.
Ruby Freeman speaks with reporters outside federal court, Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C.ALEX BRANDON / AP
Giuliani had indicated that he would testify in his defense and said outside of court in recent days that he was in no way connected to the violent threats. He ultimately chose not to take the stand on Thursday, the final day of testimony. He continued to make false claims about the pair, despite his acknowledgment earlier in the case that he made untrue statements about them.

"Everything I said about them is true," Giuliani told reporters on Monday. "They were engaged in changing the votes." Jurors saw a recording of those new claims during the trial.

Judge Beryl Howell, who oversaw the case and ruled in August that Giuliani defamed Freeman and Moss, expressed concerns about the comments, as did Sibley, Giuliani's defense attorney.

Sibley did not call any witnesses of his own during the trial and told the jury he was not contesting the harm the mother and daughter endured because of his client's behavior. Instead, he opted to focus on the expert witnesses the plaintiffs called to calculate the millions requested in damages, and highlighted other media outlets and personalities who also spread the lies.

"Rudy Giuliani is a good man ... he hasn't exactly helped himself" in recent days, the defense attorney said during closing arguments Thursday. "Rudy Giuliani shouldn't be defined by what's happened in recent times."

The attorney placed blame for the initial harm Freeman and Moss suffered at the feet of the first website to identify them, the Gateway Pundit, and showed the jury a lawsuit the pair has filed against the outlet.

"That's how the names got out. That's how everyone knew who they were," Sibley argued.

The pair's attorneys, however, contended that injecting the conspiracy theories into media accounts was part of the Trump legal team's plan.

On Wednesday, Freeman talked about a post-election communications strategy from Giuliani's team that said she would become a key component used to cast doubt on the 2020 election. The communications plan referenced the video of Freeman at the Fulton County ballot counting center and said she was engaging in "ballot stuffing."

"This was a plan from the beginning, that if … No. 45 didn't win, that they had already set this plan up," she said of Trump, the 45th president, and his allies. She said that, according to the plan, she would be their "culprit."

The jurors were instructed to consider any damages caused by Giuliani's co-conspirators in the defamation campaign, including Trump and other allies. Under direct examination, Freeman recalled she heard Trump identify her on a call with Georgia's secretary of state in January 2021. In that conversation, the former president called her a "professional vote scammer."

"How mean. How evil. I just was devastated," Freeman said. "He had no clue what he was talking about."

One of the two experts called by the plaintiffs testified that Giuliani and his co-conspirators' lies about Freeman and Moss were seen millions of times online, warranting a campaign to restore their reputation that would cost millions of dollars. Giuliani's attorney, however, argued for lesser compensation, arguing that such an effort would likely be useless, since the people who believed Giuliani's lies would believe them "no matter what."
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
They deserve more than that & his shit should be taken ASAP


Washington — A federal jury on Friday ordered former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani to pay a total of $148 million to two former Georgia election workers who were at the center of baseless claims he spread in the wake of the 2020 presidential election, a stunning award worth nearly $100 million more than the women had sought.

The jury of eight Washington, D.C., residents deliberated for roughly 10 hours across Thursday and Friday before reaching a decision. Jurors heard four days of emotional testimony in the civil trial against Giuliani, who served as former President Donald Trump's personal lawyer toward the end of his presidency.

The case was brought by Ruby Freeman and Wandrea ArShaye "Shaye" Moss, her daughter, who sued Giuliani for falsely claiming they engaged in a fake ballot processing scheme while they served as election workers for Fulton County in the last presidential election.

A federal judge in Washington determined earlier this year that Giuliani was liable for defaming Freeman and Moss, and the jury was tasked with determining how much in compensatory and punitive damages to award the mother-and-daughter pair. Freeman sought compensatory damages of $23.9 million for defamation, while Moss was asking for $24.7 million.

The jury awarded the following:

  • $16,171,000 to Freeman in compensatory damages for defamation;
  • $16,998,000 for Moss in compensatory damages for defamation;
  • $20 million each, or $40 million total, in compensatory damages for emotional distress;
  • $75 million in punitive damages for both
Giuliani remained defiant after the verdict was read in court. Speaking to reporters outside the courthouse, he said the threats the women received in the wake of the election were "abominable" and "deplorable" but continued to stand by his baseless claims of voter fraud and vowed to appeal the ruling.

"The absurdity of the number merely underscores the absurdity of the entire proceeding," Giuliani said. "I'm quite confident that when this case gets before a fair tribunal, it will be reversed so quickly it'll make your head spin, and the absurd number that just came in will help that."

Giuliani's net worth and assets have fluctuated over the years, but they were currently believed to be less than the $48.6 million the women were seeking, based on a comment from his attorney earlier in the week. Joe Sibley told the jury that an award of that amount would be the "civil equivalent of the death penalty" for his client.

The Giuliani defamation trial​

Rudy Giuliani speaks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023.
Rudy Giuliani speaks to reporters outside the federal courthouse in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023.JOSE LUIS MAGANA / AP
Throughout the trial, the jurors heard directly from Freeman and Moss as they described the terror they felt after they were thrust into the public eye after the 2020 election.

Moss said Tuesday that the absentee ballot processing team that she oversaw — which included her mother — did a "perfect job" examining the votes that came into their facility, State Farm Arena in Atlanta, during the election. The mother and daughter both said their lives changed when a conservative website and Giuliani identified them in security camera footage of the ballot processing facility and falsely tied them to voter fraud.

Giuliani claimed the video showed Freeman and Moss adding fake ballots to the vote count in Joe Biden's favor and inserting a USB drive into election machines. What followed, according to Freeman and Moss, was a barrage of racist threats. An investigation by the Georgia secretary of state later concluded that "[a]ll allegations made against Freeman and Moss were unsubstantiated and found to have no merit."

"Every single aspect of my life has changed," Moss said. "I'm most scared of my son finding me or my mom hanging in front of our house."

Freeman, through tears, testified Wednesday about the hate-filled calls, emails, texts and letters she and her small business received after being targeted online.

"I took it as they were gonna cut me up, put me in a trash bag and take me out to my street," she said of one note she received. "I felt as if I was terrorized."

"Ruby Freeman, I hope the Federal Government hangs you and your daughter from the Capitol dome you treasonous piece of s***! I pray that I will be sitting close enough to hear your necks snap," one individual wrote to Freeman in a message to her business.

Moss was passed up for a promotion and missed out on another job, while Freeman had to close her business and sell her house. The pair testified that they felt as if they lost their identities.

Ruby Freeman speaks with reporters outside federal court, Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C.
Ruby Freeman speaks with reporters outside federal court, Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, in Washington, D.C.ALEX BRANDON / AP
Giuliani had indicated that he would testify in his defense and said outside of court in recent days that he was in no way connected to the violent threats. He ultimately chose not to take the stand on Thursday, the final day of testimony. He continued to make false claims about the pair, despite his acknowledgment earlier in the case that he made untrue statements about them.

"Everything I said about them is true," Giuliani told reporters on Monday. "They were engaged in changing the votes." Jurors saw a recording of those new claims during the trial.

Judge Beryl Howell, who oversaw the case and ruled in August that Giuliani defamed Freeman and Moss, expressed concerns about the comments, as did Sibley, Giuliani's defense attorney.

Sibley did not call any witnesses of his own during the trial and told the jury he was not contesting the harm the mother and daughter endured because of his client's behavior. Instead, he opted to focus on the expert witnesses the plaintiffs called to calculate the millions requested in damages, and highlighted other media outlets and personalities who also spread the lies.

"Rudy Giuliani is a good man ... he hasn't exactly helped himself" in recent days, the defense attorney said during closing arguments Thursday. "Rudy Giuliani shouldn't be defined by what's happened in recent times."

The attorney placed blame for the initial harm Freeman and Moss suffered at the feet of the first website to identify them, the Gateway Pundit, and showed the jury a lawsuit the pair has filed against the outlet.

"That's how the names got out. That's how everyone knew who they were," Sibley argued.

The pair's attorneys, however, contended that injecting the conspiracy theories into media accounts was part of the Trump legal team's plan.

On Wednesday, Freeman talked about a post-election communications strategy from Giuliani's team that said she would become a key component used to cast doubt on the 2020 election. The communications plan referenced the video of Freeman at the Fulton County ballot counting center and said she was engaging in "ballot stuffing."

"This was a plan from the beginning, that if … No. 45 didn't win, that they had already set this plan up," she said of Trump, the 45th president, and his allies. She said that, according to the plan, she would be their "culprit."

The jurors were instructed to consider any damages caused by Giuliani's co-conspirators in the defamation campaign, including Trump and other allies. Under direct examination, Freeman recalled she heard Trump identify her on a call with Georgia's secretary of state in January 2021. In that conversation, the former president called her a "professional vote scammer."

"How mean. How evil. I just was devastated," Freeman said. "He had no clue what he was talking about."

One of the two experts called by the plaintiffs testified that Giuliani and his co-conspirators' lies about Freeman and Moss were seen millions of times online, warranting a campaign to restore their reputation that would cost millions of dollars. Giuliani's attorney, however, argued for lesser compensation, arguing that such an effort would likely be useless, since the people who believed Giuliani's lies would believe them "no matter what."


.
 

knightmelodic

American fruit, Afrikan root.
BGOL Investor
He ain't got it so he don't give a fuck. He's got a bit tucked away, probably in russia. It will be up to the plaintiffs now to keep turning the screws.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
He ain't got it so he don't give a fuck. He's got a bit tucked away, probably in russia. It will be up to the plaintiffs now to keep turning the screws.
With all those Ukrainians that he was buddying up with when he was over there trying to twist Zalenski's arm for Biden info.... you can bet something's squirreled away with them somewhere


.
 

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor

Former Georgia election workers sue Rudy Giuliani again, asking judge to permanently stop him from lying about them


(CNN)- Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the two Georgia election workers who won a nearly $150 million verdict against Rudy Giuliani for defamation on Friday, have sued him again, asking a federal judge to permanently prohibit him from lying about them.

The lawsuit comes as Giuliani has continued to make false statements about their work as absentee ballot counters in the 2020 election.

“Defendant Giuliani continues to spread the very same lies for which he has already been held liable,” the new lawsuit says. “Defendant Giuliani’s statements, coupled with his refusal to agree to refrain from continuing to make such statements, make clear that he intends to persist in his campaign of targeted defamation and harassment. It must stop.”

The new lawsuit represents the latest round of fallout facing the former New York mayor because of his legal work for Donald Trump after the 2020 election – and comes as Giuliani continues to be buried in debt and legal proceedings. He is also headed to trial for criminal charges in Georgia, where he’s pleaded not guilty, related to his 2020 election work for Trump.
Moss and Freeman’s lawyers added that even since the verdict, Giuliani has indicated he wouldn’t stop repeating the false claims about them.

At the end of the first day of their defamation damages trial against him last week, Giuliani told TV cameras outside court that “everything I said about them is true” and that he had proof that the media should “stay tuned.” Giuliani presented little defense in the case and didn’t testify.

Moss and Freeman pointed out that Giuliani also told the media after the jury’s verdict Friday he had “no doubt” his comments were “supportable,” and that he continued to repeat himself on a podcast hosted by far-right figure Steve Bannon on Saturday.

Their new lawsuit seeks a permanent injunction from the federal court in Washington, DC, to be placed on Giuliani that would prohibit him “from making or publishing, or causing to be made or published, further statements repeating any and all false claims” that the mother and daughter during the 2020 election ballot counting “engaged in election fraud, illegal activity or misconduct of any kind,” according to the filing.

More than a dozen statements Giuliani made about them, accusing the women of tampering with votes as they counted ballots, were found to be false and defamatory.


Final judgment is for $146 million plus attorneys’ fees​

In a separate court filing Monday, attorneys on both sides agreed on final numbers and terms now that the jury has weighed in.

Giuliani agreed the court’s final judgment would make clear he owes the women $146 million, plus more than $237,000 for attorneys’ fees. The jury verdict has been slightly reduced because Moss and Freeman previously settled another part of their lawsuit, against One America News Network and others.

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Giuliani also said the court can say, in its final judgment, that he made more than a dozen defamatory statements about Moss and Freeman that hurt them, and that his “conduct was intentional, malicious, wanton and willful,” according to the filing.

By including those declarations in the court’s judgment, it will be more difficult for Giuliani to avoid paying Moss and Freeman by filing for bankruptcy.

The judge, Beryl Howell of the DC District Court, signed off on the terms of the final judgment Monday evening.

The clock is likely to start soon for when the women may begin collecting what Giuliani owes them for their emotional distress, reputational harm and as punishment.

Moss and Freeman’s attorneys have told the court they would like to try to collect money and claim his assets as soon as possible, and not wait for a 30-day delay that is automatic in cases like these. Giuliani said he wants to keep the 30-day delay, but Howell hasn’t weighed in yet on that timing.

“We are going to work very, very hard to ensure that they see every bit of money that Mr. Giuliani has available to him to pay and satisfy this judgment,” John Langford, one of Moss and Freeman’s attorneys, told CNN’s Erin Burnett after the verdict.

“Getting a final judgment entered is the document you need to go to other jurisdictions where Mr. Giuliani has assets, New York, Florida, and … attach the judgment to his assets,” Langford added.

Giuliani’s assets​

While Giuliani has repeatedly claimed he’s broke, Moss and Freeman’s legal team is already carving out ways to collect what they’re owed.

The lawyers for the women have identified “substantial assets” Giuliani has in New York and Florida, including bank accounts, a condo in south Florida and a New York City co-op, according to another court filing following the jury verdict.

And during the trial last week, Giuliani acknowledged he had reached an agreement to host a show on a streaming channel affiliated with the right-wing network Newsmax, which could contribute to his income, in addition to earnings from podcasting and other public appearances.
Moss and Freeman’s team told the court Monday they are already concerned Giuliani may try to shield some of his wealth, so they want to try to claim some of his assets as soon as this week.

“Defendant Giuliani has already proven himself to be an unwilling and uncooperative litigant, including with respect to this Court’s orders to pay attorney’s fees and cost,” Moss and Freeman’s attorneys told Howell on Monday. “There is a severe risk that Defendant Giuliani will use whatever time he has to alienate or dissipate what assets are available to satisfy even a small portion of Plaintiffs’ judgment.”

Moss and Freeman’s lawyers have struggled for months to gain a full picture of the former New York City mayor’s financial state, with some of their only insight coming from a years-old tax return of Giuliani’s that has not been made public.

Even so, Giuliani has publicly claimed he is broke. That prompted him earlier in the lawsuit to essentially forfeit fighting them in court, leading to the trial this month.

The court action on Monday notes Giuliani still hadn’t paid Moss and Freeman for reimbursements they won earlier for their attorneys’ fees.

A law firm that had represented Giuliani in other proceedings is suing him for almost $1.4 million of unpaid legal bills as well. That’s on top of other debts Giuliani has disclosed publicly, such as tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid phone bills and litigation costs, some of which Trump has helped him with.

“If he does not file for bankruptcy, he will continue to be indebted to them, until he can pay it off,” Jennifer Hardy, a bankruptcy partner at the law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, which represents Moss and Freeman, told CNN on Monday. Hardy and others at the firm have been working to try to secure money for the families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims from another right-wing figure, Alex Jones, who defamed them and has since filed for bankruptcy.

The Jones case shows that following major defamation judgments, defendants need to “come up with the money, strike a deal or have a debt that’s hanging around your neck for the rest of your life,” another Willkie Farr partner involved in the Jones case, Stuart Lombardi, said Monday.




 

The Plutonian

The Anti Bullshitter
BGOL Investor

Former Georgia election workers sue Rudy Giuliani again, asking judge to permanently stop him from lying about them


(CNN)- Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the two Georgia election workers who won a nearly $150 million verdict against Rudy Giuliani for defamation on Friday, have sued him again, asking a federal judge to permanently prohibit him from lying about them.

The lawsuit comes as Giuliani has continued to make false statements about their work as absentee ballot counters in the 2020 election.

“Defendant Giuliani continues to spread the very same lies for which he has already been held liable,” the new lawsuit says. “Defendant Giuliani’s statements, coupled with his refusal to agree to refrain from continuing to make such statements, make clear that he intends to persist in his campaign of targeted defamation and harassment. It must stop.”

The new lawsuit represents the latest round of fallout facing the former New York mayor because of his legal work for Donald Trump after the 2020 election – and comes as Giuliani continues to be buried in debt and legal proceedings. He is also headed to trial for criminal charges in Georgia, where he’s pleaded not guilty, related to his 2020 election work for Trump.
Moss and Freeman’s lawyers added that even since the verdict, Giuliani has indicated he wouldn’t stop repeating the false claims about them.

At the end of the first day of their defamation damages trial against him last week, Giuliani told TV cameras outside court that “everything I said about them is true” and that he had proof that the media should “stay tuned.” Giuliani presented little defense in the case and didn’t testify.

Moss and Freeman pointed out that Giuliani also told the media after the jury’s verdict Friday he had “no doubt” his comments were “supportable,” and that he continued to repeat himself on a podcast hosted by far-right figure Steve Bannon on Saturday.

Their new lawsuit seeks a permanent injunction from the federal court in Washington, DC, to be placed on Giuliani that would prohibit him “from making or publishing, or causing to be made or published, further statements repeating any and all false claims” that the mother and daughter during the 2020 election ballot counting “engaged in election fraud, illegal activity or misconduct of any kind,” according to the filing.

More than a dozen statements Giuliani made about them, accusing the women of tampering with votes as they counted ballots, were found to be false and defamatory.


Final judgment is for $146 million plus attorneys’ fees​

In a separate court filing Monday, attorneys on both sides agreed on final numbers and terms now that the jury has weighed in.

Giuliani agreed the court’s final judgment would make clear he owes the women $146 million, plus more than $237,000 for attorneys’ fees. The jury verdict has been slightly reduced because Moss and Freeman previously settled another part of their lawsuit, against One America News Network and others.

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close dialog

Giuliani also said the court can say, in its final judgment, that he made more than a dozen defamatory statements about Moss and Freeman that hurt them, and that his “conduct was intentional, malicious, wanton and willful,” according to the filing.

By including those declarations in the court’s judgment, it will be more difficult for Giuliani to avoid paying Moss and Freeman by filing for bankruptcy.

The judge, Beryl Howell of the DC District Court, signed off on the terms of the final judgment Monday evening.

The clock is likely to start soon for when the women may begin collecting what Giuliani owes them for their emotional distress, reputational harm and as punishment.

Moss and Freeman’s attorneys have told the court they would like to try to collect money and claim his assets as soon as possible, and not wait for a 30-day delay that is automatic in cases like these. Giuliani said he wants to keep the 30-day delay, but Howell hasn’t weighed in yet on that timing.

“We are going to work very, very hard to ensure that they see every bit of money that Mr. Giuliani has available to him to pay and satisfy this judgment,” John Langford, one of Moss and Freeman’s attorneys, told CNN’s Erin Burnett after the verdict.

“Getting a final judgment entered is the document you need to go to other jurisdictions where Mr. Giuliani has assets, New York, Florida, and … attach the judgment to his assets,” Langford added.

Giuliani’s assets​

While Giuliani has repeatedly claimed he’s broke, Moss and Freeman’s legal team is already carving out ways to collect what they’re owed.

The lawyers for the women have identified “substantial assets” Giuliani has in New York and Florida, including bank accounts, a condo in south Florida and a New York City co-op, according to another court filing following the jury verdict.

And during the trial last week, Giuliani acknowledged he had reached an agreement to host a show on a streaming channel affiliated with the right-wing network Newsmax, which could contribute to his income, in addition to earnings from podcasting and other public appearances.
Moss and Freeman’s team told the court Monday they are already concerned Giuliani may try to shield some of his wealth, so they want to try to claim some of his assets as soon as this week.

“Defendant Giuliani has already proven himself to be an unwilling and uncooperative litigant, including with respect to this Court’s orders to pay attorney’s fees and cost,” Moss and Freeman’s attorneys told Howell on Monday. “There is a severe risk that Defendant Giuliani will use whatever time he has to alienate or dissipate what assets are available to satisfy even a small portion of Plaintiffs’ judgment.”

Moss and Freeman’s lawyers have struggled for months to gain a full picture of the former New York City mayor’s financial state, with some of their only insight coming from a years-old tax return of Giuliani’s that has not been made public.

Even so, Giuliani has publicly claimed he is broke. That prompted him earlier in the lawsuit to essentially forfeit fighting them in court, leading to the trial this month.

The court action on Monday notes Giuliani still hadn’t paid Moss and Freeman for reimbursements they won earlier for their attorneys’ fees.

A law firm that had represented Giuliani in other proceedings is suing him for almost $1.4 million of unpaid legal bills as well. That’s on top of other debts Giuliani has disclosed publicly, such as tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid phone bills and litigation costs, some of which Trump has helped him with.

“If he does not file for bankruptcy, he will continue to be indebted to them, until he can pay it off,” Jennifer Hardy, a bankruptcy partner at the law firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher, which represents Moss and Freeman, told CNN on Monday. Hardy and others at the firm have been working to try to secure money for the families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims from another right-wing figure, Alex Jones, who defamed them and has since filed for bankruptcy.

The Jones case shows that following major defamation judgments, defendants need to “come up with the money, strike a deal or have a debt that’s hanging around your neck for the rest of your life,” another Willkie Farr partner involved in the Jones case, Stuart Lombardi, said Monday.




Clean him out! Leave nothing!
 
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