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Tag: Rudy Giuliani

  • Trump Hosts $100,000-A-Plate Fundraiser For Cash-Strapped Giuliani’s Legal Bills

    Trump Hosts $100,000-A-Plate Fundraiser For Cash-Strapped Giuliani’s Legal Bills

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Former President Donald Trump hosted a $100,000-a-plate fundraiser for disgraced former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club Thursday night as Giuliani struggles to pay his mounting legal bills.

    Giuliani, a longtime Trump ally who also served as his lawyer, is facing a barrage of legal fees, fines, sanctions and damages related to his work helping Trump try to overturn the 2020 election and other cases.

    He was indicted last month along with Trump and 17 others in Georgia for what Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has described as a wide-ranging conspiracy to subvert the will of the voters after Trump lost to Biden in 2020.

    Rudy Giuliani faces a barrage of legal fees, fines, sanctions and damages related to his work helping Trump try to overturn the 2020 election and other cases.

    Giuliani’s son, Andrew, said in a radio interview Thursday morning that the event was expected to raise more than $1 million for his father and that Trump had committed to hosting a second event at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida later in the fall or early winter.

    “So that will be very helpful,” he said on WABC radio. Still, he said, “It won’t be enough to get through this.”

    He has created a committee, the Giuliani Defense PAC, to raise funds for his father. Allies have also been soliciting checks for what they have called The Rudy Giuliani Freedom Fund.

    Brian Tevis, who is representing Giuliani in Georgia, said on CNN Thursday night that he assumed the former mayor was trying to raise “as much as possible,” adding, “And I think that they’re going to need it.”

    Rudy Giuliani's booking photo in the Georgia election case.
    Rudy Giuliani’s booking photo in the Georgia election case.

    Giuliani was held liable last month by a federal judge in a defamation lawsuit brought by two Georgia election workers who say they were falsely accused of fraud.

    A trial could result in Giuliani being ordered to pay significant damages to the women, in addition to the tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees he’s already being directed to pay.

    To generate cash, he’s hawked autographed 9/11 shirts and pitched sandals sold by election denier Mike Lindell. He’s also joined Cameo, a service where celebrities record short videos for profit.

    In July, he put his Manhattan apartment up for sale for $6.5 million.

    Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump, pictured in 1999.
    Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump, pictured in 1999.

    MATT CAMPBELL via Getty Images

    Last year, a judge threatened Giuliani with jail in a dispute over money owed to his third ex-wife. Giuliani said he was making progress paying the debt, which she said totaled more than $260,000.

    In May, a woman who says she worked for Giuliani sued him, alleging that he owed her nearly $2 million in unpaid wages and that he had coerced her into sex. Giuliani denied the allegations.

    His lawyers have repeatedly cited his financial troubles in court filings.

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  • With millions of dollars in legal expenses looming, who will foot the bill for Trump’s Georgia co-defendants?

    With millions of dollars in legal expenses looming, who will foot the bill for Trump’s Georgia co-defendants?

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    Former President Donald Trump is wielding his political clout to help his former personal attorney — and criminal co-defendant — Rudy Giuliani — by hosting a fundraiser for him Thursday. The event is expected to offer a lavish display of loyalty, as Trump rounds up donors willing to give $100,000 each to a legal defense fund for Giuliani, who has racked up millions in legal bills from defamation lawsuits stemming from the 2020 presidential election.

    But for 17 other Trump co–defendants in the Georgia criminal conspiracy case against the former president, it remains to be seen whether Trump will step in with any financial help. For now, most have been left to figure out how to pay for their own criminal defense regarding their alleged scheme to help keep him in office, according to a number of people familiar with the case. All of the defendants face the same charge of racketeering under Georgia law, in addition to other charges involving alleged efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

    One expert in the state’s RICO laws suggested those co-defendants face some challenges in getting any financial help from Trump and his campaign.

    “Georgia RICO charges are exceedingly hard to finance a defense for under any circumstances, but here Trump not only has state proceedings to litigate but also a potential removal effort in federal court,” says Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis. “And with PAC cash being a finite resource, diverting funds toward a legal defense necessarily takes away from something else. It will likely get very costly and undermine political work that might have a larger budget but for the diverted cash.”

    Legal bills tend to pile up in stages over the course of a criminal case, from pre-indictment counsel to post-indictment representation – which can include motions preparation and discovery analysis — to the time spent preparing and executing a defense strategy at trial.  

    Noah Pines, a Georgia defense attorney, offered this estimate: lawyers who may charge $100,000 per month for 80-hour work weeks during trial are only making about $312 an hour, a sum he says would be insufficient if he were taking on a RICO case like this.

    Multiply that by 19 — the number of defendants in the case — and the monthly costs spiral.

    During a trial, criminal defense attorneys on average put in about 40 hours a week in court, plus another 40 to 60 hours during that same week preparing for the what’s next. Pines compares the stamina of the lawyers who try cases like this to extreme athletes. 

    “You are running a marathon every week over and over and over again in a case that’s going to last four months, six months is just even beyond that,” Pines said of RICO trials. 

    The defense bills for the case in Fulton County could easily reach into the millions, according to several defense attorneys who spoke with CBS News.

    Prosecutors said they expect the trial of all 19 defendants to take approximately four months, and that timeline excludes the jury selection process. At least 150 witnesses are expected to be called to testify. 

    For Trump, who has pleaded not guilty in all four criminal prosecutions against him, cases are taking place concurrently, and several investigations are still underway, not to mention the raft of civil matters involving the former president. But unlike others who have found themselves in these legal crosshairs, Trump is able to rely on his personal fortune or his political war chest to shoulder the mountain of legal expenses.

    The real-estate tycoon turned politician has collected an array of co-defendants along the way. In Florida, he has been charged along with two of his employees, Walt Nauta and Carlos De Oliveira, for their roles in the case stemming from Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents after his presidency, for which they have both pleaded not guilty. Nauta’s defense team is currently being at least in part funded by a Trump-associated PAC which has paid his legal bills throughout the investigation, CBS News confirmed. An attorney for Nauta declined to comment. Attorneys for De Oliveira declined to comment.

    Trump has played a role in defraying the legal bills that are piling up not just for himself, but also for allies and aides who have been embroiled in legal trouble. He has been raising money through his political action committee, Save America, and it has helped fund counsel for witnesses before the House Jan. 6 select committee and federal grand jury investigations, in addition to Nauta’s defense. 

    Save America disclosed in its mid-year FEC filing over the summer that it spent $21.6 million on Trump-related legal fees in the first half of 2023. A figure that dominated the majority of the approximately $25 million the PAC spent overall within that period. However, a source familiar with the PAC’s spending said before the midyear filing that Save America had actually spent more than $40 million on legal fees for Trump and his allies on multiple legal cases in the first six months of 2023.

    In July, longtime Trump adviser Michael Glassner, announced the creation of a new legal defense fund whose mission is to pay the legal bills for Trump and his family, as well as his allies and staffers, called the Patriot Legal Defense Fund Inc. The site is currently marketing Trump’s mugshot by selling merchandise of the image and the words “NEVER SURRENDER!” and “NOT GUILTY!” on shirts, bumper stickers and coffee cups. It is unclear how much that fund has already raised because it is not required to make the same disclosures as political committees do, and whether any of that money has been disbursed among the Georgia defendants has also not been disclosed.

    Given the financial burden these cases impose, Trump may not have the ability to support his 18 co-defendants in Georgia. In an August 12 post on Truth Social he blamed Democrats for causing “the Trump Campaign to spend vast amounts of money on legal fees.”

    Trump is not the only defendant in Georgia fighting multiple legal battles. Giuliani is facing several civil challenges of his own and was recently found liable for defaming two Fulton County election workers, Ruby Freeman and Wandrea ArShaye “Shaye” Moss. While the cost of damages in that case has yet to be determined, the judge ordered Giuliani to reimburse Freeman and Moss for more than $89,000 in attorney fees and costs related to a request that the court force Giuliani to fulfill his discovery obligations. Giuliani also must ensure his eponymous businesses cover more than $43,000 in attorneys’ fees associated with an effort to force them to respond to requests for documents and depositions, the judge said.

    Noting Giuliani’s excuses, the judge wrote that although he claimed that “he is having financial difficulties” Giuliani has not “provided any evidence about his inability to reimburse plaintiff.”

    One confidante familiar with his legal problems said that in August, Giuliani was experiencing financial  issues. Giuliani appears poised to raise money by selling his long-time New York apartment, currently listed for $6.5 million. 

    Tickets for the Bedminster fundraiser are being sold for $100,000 a seat. Some experts say that while the event may not violate any rules from a campaign finance standpoint, it does raise some flags.

    “Helping Rudy in some sense, does help Trump,” said Richard Briffault, the Joseph P. Chamberlain Professor of Legislation at Columbia University. He says that while those contributions to Trump’s legal defense fund would not be subject to any spending limits or public disclosures that would be required for campaign committees, there are some ethical concerns. “Trump will be aware of [the contributions] and he could be grateful to the donors. And should he become president again, that gratitude could be translated into government decisions.”

    Former Trump attorney and current Georgia co-defendant, Jenna Ellis has been vocal about the financial strain that comes with being a defendant. “I was reliably informed Trump isn’t funding any of us who are indicted,” she wrote in a post on X. “Would this change if he becomes the nominee? Why then, not now? I totally agree this has become a bigger principle than just one man. So why isn’t MAGA, Inc. funding everyone’s defense?”

    Ellis is one of several  co-defendants in Georgia who has begun crowdfunding to raise money for legal expenses. As of this posting, Ellis’ GiveSendGo page, which says she “is being targeted and the government is trying to criminalize the practice of law,” has raised more than $197,000 through the site. 

    Another co-defendant, Harrison Floyd, was the only defendant to spend time behind bars after surrendering  after turning himself in to the Fulton County jail without a pre-negotiated bond. Floyd, a former Marine who was the director of Black Voices for Trump, asked for a public defender because he said that he could not afford his own legal representation. 

    After his release from jail, Floyd joined Steve Bannon on his program “The War Room,” which promoted a crowdfunding effort for Floyd that has raised more than $298,000, with a goal of  $350,000. “I’m looking forward to being down here and fighting the devil in Georgia,” Floyd said. 

    All 19 defendants in the Georgia case have entered not guilty pleas. As the case enters its next phase, CBS News reached out to the attorneys for each of the defendants in Georgia about whether they are relying on the Trump PACs or other methods of financing to fund their defense.

    Jeffrey Clark, one of the 19 Fulton County defendants, has raised over  $60,000, with a goal of $500,000 through his crowdfunding efforts. A spokesperson did not comment beyond sharing a link to his donation page.

    An attorney for Robert Cheeley, who is alleged to have encouraged Georgia state lawmakers to appoint an alternate slate of presidential electors among other accusations,  said his client is not receiving any financial support from Trump’s PACs, defense fund,  or any other crowdfunding mechanism. 

    Robert Legare contributed to reporting.

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  • Rudy Giuliani Puts Himself Up For Adoption

    Rudy Giuliani Puts Himself Up For Adoption

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    NEW YORK—In the wake of mounting legal troubles, including an indictment in Georgia on felony charges of tampering with the 2020 election, sources reported Friday that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani had put himself up for adoption. “Little Rudy needs someone to take care of him, and he has so much love to give!” said Giuliani, formerly a lawyer for Donald Trump and currently his alleged co-conspirator, adding that he hoped to be taken in by a warm, kind, rich family who would be able to pay off all his legal fees as well as any damages he would need to pay after being found liable for defaming election workers. “I would kiss my new mama and papa on the cheek every single day. You could buy me candy and maybe even the $6.5 million luxury apartment I just put up for sale. Then I could live there again and we would be so happy! Oh please, oh please, I’m all alone in this big world.” Giuliani went on to state that if he were to be adopted, it would be the best thing that had ever happened to him, “including 9/11.”

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  • Giuliani to enter not guilty plea in Fulton County case, waive arraignment

    Giuliani to enter not guilty plea in Fulton County case, waive arraignment

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    Trump enters not guilty plea in Fulton County


    Trump enters not guilty plea in Georgia election case, won’t appear for arraignment

    07:39

    Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump’s former lawyer, will waive arraignment and enter a not guilty plea in the Fulton County, Georgia case in which he’s charged alongside the former president, according to his spokesperson.

    Trump and several other defendants have already filed waivers and entered not guilty pleas.

    “I can confirm that it is his intention to waive,” said Giuliani’s spokesperson and political advisor Ted Goodman.

    Giuliani faces 13 charges related to the racketeering case, in which 19 people are accused of acting as a “criminal enterprise” in their efforts to overturn Georgia’s vote after President Joe Biden won. 

    rudolph-giuliani.png
    Rudy Giuliani mugshot from Fulton County Sheriff’s Office. 

    Fulton County Sheriff’s Office


    Giuliani, who is accused of spearheading the effort, surrendered to Fulton County authorities on Aug. 23, submitting to a booking photo and fingerprinting. He was released on $150,000 bond.

    Giuliani’s Atlanta-based attorney said Wednesday that the majority of defendants waive arraignment if they’re given the opportunity to do so. Appearing at arraignment is optional for Georgia defendants.

    “99% of the time, defendants choose to waive formal arraignment and to not have to appear if the judge allows it,” said the attorney, Brian Tevis.

    Trump was also charged in early August in a federal case alleging he and six unindicted, unnamed alleged co-conspirators interfered with the peaceful transfer of power after his 2020 loss to Biden. Another attorney for Giuliani, Robert Costello, told CBS News that Giuliani “appeared” to be one of those unnamed alleged co-conspirators.

    Trump has entered a not guilty plea in that case. He and Giuliani have denied wrongdoing in both cases. 

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  • Trump pleads not guilty to election charges in Georgia, waives arraignment

    Trump pleads not guilty to election charges in Georgia, waives arraignment

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    Former President Donald Trump speaks with the press at the Iowa Pork Producers booth during the 2023 Iowa State Fair at the Iowa State Fair Grounds on Saturday August 12, 2023. 

    Demetrius Freeman | The Washington Post | Getty Images

    Former President Donald Trump on Thursday pleaded not guilty to criminal charges related to his efforts to overturn Joe Biden‘s 2020 election victory in Georgia and waived his right to appear at his arraignment next week, according to a court filing.

    Trump’s arraignment on 13 felony charges is scheduled on Sept. 6 at 9:30 a.m. ET in Fulton County Superior Court in Atlanta.

    “Understanding my rights, I do hereby freely and voluntarily waive my right to be present at my arraignment on the Indictment and my right to have it read to me in open court,” the former president said in the court filing.

    Trump is far and away the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. He is facing a litany of charges in three other criminal cases with trial dates that overlap with the election campaign.

    Trump is one of 19 co-defendants charged in a wide-ranging racketeering case that includes his former lawyer Rudy Giuliani, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, and several Republican state party officials among others who sought to overturn Biden’s 2020 victory in Georgia by various means.

    Trump’s 18 co-defendants in the case will also be arraigned in Atlanta on Sept. 6. Giuliani will be arraigned at 9:45 a.m. The arraignment of the other 17 defendants is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m.

    The 41-count indictment returned by a grand jury alleges the defendants participated in a criminal enterprise that sought overturn Biden’s victory by trying to convince state legislators in Georgia through false statements and other means to unlawfully appoint fake electors to vote for Trump.

    The most serious charge Trump faces in the Georgia case is violating the state’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years. The former president also faces various fraud and forgery charges.

    Trump was arrested, fingerprinted and had his mugshot taken at the Fulton County jail last week. Following his Aug. 25 arrest, Trump was released on a $200,000 bond, which he posted with the help of a local bail bondsman.

    Fulton County Sheriff’s Office

    The conditions of his release are different than his 18 co-defendants. The conditions include a prohibition against making any “direct or indirect threat of any nature” against anyone involved in the case or against the broader “community” or its property.

    “The above shall include, but are not limited to, posts on social media or reposts of posts made by another individual on social media,” wrote Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee, who issued Trump’s bond order.

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis initially proposed a trial date of March 4, 2024, in the Georgia election case, the day before the Super Tuesday primary contests and seven months before the presidential election.

    But Willis’ plan was complicated when one of Trump’s co-defendants, Kenneth Chesebro, asked for a speedy trial date under Georgia law, which the judge set for Oct. 23. The district attorney then asked the judge for Trump and the 18 other defendants in the case to go to trial on the same date set for Chesebro.

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    Trump’s lawyers oppose the October date and asked the judge Thursday to sever his case from the defendants who are asking for a speedy trial.

    Trump faces dozens of charges in three other criminal cases. In two separate federal cases brought by special counsel Jack Smith, the former president has been indicted on charges related to his attempt to overturn Biden’s victory in the 2020 election and for mishandling classified documents.

    Federal judges have set trial dates of March 4, 2024, in the federal election interference case and May 20, 2024, in the classified documents case.

    In New York state, Trump has been charged with falsifying business records related to hush money payments to women who say they had extramarital affairs with him. 

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  • Judge sides with Georgia election workers in defamation case against Rudy Giuliani

    Judge sides with Georgia election workers in defamation case against Rudy Giuliani

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    Judge sides with Georgia election workers in defamation case against Rudy Giuliani – CBS News


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    A judge held Rudy Giuliani liable for defamation against two Georgia election workers, ordering him and his business to pay more than $130,000 in legal fees.

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  • Rudy Giuliani liable for defaming Georgia election workers, hit with sanctions by judge

    Rudy Giuliani liable for defaming Georgia election workers, hit with sanctions by judge

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    Rudy Giuliani speaks outside the Fulton County jail, Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2023, in Atlanta.

    Brynn Anderson | AP

    A federal judge on Wednesday issued a default judgment against former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and ordered him to pay sanctions of nearly $133,000 in a defamation and civil conspiracy lawsuit by two Georgia election workers whom he claimed mishandled ballots in the 2020 presidential contest.

    Judge Beryl Howell imposed the default judgment and monetary punishment because Giuliani repeatedly failed to comply with her orders to turn over electronically stored documents and other evidence sought by lawyers for the election workers, Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss.

    Howell blasted Giuliani for “willful … misconduct,” and “slippery” statements in failing to turn over the requested information as part of the legal process known as discovery.

    “The bottom line is that Giuliani has refused to comply with his discovery obligations and thwarted plaintiffs Ruby Freeman and Wandrea’ ArShaye Moss’s procedural rights to obtain any meaningful discovery in this case,” Howell wrote in a 57-page opinion that nodded at Giuliani’s recent criminal indictment with former President Donald Trump in Georgia.

    The judge also ordered attorneys for Giuliani and the two women to propose three possible dates for trial in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., on the question of how much money in compensatory and punitive damages he should be ordered to pay them as a result of the default judgment.

    Ted Goodman, a political advisor to Giuliani, in a statement, said, “This 57 page opinion on discovery — which would usually be no more than two or three pages — is a prime example of the weaponization of the justice system, where the process is the punishment.”

    “This decision should be reversed, as Mayor Giuliani is wrongly accused of not preserving electronic evidence that was seized and held by the FBI,” Goodman said.

    Lawyers for Freeman and Moss, who are mother and daughter, released a statement from the women.

    “What we went through after the 2020 election was a living nightmare. Rudy Giuliani helped unleash a wave of hatred and threats we never could have imagined. It cost us our sense of security and our freedom to go about our lives,” the woman said.

    “Nothing can restore all we lost, but today’s ruling is yet another neutral finding that has confirmed what we have known all along: that there was never any truth to any of the accusations about us and that we did nothing wrong,” the woman said. ” We were smeared for purely political reasons, and the people responsible can and should be held accountable.”

    “The fight to rebuild our reputations and to repair the damage to our lives is not over. But today we’re one step closer, and for that we are grateful.”

    Freeman last year told a select House committee, “I’ve lost my name and I’ve lost my reputation” as the result of false claims Giuliani made about her handling of voters’ ballots while he was representing Trump.

    Trump himself had repeatedly mentioned Freeman by name in a January 2021 phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, in which the then-president pressured the official to “find” Trump enough votes to overturn his electoral loss in the state.

    “Do you know how it feels to have the president of the United States target you?” Freeman asked during her testimony.

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    Giuliani was indicted two weeks ago with Trump and 17 co-defendants by a grand jury in Atlanta on charges related to an alleged conspiracy to illegally overturn Trump’s loss in 2020 to President Joe Biden in Georgia.

    That indictment details an effort by Trump, Giuliani and others to cast doubt on the legitimacy of Biden’s victory in Georgia, an effort that included making false claims about the work of Freeman and Moss.

    Among other things, Giuliani, a former federal prosecutor, had said at a Georgia Senate hearing that Freeman and Moss had passed each other USB flash drives like “vials of heroin or cocaine” as part of a scheme to defraud Trump of an election win.

    Moss later told Congress that the items were actually candy.

    The women had sued Giuliani in 2021 with claims of defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy.

    Giuliani in a court filing last month conceded, for the purposes of the lawsuit, that he had made “false” statements about the women that were “defamatory per se.”

    In her scathing opinion Tuesday, Howell detailed why monetary sanctions were required for Giuliani’s failure to comply with discovery requests in the case.

    The judge wrote, “Due to Giuliani’s discovery conduct, plaintiffs have filed two motions to compel production from Giuliani and his eponymous businesses, Giuliani Communications LLC and Giuliani Partners LLC,” resulting in two hearings on those motions, and Howell ordering him multiple times to comply with discovery requests.

    “The result of these efforts to obtain discovery from Giuliani, aside from his initial production of 193 documents, is largely a single page of communications, blobs of indecipherable data, a sliver of the financial documents required to be produced, and a declaration and two stipulations from Giuliani, who indicates in the latter stipulations his preference to concede plaintiffs’ claims rather than produce discovery in this case,” Howell wrote.

    The judge wrote that Giuliani, in responding to discovery demands, had made “stipulations” that “hold more holes than Swiss cheese,” with the most recent one “expressly reserving his arguments” that the statements he made about the woman are legally protected and nonactionable “for purposes of appeal.”

    Howell noted Giuliani’s efforts to overturn Trump’s 2020 electoral loss as she rejected that as a legitimate excuse not to turn over all of the information being sought by the women.

    “Just as taking shortcuts to win an election carries risks — even potential criminal liability — bypassing the discovery process carries serious sanctions, no matter what reservations a noncompliant party may try artificially to preserve for appeal,” the judge wrote.

    “Given the willful shirking of his discovery obligations in anticipation of and during this litigation, Giuliani leaves little other choice,” Howell wrote. “For the reasons set out below, the pending motion [for sanctions] is granted. Default judgment will be entered against Giuliani as a discovery sanction.”

    She ordered Giuliani to personally pay $89,172.50 to the women to reimburse them for attorneys’ fees and costs related to their successful first motion to compel the production of that evidence.

    Howell also ordered Giuliani to compel two of his companies to pay another $43,684 to the women for the same conduct.

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  • Prosecutors Ask If Trump Knew Giuliani Was Drunk as a Skunk on Election Night: Report

    Prosecutors Ask If Trump Knew Giuliani Was Drunk as a Skunk on Election Night: Report

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    Rudy Giuliani may have spent the last several years giving off the impression that he is extremely drunk at all times (see: confusing Four Seasons Total Landscaping with the Four Seasons, shaving in the middle of a restaurant, and sweating out hair dye on live TV). But by numerous accounts, he actually was quite intoxicated on election night 2020. Why are we bringing this up now? Because the former mayor’s alleged inebriation—and what Donald Trump knew about it—may play a key role in the ex-president’s federal trial on charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election results.

    Rolling Stone reports that investigators working for Special Counsel Jack Smith have “repeatedly grilled” witnesses about Giuliani’s drinking on and after Election Day, how drunk he allegedly was when he was giving the then president advice on how to stay in power, and what Trump’s awareness was of his attorney’s sobriety or lack thereof. Among other things, Smith’s team has reportedly asked witnesses “if Trump had ever gossiped with them about Giuliani’s drinking habits, and if Trump had ever claimed Giuliani’s drinking impacted his decision-making or judgment.” They’ve also reportedly inquired “about whether the then president was warned, including after election night 2020, about Giuliani’s allegedly excessive drinking,” or if Trump was told that Giuliani was giving him “post-election legal and strategic advice while inebriated.”

    Obviously, being tipsy or even shit-faced is not necessarily a crime—and the Feds are not actually interested in Giuliani’s drinking in and of itself. Rather, as attorneys and witnesses familiar with the matter told Rolling Stone, “Smith and his team are interested in this subject because it could help demonstrate that Trump was implementing the counsel of somebody he knew to be under the influence and perhaps not thinking clearly. If that were the case, it could add to federal prosecutors’ argument that Trump behaved with willful recklessness in his attempts nullify the 2020 election.” Given that Trump’s current legal team reportedly plans to argue that Trump had just been taking his lawyers’ advice after the election, evidence that he knew Giuliani was three sheets to the wind would likely undermine such an argument.

    “In order to rely upon an ‘advice of counsel’ defense, the defendant has to, number one, have made full disclosure of all material facts to the attorney,” Mitchell Epner, a former assistant United States attorney, told Rolling Stone. “That requires that the attorney understands what’s being told to them. If you know that your attorney is drunk, that does not count as making full disclosure of all material facts.”

    As for the question of whether or not Giuliani was, in fact, drunk on election night and the days that followed, the answer seems to depend on who you ask: Rudy Giuliani or anyone else. The former mayor has denied advising Trump while drunk, insisting in since-deleted tweets last year that he “REFUSED all alcohol” on election night and that his “favorite drink [is] Diet Pepsi,” and in a statement, Ted Goodman, a political adviser advisers to Giuliani, said: “One should always question a story that is completely reliant on anonymous sources. This false narrative by nameless sources has been contradicted by on-the-record witnesses.”  Yet advisers to Trump told the January 6 committee that the ex-mayor was indeed plastered, with one saying Giuliani was “definitely intoxicated” while talking to Trump on the evening of November 3, 2020.

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    In addition to that testimony, Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker wrote in their book I Alone Can Fix It that observers believed Giuliani had had too much to drink on election night, while author Michael Wolff told MSNBC of the evening: “Rudy was incredibly drunk, weaving this way and that way…. Trump’s aides were obviously, or rightly, concerned about what Giuliani was saying to the president about the election and giving him misinformation, but they were also concerned that he was going to break [priceless artifacts]” in the White House’s China Room.

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  • Trump’s Mug Shot Gives His Haters Nothing

    Trump’s Mug Shot Gives His Haters Nothing

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    Produced by ElevenLabs and NOA, News Over Audio, using AI narration.

    Donald Trump dropped in for a photo op in Georgia last night—not the usual kibbitz on the hustings for a former president, but a killer visual to end the week with: a mug shot.

    And just like that, Trump was restored to his accustomed place in the Republican dogpile: everywhere. It was hard to look away, even if you wanted to. Former presidents do not go and get fingerprinted and mug-shotted and perp-walked every day, even the one former president who takes his arraignments in gift packs of four.

    Clichés are always bad, and sometimes quite wrong, but the conceit that this would be a “split screen” week for the Republican campaign—eight GOP debaters on one screen, Trump’s co-defendants getting processed on the other—was spectacularly amiss from the start. One screen this week would blot out all of the rest.

    Yes, Wednesday’s debate yielded a few enduring images—including Chris Christie, Mike Pence, and Nikki Haley all fixing simultaneous stink eyes upon Vivek Ramaswamy, as if they were about to stab him with their pens. But those moments unquestionably pale next to what emanated last night from Fulton County. Trump’s mug shot, probably the most anticipated in history, seems destined to also be the most analyzed and disseminated.

    You can assume that the subject, a figure of uncommon vanity, obsessed like hell over his bureaucratic close-up. How should he pose? For what aura should he strive? Tough guy, defiant, or wounded pup? Would makeup be allowed? Thumbs-ups or no?

    Trump had come and gone from the Fulton County Jail by about 8 p.m. on the East Coast. Roughly 95 percent of Americans—or at least a sampling of hyper-online individuals in my feed—furiously began refreshing social media to see if the image was out yet. There were a few fakeouts and some inspired memes. Trump’s recorded weight—215 pounds—became a topic for discussion. It was widely doubted.

    Finally, around 8:40 p.m, the mug shot landed. Trump’s hair and eyebrows were more feathered than usual, like he had brushed them out. Lips were pursed, eyes stern and severe, his brow zig-zagging like lightning. The former president looked like the Grinch—the Grinch Who Stole Georgia (or tried).

    One thing that seemed clear from the other co-defendant processings this week is that the “deep state” wise guy who’s in charge of the booking shots at this notorious Atlanta jail is not much interested in customer service. The alleged lawbreakers have appeared, for the most part, shaken and disoriented. The lighting in the photos is awful; a harsh shine beats down over the side of each defendant’s forehead. The lawyer John Eastman seems confused; Mark Meadows, kind of sedated; a smiling Sidney Powell looks under-slept (and bonkers); Rudy Giuliani delivered the perfect “after” image to view alongside his Time “Person of the Year” cover from 2001.

    Trump’s photo offers a rough visage, formidable and extremely serious—which is what I assume he was going for. He made an effort here. It paid off. He gave his haters nothing in the ballpark of vulnerability. At 9:38 p.m., he tweeted out the image with a link to his campaign website and a message: “NEVER SURRENDER!”

    Each defendant’s photo, including Trump’s, is imprinted with a prominent Fulton County Sheriff’s Office badge in the top left corner. The logo carries a subtle but powerful message: Don’t even think about portraying this as anything but a dark, singular, and deeply unpleasant occasion. This is no place for joyriders or dilettantes or Instagram peacocks. You can post bail and leave, for now, but you don’t want to come back, trust us. Take a whiff and remember it.

    No doubt, Trump will. He does not like places that are “not nice.” He is sensitive to germs and smells. “There have been ongoing problems with overcrowding in the [Fulton County] jail, along with violence, overflowing toilets and faulty air conditioning,” The Washington Post reported last week.

    But at least Trump was spared the spin room in Milwaukee.

    For the record, Ramaswamy dominated that particular halitosis hall after Wednesday night’s debate. He kept darting from one late-night interview to the next, big-man-on-the-stage that he was. “I gotta keep moving, gotta keep moving,” Ramaswamy announced as he glad-handed his way through the sweaty scene. At one point, he approached a CNN camera where host Dana Bash was preparing to interview North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum. Ramaswamy tapped Bash on the shoulder, and Bash lit up, recognizing this sleeker vessel that had drifted into precious airspace. She seized her moment, as Ramaswamy had earlier, securing the peppy capitalist after an awkward back-and-forth with the governor.

    “I gotta keep moving,” Ramaswamy said again as someone tried to grab him away from Bash’s camera setup. This was his big night. Everyone was watching him, and he seemed determined to savor it all before midnight struck. Trump would be back and inescapable again soon enough.

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  • Trump surrenders at Atlanta jail in 2020 election interference case

    Trump surrenders at Atlanta jail in 2020 election interference case

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    Trump surrenders at Atlanta jail in 2020 election interference case – CBS News


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    Former President Donald Trump surrendered and was booked at the Fulton County jail Thursday after being indicted last week along with 18 others on charges that he attempted to subvert the results of the 2020 election in Georgia. Nikole Killion has the latest.

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  • Rudy Giuliani surrenders in Georgia election case

    Rudy Giuliani surrenders in Georgia election case

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    Rudy Giuliani surrenders in Georgia election case – CBS News


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    Rudy Giuliani, the one-time personal attorney for former President Donald Trump, surrendered at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta on Wednesday to face 13 state felony counts charging him as part of an alleged scheme to overturn the results of the 2020 election in Georgia. He was one of 19 people, included Trump, who have been indicted in the case. Trump is expected to surrender Thursday. Nikole Killion has more.

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  • See Rudy Giuliani’s mugshot after the embattled Trump ally turned himself in at Fulton County Jail

    See Rudy Giuliani’s mugshot after the embattled Trump ally turned himself in at Fulton County Jail

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    Washington — Rudy Giuliani’s mugshot was released by the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office on Wednesday, shortly after he surrendered at an Atlanta jail to be booked on charges alleging he and others attempted to subvert the 2020 election results in Georgia. 

    Giuliani, who was Trump’s personal attorney, spearheaded efforts to challenge the election results after Trump’s loss. He faces 13 felony counts, including allegedly breaking Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, making false statements and soliciting a public officer to violate their oath. Eighteen others, including Trump, were also indicted in the Georgia case. 

    rudolph-giuliani.png
    Rudy Giuliani mugshot from Fulton County Sheriff’s Office. 

    Fulton County Sheriff’s Office


    Giuliani’s bond is set at $150,000. 

    Ahead of his surrender, Giuliani told reporters that he would plead not guilty and lamented that he would have his mugshot taken, saying he “probably put the worst criminals of the 20th century in jail.” Giuliani is a former federal prosecutor and served as mayor of New York City from 1994 to 2001. 

    “You find a prosecutor who has a better record than mine in the last hundred years — I bet you don’t,” he said. “I’m the same Rudy Giuliani who took down the mafia, made New York City the safest city in America, reduced crime more than any mayor in the history of any city anywhere, and I’m fighting for justice.”

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  • Giuliani Declares “I’m the Same Rudy Giuliani That Took Down the Mafia” Before Facing RICO Charge in Georgia

    Giuliani Declares “I’m the Same Rudy Giuliani That Took Down the Mafia” Before Facing RICO Charge in Georgia

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    As you’ve probably heard by now, things are not going swimmingly for one Rudy Giuliani. Already in a load of legal trouble stemming from his attempt to overturn the 2020 election on behalf of Donald Trump, the former mayor of New York City was criminally charged last week by the Fulton County district attorney’s office for his plot to overturn the results of the election in Georgia—and if convicted on just the racketeering count alone, he could go away for 5 to 20 years. On top of that, he’s also facing defamation lawsuits from Dominion Voting Systems, Smartmatic, and two election workers, and on top of that, he is in such a bad way financially that he can’t pay his bills, per his attorney. And while Trump has reportedly refused to open his own checkbook to help out a guy who—let’s be honest—destroyed what little reputation he had left to try and steal him a second term, the ex-president has apparently decided to throw Giuliani a small-to-medium-size bone.

    That bone has come in the form of a $100,000-per-plate fundraiser at Trump’s Bedminster golf course “in support of” Giuliani, which will take place on September 7. According to the invite, Trump will be present for a “roundtable” with the former mayor, and then he’ll take off before dinner.

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    It’s not clear why Trump has suddenly decided to sort of step up to the plate to help out his friend/alleged coconspirator, though one possible explanation is that he’s trying to ensure Giuliani doesn’t flip on him, which an attorney who specializes in white-collar crime suggested this week was an outcome Trump was risking by leaving the 18 people also charged in Fulton County high and dry re: legal bills.

    On Wednesday, the former mayor flew to Georgia to surrender to authorities and face charges brought by Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis. There, he was booked and had his mugshot taken:

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    And while, as of yesterday evening, Giuliani was reportedly still struggling to find a lawyer necessary to negotiate his surrender, he was apparently feeling pretty good about his situation Wednesday morning, telling reporters, “I’m feeling very, very good about it.”

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    Then he delivered a long speech that (1) appeared to reference the many stories that have been written over the last several years about how far he’s fallen (2) highlighted the work he did in—checks notes—the 1990s (3) falsely claimed that Trump had been “proven innocent several times,” and (4) repeated Trump’s go-to line about how Americans should be worried that they too could one day be charged for trying to overturn a federal election.

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  • Rudy Giuliani surrenders in Fulton County

    Rudy Giuliani surrenders in Fulton County

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    Rudy Giuliani arrives in Atlanta to surrender


    Rudy Giuliani arrives in Atlanta to surrender

    02:22

    Rudy Giuliani turned himself in at the Fulton County Jail Wednesday on charges alleging he and others attempted to thwart the 2020 election results in Georgia. 

    As he left his New York apartment building Wednesday morning, he told reporters, “I’m going to Georgia, and I’m feeling very, very good about it because I feel I’m defending the rights of all Americans, as I did so many times as a United States attorney.” 

    “I’m going to vote to Fulton County to comply with the law, which I always do,” Giuliani said, adding, “I don’t know if I plead today, but if I do, I’ll plead not guilty. And I’ll get photographed, isn’t that nice? A mugshot, (of) the man who probably put the worst criminals of the 20th century in jail.”

    “You find a prosecutor who has a better record than mine in the last hundred years —I bet you don’t,” he added. He told reporters, “I’m the same Rudy Giuliani who took down the mafia, made New York City the safest city in America, reduced crime more than any mayor in the history of any city anywhere, and I’m fighting for justice.”

    Lawyers for Giuliani met with the district attorney Wednesday afternoon, and his bond was set at $150,000. 

    He was accompanied by former New York City Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik, a source said. Kerik, a longtime ally of Giuliani’s, is not one of the 19 defendants in the Fulton County case. 

    Rudy Giuliani Attends Court Hearing In Poll Worker Defamation Case
     Former New York City Mayor and former personal lawyer for former President Donald Trump Rudy Giuliani talks to members of the press before he leaves the U.S. District Court on May 19, 2023 in Washington, DC. 

    Alex Wong / Getty Images


    Giuliani said he would plead not guilty. He said he would likely get a mug shot, despite that he is “the man who probably put the worst criminals of the 20th century in jail.”

    Giuliani is one of 19 defendants, including former President Donald Trump, who have been indicted on racketeering and other charges in Fulton County related to alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia. 

    He was central to a campaign to challenge the results after Trump lost, taking on a leadership role both in internal planning as well as cheerleading the effort in public — holding a famous press conference after the election at Four Seasons Total Landscaping in Philadelphia, saying Trump would not concede, and spreading misinformation in appearances before state legislatures.

    The indictment claims Giuliani, “in furtherance of the conspiracy” to overturn the election, sought to push legislators in Arizona, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Michigan to “unlawfully appoint” presidential electors from their states.

    Giuliani has denied all wrongdoing in the case, and has criticized Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ handling of the investigation.

    On Tuesday, Scott Hall, a Georgia bail bondsman, and John Eastman, a conservative attorney, were also booked at the jail. Both men were eligible for bond. A request to Hall for comment was not immediately returned.

    Eastman said in a statement that he and his legal team plan to contest the charges and said he is confident he will be “fully vindicated.” 

    Willis gave those charged until noon Friday to surrender to authorities. 

    Trump said on his social media platform Monday that he will turn himself in on Thursday. He has denied wrongdoing in the case.

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  • Trump Is Hosting $100,000-Per-Plate Dinner For Cash-Strapped Rudy Giuliani. Snark Is Served.

    Trump Is Hosting $100,000-Per-Plate Dinner For Cash-Strapped Rudy Giuliani. Snark Is Served.

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    The former president appears to be following through on a reported promise to help Giuliani after the former mayor of New York City went to Mar-a-Lago with his own lawyer to plead with Trump to pay Giuliani’s mounting legal bills.

    The New York Times’ Shane Goldmacher shared an invitation for the Sept. 7 event at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey, which touted a roundtable with “President” Trump and Giuliani and then a dinner with “America’s Mayor.”

    Giuliani, who was indicted for election interference in Georgia along with Trump, faces legal and financial jeopardy elsewhere as well. He is being sued by Dominion and Smartmatic for falsely claiming that their voting services swayed the 2020 election in President Joe Biden’s favor. He is also being sued for defamation by two Georgia election workers and by a former employee who accused him of coercing her into sex.

    But many critics on social media weren’t feeling sympathy for Giuliani, opting to roast the fundraising dinner on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

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  • ‘Truly An Idiot’: Michael Cohen Names The 1 Bad Move That Will Haunt Trump

    ‘Truly An Idiot’: Michael Cohen Names The 1 Bad Move That Will Haunt Trump

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    Michael Cohen, former personal attorney to Donald Trump, said there’s a simple explanation for the former president’s decision to refuse to pay legal fees for some of those indicted alongside him.

    “Donald’s an idiot,” he told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins. “Let me just be very clear when it comes to paying money: He is truly an idiot.”

    Former Trump attorney Jenna Ellis, who helped with his failed effort to overturn the 2020 election and has been charged alongside him in the Georgia criminal case, said the former president isn’t picking up the tab for her defense.

    And former Trump attorney/New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who was also indicted for his role in attempting to subvert democracy, has reportedly traveled to Florida to plead for money for his defense, but didn’t get much.

    Cohen said that decision could haunt the former president.

    “He has not learned yet… three people you don’t want to throw under the bus like that: your lawyer, your doctor, and your mechanic,” he told Collins. “Because, one way or the other, you’re gonna go down the hill and there’ll be no brakes.”

    He said Giuliani in particular should cooperate with investigators.

    “He’s gonna need to speak,” Cohen said. “And he’s gonna need to speak before everybody else does.”

    Asked if Trump was making mistake by not paying for Giuliani’s defense, Cohen shot back: “Absolutely.”

    Cohen spent years as Trump’s loyal fixer, but eventually turned on him when he cooperated with investigators and pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations, lying to Congress and other charges ― all of which, he has said, was done for Trump.

    He was sentenced to three years in prison, and has since been a persistent Trump critic.

    See more of his conversation with Collins below:

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  • Rudy Giuliani: I Have “Scientific Evidence” the 2020 Election Was Stolen From Donald Trump

    Rudy Giuliani: I Have “Scientific Evidence” the 2020 Election Was Stolen From Donald Trump

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    Last Thursday, Donald Trump abruptly canceled a press conference he’d said would feature “A Large, Complex, Detailed but Irrefutable REPORT on the Presidential Election Fraud which took place in Georgia,” which he claimed would exonerate both him and his 18 coconspirators. For his most ardent supporters, the ones who maintain the belief—after numerous state and federal investigations have said otherwise—that the election was stolen and that the 45th president is being unjustly prosecuted, this was presumably a big disappointment. But fear not, because an old pal of old Donny’s says he’s also got the goods to clear both their names.

    Yes, on Sunday, Rudy Giuliani claimed that he has cold, hard evidence proving the 2020 election was stolen, which will in turn show that he and Trump were right to contest Joe Biden’s win and are thus innocent of all charges against them. Why didn’t Rudy mention any of this evidence at the time or in the years since? Well, he didn’t have it way back then, and he didn’t have it just before he was charged by Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis, but he’s got it now. And boy, is it big. Scientific big.

    “There are things we didn’t present then, because over the next couple years, a lot of people did a lot of work and have been able to produced more witnesses, and what I would call ‘scientific evidence’ that I would say is very persuasive,” Giuliani said on his WABC radio show. What, exactly, did he mean by “scientific evidence”? No one knows and, unfortunately, the former mayor did not explain.

    Like Trump, Giuliani is currently facing a boatload of legal problems. In addition to the criminal charges out of Georgia, the man once known as “America’s Mayor” is being sued for defamation by both Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic for the many false claims he made about their technology being manipulated to benefit Joe Biden in 2020, and is also being sued for defamation by former Georgia election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, whom Giuliani has admitted he made false statements about. There’s also a lawsuit against him from former employee Noelle Dunphy, who has accused him of “sexual assault and harassment, wage theft, and other misconduct,” and is seeking $10 million in damages. (A political adviser to Giuliani disputed Dunphy’s claims to CBS News and insisted, “This was a consensual relationship.”) Unlike Trump, Giuliani does not have faithful followers to cover his legal bills, and despite reportedly begging more than once, has apparently yet to convince the ex-president to pony up some cash-based assistance. Last week, an attorney for Giuliani said there “are a lot of bills that he’s not paying” at the moment, because he can’t.

    After he was indicted in Georgia, Giuliani said on his YouTube show, “This is a completely unjustified and disgusting act of retribution, as I had the temerity to unveil the biggest scandal in American history—and for that, my parents are proud of me, and I don’t give a damn about the rest.” Trump has similarly claimed he did nothing wrong.

    Judge rules Trump can’t intimidate witnesses in Georgia election case

    This is clearly a good and necessary thing that hopefully but may not have any impact on the ex-president’s actions:

    An Atlanta-area judge approved on Monday a $200,000 bond for former president Donald Trump, who is expected to surrender later this week on charges that he and 18 allies illegally conspired to try to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss in Georgia.

    The bond agreement—known as a consent bond order—sets strict rules for Trump’s release. Trump is not allowed to communicate with witnesses or co-defendants about the case, except through his lawyers, and he is barred from intimidating witnesses or co-defendants. He is also forbidden from making any “direct or indirect threat of any nature against the community or to any property in the community,” including in “posts on social media or reposts of posts” by others on social media.

    Earlier this month, a judge presiding over Trump’s arraignment in the federal election case warned him, “I want to remind you it is a crime to intimidate a witness or retaliate against anyone for providing information about your case to the prosecution, or otherwise obstruct justice.” Less than a day later, the ex-president wrote on Truth Social: “IF YOU GO AFTER ME, I’M COMING AFTER YOU!”

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  • Rudy Giuliani’s former colleagues reflect on his path from law-and-order champion to RICO defendant: “A tragedy”

    Rudy Giuliani’s former colleagues reflect on his path from law-and-order champion to RICO defendant: “A tragedy”

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    Waving his glasses in front of his face while recording his YouTube show on Tuesday, Rudy Giuliani taunted the prosecutor who had just charged him with racketeering.

    “You’re screwed, Fani. Giuliani got new glasses. Ha! And he’s like five times the lawyer … five times the lawyer you are? How can you? No. Well, you can’t multiply by zero,” Giuliani said.

    Giuliani was one of 19 people, including former President Donald Trump, indicted in Georgia Monday in a broad racketeering case focused on their efforts to overturn the state’s 2020 presidential election results. On his YouTube show Tuesday, he echoed the irony many of his former colleagues recalled in interviews in recent days, having watched Giuliani transform from a hard-charging federal prosecutor-turned-mayor — known for his tough-on-crime braggadocio — to defendant in a case painting him as a central figure in a “criminal enterprise” bent on overthrowing a president-elect. 

    “What the hell do you know about racketeering? I know about racketeering,” Giuliani said during his YouTube show, claiming, “I probably have done more against organized crime than any prosecutor in history.”

    Giuliani’s sense that he was an original champion of prosecuting racketeering, or RICO, cases was echoed by Paul Shechtman, who in the early 1980s was chief of appeals under Giuliani, then the U.S. attorney for the U.S. Southern District of New York. At the time, Giuliani was becoming a household name in New York, known for pursuing mobsters and corrupt politicians. 

    “In the 1980s, if you said that Rudy Giuliani had been indicted on RICO charges, someone would’ve thought it was a bad ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit,” said Shechtman, who is now deputy commissioner of legal matters/general counsel for New York City’s Department of Correction.

    Rudy Giuliani Holds News Conference in Washington
    Rudy Giuliani speaks during a news conference about lawsuits contesting the results of the presidential election at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 19, 2020.

    Getty Images


    Columbia Law School professor Daniel Richman was a young federal prosecutor at the time working for Giuliani — in his own words, “a starry-eyed young assistant who thought Rudy was an inspiring leader and a prosecutor with a real moral compass and commitment to getting the law right.”

    Among Giuliani’s major cases was the prosecution and racketeering conviction of Stanley Friedman, a former New York City deputy mayor and Bronx Democratic party boss. Before Giuliani prosecuted him, Friedman was a lawyer whose most famous client was local businessman Donald Trump; the firm Friedman worked for was founded by Trump’s mentor, Roy Cohn.

    “If you had told me that Rudy would be doing dirty work for Roy Cohn’s protege, I wouldn’t have been able to fathom it,” Richman said, “since I was involved in cases where Roy Cohn was deeply connected to mob figures.”

    Giuliani left the U.S. attorney’s office in 1989 and four years later successfully ran for mayor, riding a “law and order” message to City Hall.

    Giuliani’s campaign rhetoric was brash and confrontational. During one September 1992 speech, he addressed hundreds of police officers who gathered near the Brooklyn Bridge to protest a civilian oversight board and other police reform efforts. Soon after, the police group rioted, shutting down the bridge, stopping traffic, shouting racial epithets and stomping on cars.

    In the aftermath, some — including then-Mayor David Dinkins — criticized Giuliani for egging the police on, an allegation Giuliani called “dead wrong.”

    Giuliani was elected two months later, and re-elected four years after that. He’d claim credit for a marked decrease in crime rates during his tenure, which ended a few months after the day that for years defined his legacy: September 11, 2001.

    “He was ‘America’s Mayor,’ who led us through one of the most difficult periods in the history of the country,” said Lou Ellen Barkan, who worked with Giuliani for four years as chief of staff to Deputy Mayor Randy Mastro.

    After the attack on the World Trade Center, “people were pretty hysterical. And his behavior was so calming and reassuring, that even though we were all just beside ourselves, having him as the leader at that time was really great,” Barkan reflected.

    In the two decades since, Giuliani went into business for himself, ran for president and worked for a major law firm before serving as personal attorney to President Trump, the role that ultimately led to his indictment. 

    Giuliani faces 13 counts related to his alleged efforts to help Trump overturn the 2020 presidential election. By his own account, he spearheaded a campaign to challenge the results after Trump lost. He was central to internal planning and strategy, but also the most visible face of the Trump legal team — holding a famous press conference after the election at Four Seasons Total Landscaping in Philadelphia saying Trump would not concede, and spreading misinformation in appearances before state legislatures.

    Trump Campaign Lawyers Hold News Conference In Philadelphia
    Rudy Giuliani speaks at a news conference in support of then-President Donald Trump in the parking lot of Four Seasons Total Landscaping in Philadelphia on Nov. 7, 2020.

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    The Georgia indictment alleges that Giuliani, “in furtherance of the conspiracy” to overturn the election, sought to push legislators in Arizona, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Michigan to “unlawfully appoint” presidential electors from their states.

    He has not yet entered a plea in the case, but has denied wrongdoing.

    One person who worked closely for years with then-Mayor Giuliani, but asked not to be identified, described his current situation as “tragic.”

    “It’s hard, when you’ve worked closely with someone. Admired them, loved them. My time with him was the best job I’ve ever had,” the person said. 

    Asked about the comments by Giuliani’s former colleagues, a spokesperson for Giuliani brought up allegations about Democrats and “the Russian collusion hoax,” a 2020 comment by then-candidate Joe Biden calling Giuliani “a Russian pawn,” and “big tech” censorship of Hunter Biden’s laptop.

    “I would remind these ‘former colleagues’ that Rudy Giuliani is the most effective federal prosecutor in American history, he improved the quality of life for more people than any Mayor in American history, and he comforted the nation following September 11th,” said the spokesperson, Ted Goodman. “No one can take away his great accomplishments and contributions to the country.”

    Barkan struggles to explain a change in Giuliani’s demeanor over the years that she also calls “tragic.”

    “Rudy Giuliani is a tragedy of biblical, Shakespearean proportions. I think a hundred years from now, somebody will write an opera about this guy’s life,” Barkan said.

    “He achieved remarkable things with a group of remarkable people, and to see where he is today, for those of us who knew him at that time, is to recognize that he’s no longer the same person,” Barkan said. “That trajectory has been, in the classical sense of the word, really a tragedy, for him, of course, and for all the people who knew and loved him.”

    But how did the guy who went after Donald Trump’s lawyer, and others close to his mentor, turn into the guy risking prison for Trump? 

    Barkan says she frequently thinks about “how did we get so far down this road?”

    “Politics brings people together who have a mutual agenda, whether it’s personal or professional. The combination is like putting two chemicals in a jar where you don’t really know what the response is going to be — like in a chem lab in high school,” Barkan said. 

    “And the teacher might say, ‘don’t put that in there, you’ll have an explosion.’”

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  • Rudy Giuliani Can’t Pay His Bills After Hitching His Wagon to Trump’s Failed Election Coup

    Rudy Giuliani Can’t Pay His Bills After Hitching His Wagon to Trump’s Failed Election Coup

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    As reasonable people can probably all agree, plotting to overturn the results of a free and fair election is an extremely bad idea from a moral, reputational, and legal perspective. (Have you heard? You might actually go to jail for it!) On a practical level, it also turns out to be a really bad idea to try and overturn an election if you don‘t have the deep pockets of, say, a former reality-TV show host whose supporters seem all too happy to foot legal bills. Like if you’re a former New York City mayor turned national embarrassment now best known for confusing a five-star hotel with a landscaping business of the same name and having no choice but to see it through, shaving in the middle of a restaurant, and accidentally appearing in a Sacha Baron Cohen movie with your hand down your pants, you should take a cold hard look at your finances, realize they probably can’t withstand the risks of an attempted coup, and call it a day. Rudy Giuliani, for one, knows what we’re talking about.

    CNN reports that the mayor turned Trump attorney is “staring down hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal bills and sanctions amid numerous lawsuits in addition to the new criminal charges—related to his work for Donald Trump after the 2020 election.” How bad is the situation? So bad that in court on Monday, Giuliani said his legal situation has basically left him with no cash. So bad that in court on Wednesday, Adam Katz, at attorney for Giuliani said there “are a lot of bills that he’s not paying” as a result. So bad that he’s listed his Manhattan apartment for sale.* Is it so bad that he’s going to have to film more cigar and gold coin ads? That remains to be seen, but it’s probably getting close! Speaking about Giuliani’s financial situation, this week Katz said the former mayor does not have the funds to produce records in voting technology company Smartmatic’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News and others, including Giuliani. Katz added that the apparent cash crunch is “very humbling for Mr. Giuliani.” On Wednesday, a judge gave Giuliani two weeks to come up with the money necessary to generate the records for Smartmatic; if he can’t, he’ll be forced to pay some of the company’s legal fees (which he presumably does not have the money to cover, either.)

    Of course, the lawsuit from Smartmatic is not the only legal issue facing Giuliani. He’s also being sued for defamation by, among others, Dominion Voting Systems and Georgia election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, who he has conceded he made false statements about concerning the 2020 election. Also, there are those pesky criminal charges, per CNN:

    The criminal charges that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis brought against Trump, Giuliani and 17 others will undoubtedly add to the former mayor’s legal bills.

    That prosecution is separate from the federal election subversion investigation that looms over Giuliani. He is “Co-conspirator 1” in special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment of Trump related to efforts to overturn the 2020 election. While he has not been indicted, prosecutors continue to investigate, including speaking with Giuliani’s ally, Bernie Kerik, about what Giuliani did to prove that Trump actually won the election, among other things, Kerik’s attorney told CNN.

    Giuliani is also being sued by former employee Noelle Dunphy, who has accused him of “sexual assault and harassment, wage theft, and other misconduct,” and is seeking $10 million in damages. (Ted Goodman, a political adviser to Giuliani, disputed Dunphy’s claims to CBS News and insisted that “This was a consensual relationship.”)

    Robert Costello, an attorney for Giuliani, declined CNN’s request for comment. After he was indicted in Georgia, the former mayor said, “This is a completely unjustified and disgusting act of retribution, as I had the temerity to unveil the biggest scandal in American history—and for that, my parents are proud of me, and I don’t give a damn about the rest.”

    *Giuliani has obviously not publicly stated that he’s trying to sell the apartment because he needs money ASAP, and it’s possible he’s just looking for a change of scenery—but it also seems quite-to-very possible he’s doing it for the cash, given his financial situation. Maybe he’ll appear on an episode of Million Dollar Listing and let us know.

    Jack Smith has more than just Trump’s tweets

    The special counsel has the ex-president’s DMs and drafts too—no thanks to Elon Musk. Per Politico:

    Special counsel Jack Smith obtained an extraordinary array of data from Twitter about Donald Trump’s account—from direct messages to draft tweets to location data—newly unsealed court filings reveal. But it took a bruising battle with Twitter’s attorneys in January and February—punctuated by a blistering analysis by a federal judge, who wondered whether Elon Musk was attempting to “cozy up” to the former president by resisting the special counsel’s demands—before prosecutors got the goods.

    Ultimately, US district judge Beryl Howell held Twitter (now known as X) in contempt of court in February, fining the company $350,000 for missing a court-ordered deadline to comply with Smith’s search warrant. But the newly unsealed transcripts of the proceedings in her courtroom show that the fine was the least of the punishment. Howell lit into Twitter for taking “extraordinary” and apparently unprecedented steps to give Trump advance notice about the search warrant—despite prosecutors’ warnings, backed by unspecified evidence, that notifying Trump could cause grave damage to their investigation.

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    Bess Levin

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  • Trump stiffed his alleged co-conspirators, whose false claims brought in $250 million

    Trump stiffed his alleged co-conspirators, whose false claims brought in $250 million

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    Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump arrive to speak to police gathered at a Fraternal Order of Police lodge during a campaign event in Statesville, North Carolina, Aug. 18, 2016.

    Carlo Allegri | Reuters

    Several of the attorneys who spearheaded President Donald Trump‘s frenzied effort to overturn the results of the 2020 election tried, and failed, to collect payment for the work they did for Trump’s political operation, according to testimony to congressional investigators and Federal Election Commission records. This is despite the fact that their lawsuits and false claims of election interference helped the Trump campaign and allied committees raise $250 million in the weeks following the November vote, the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot said in its final report.

    Among them was Trump’s closest ally, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Trump and Giuliani had a handshake agreement that Giuliani and his team would get paid by the Trump political operation for their post-election work, according to Timothy Parlatore, an attorney for longtime Giuliani ally Bernard Kerik.

    But the Trump campaign and its affiliated committees ultimately did not honor that pledge, according to campaign finance records. The records show that Giuliani’s companies were only reimbursed for travel and not the $20,000 a day he requested to be paid.

    Parlatore also told CNBC that the Giuliani operation was never compensated for its work. According to Parlatore, the failure to pay Giuliani and his team came up last week in a private interview between prosecutors on special counsel Jack Smith’s team and Kerik, a member of Giuliani’s team in late 2020.

    “Lawyers and law firms that didn’t do s— were paid lots of money and the people that worked their ass off, got nothing,” Kerik complained in a 2021 tweet.

    Bob Costello, Giuliani’s attorney, declined to comment further about the agreement, citing privileged conversations between his client and then-President Trump.

    Trump has a long history of not paying his bills. But the revelation that he likely stiffed Giuliani, a longtime friend, is all the more striking given that much of the work Giuliani did for the Trump operation is detailed in a sprawling RICO indictment in Georgia released Monday, in which Giuliani is a co-defendant alongside Trump and 17 other people.

    The indictment details trips Giuliani made, phone calls he placed and meetings he attended, all in service of what prosecutors say was a criminal conspiracy to overturn the election.

    Criminal or not, what is indisputable is that Giuliani and his team did a lot of legal and PR work for Trump. Over more than two months, Giuliani served as the public face of Trump’s election challenges, which ultimately failed.

    Nonetheless, these challenges helped Trump and his allies raise an unprecedented $250 million from small-dollar donors in the weeks following the November election, according to the final congressional report by the House select committee on the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. The money came in response to countless fundraising appeals that claimed it was needed to fund Trump’s election challenges in court.

    Yet instead of paying the lawyers who tried unsuccessfully to overturn his loss, the money went into Trump’s leadership PAC, Save America.

    CNBC Politics

    Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

    According to the final report by the House select committee, “After raising $250 million dollars on false voter fraud claims, mostly from small-dollar donors, President Trump did not spend it on fighting an election he knew he lost.” Trump’s entire political network, including his joint fundraising committees, spent over $47 million combined from the start of 2020 through the end of 2021 on legal fees, according to a report by OpenSecrets.

    Today, that money raised by Trump’s political operation is instead helping Trump pay his own legal bills in the criminal cases against him. Trump’s Save America PAC spent over $20 million in the first half of the year alone on legal fees as the president faced the first two of his four indictments.

    The PAC began the second half of the year with only about $3 million in cash on hand.

    Sidney Powell, an attorney later disavowed by the Trump campaign, participates in a news conference with President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, D.C., Nov. 19, 2020.

    Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

    Giuliani is not the only unindicted co-conspirator in the special counsel’s election case who got stiffed by the Trump operation.

    Federal Election Commission records and testimony from the House Jan. 6 select committee hearings reveal that none of the private-sector lawyers identified — but not indicted — in that case got paid for their post-election work: Not Sidney Powell, Kenneth Chesebro or John Eastman.

    Giuliani and Eastman wanted a mix of reimbursements and payments, but records show they received virtually none of that money. Powell had to turn to her own law firm to pay her volunteers. All the while, the Trump team raised hundreds of millions of dollars off the false claims of election fraud that Powell and Giuliani promoted on TV and in court.

    Chesebro, for his part, told the House committee that the work he did for the Trump team was pro bono.

    On Monday, all four lawyers entered a new phase in their legal relationship with Trump, when they were charged alongside him in the Georgia RICO case.

    Giuliani, Chesebro, Powell and Eastman were among the more than a dozen other co-defendants in the indictment brought against Trump in Georgia on charges of trying to illegally overturn the 2020 election results in the state and elsewhere.

    Giuliani wanted $20,000 a day

    Matthew Morgan, an election lawyer for the Trump campaign, recalled to the House select committee in 2022 that Giuliani requested $20,000 a day from the Trump political operation to fight the election results. Working five days a week for two months, November and December 2020, this would have amounted to around $800,000 in legal fees.

    But Giuliani never got it. According to federal records, two companies linked to the former New York City mayor got about $100,000 in travel fees and reimbursements from the Trump operation. Kerik’s company saw about $85,000 for travel-related expenses, according to the records. But not a penny more from team Trump for their services.

    Eastman wanted refunds and payment

    Longtime conservative attorney John Eastman had an alleged role in trying to stall the certification of the 2020 election results.

    Attorney John Eastman speaks next to President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, as Trump supporters gather ahead of the president’s speech to contest the certification by Congress of the results of the 2020 U.S. presidential election on the Ellipse in Washington, D.C., Jan. 6, 2021.

    Jim Bourg | Reuters

    Morgan told the House select committee that when Eastman first officially came on board in December, he did so on a voluntary basis, but he requested that his expenses be reimbursed by Trump’s team.

    Federal Election Commission records show that Eastman didn’t directly receive a single reimbursement from Trump’s campaign, despite that agreement.

    Shortly after Jan. 6, 2021, Eastman requested payment “for services rendered,” according to Morgan’s testimony to the select committee. Though Morgan did not recall how much Eastman asked for, he said his understanding was that “the services requested was for the totality of all the work he’d done for the campaign.”

    Morgan told the committee that he sent the request to another Trump campaign legal advisor, Justin Clark.

    FEC records show that no payments were ever made by any of Trump’s committees to Eastman.

    Eastman’s attorneys declined to comment.

    The fact that neither Giuliani nor Eastman got paid also reflected a deep rift that emerged after the election between top staffers on Trump’s formal campaign and the small band of lawyers pushing fringe theories of how Trump could overturn his loss.

    A group of Trump campaign leaders and legal minds, occasionally referred to as “Team Normal,” pushed back against the conspiracy theories being peddled by the outside attorneys.

    Ultimately, it was members of “Team Normal” that had a say in the campaign’s purse strings.

    Clark later recounted an email he received on Christmas Eve 2020 from Giuliani associates, seeking payment.

    “What I make of it is that I think these guys were reporting directly to Mr. Giuliani, and when it came time to get paid, they were looking to me to get money, and I was never in the position to be prepared to just write checks to people ….we’re not just going to set money on fire to do stuff,” Clark told the House committee.

    An attorney for Clark declined to comment.

    Powell paid staff through her own firm

    Sidney Powell is the likely third unnamed co-conspirator in Smith’s federal indictment, according to NBC News. She’s also one of the co-defendants in the Georgia case brought against Trump and his allies.

    Powell was one of the leading voices on Fox News shortly after the election, peddling the false claim that voting machine companies Smartmatic and Dominion Voting Systems were each involved in conspiracies to stop Trump from becoming president.

    Both companies have denied the claims and taken Fox to court. This year, Fox settled the Dominion lawsuit, agreeing to pay the voting machine company an unprecedented $787.5 million. The defamation suit levied against Fox by Smartmatic is still open.

    Powell later told the House select committee that her firm, Sidney Powell P.C., not the Trump campaign, paid assistants who helped her pursue those claims about the election.

    “When money was donated, I wanted to make sure they got paid,” she said in her interview with the House panel. “That’s all I remember about that part. And I paid them.”

    FEC records indicate that no payments from Trump and his allies ever went to Powell’s law firm.

    But her nonprofit group Defending The Republic raised over $16 million since the November 2020 election, according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The group does not reveal its donors, however, and it’s unclear how much of that money ended up in Powell’s personal coffers.

    Powell did not respond to a request for comment.

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