Rudy Giuliani received a new influx of funding after a social media post from Donald Trump encouraged supporters to donate.
There’s a bit of a mystery surrounding who may have offered the financial backing for Rudy Giuliani to settle with a pair of 2020 election workers from Georgia that he repeatedly defamed. Under the agreement,
President-elect Donald Trump posted a two-word exhortation to his 8.51 million followers on Truth Social. “SAVE RUDY!!!.” he wrote. “SAVE RUDY!!!,” the Steak for Breakfast podcast quoted. “SAVE RUDY!!
Is Donald Trump about to make all of Rudy Giuliani’s legal troubles go away? That’s the impression you might get from the former presidential lawyer, who has been living life like he just has ...
Rudy Giuliani has settled with two Georgia elections workers in a deal they say let him keep his homes and personal belongings in return for compensation and a promise to never defame them again.
Giuliani's attorneys wrote in a motion that he suffers from "a number of medical conditions that make travel challenging and risky."
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has reached a tentative settlement to end all legal actions by two Georgia election workers who successfully accused him of defaming them.
Rudy Giuliani settled a defamation case brought against him by two Georgia election workers who he repeatedly falsely said were involved in stealing the 2020 election. Giuliani was previously ordered to pay $11 million of the $148 million judgment he owed Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss,
Giuliani was supposed to testify Thursday in a bench trial to determine what assets he'll have to give up to a pair of 2020 election workers he defamed.
Los Angeles-based trial lawyer, John J. Perlstein, told Newsweek that Liman is running out of patience: "Giuliani is obfuscating the process, and Judge Liman is fed up with it. Therefore, he seems to be limiting Giuliani's ability to prove that the Florida residence is primary, which, if proven, would protect it from seizure."
The former New York City mayor was nowhere to be seen more than two hours after his trial was scheduled to begin