In a new legal blow against Rudy Giuliani, a federal judge has ordered the former New York City mayor to pay fines and face a trial in a defamation case involving two Georgia election workers.
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell ruled in favor of Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss by default, concluding that Giuliani was liable for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy. Now, he must pay sanctions to them both.
Freeman and Moss both sued Giuliani for defamation in December 2021 after he made and promoted false and inflammatory statements that the pair committed election fraud and stole votes in Fulton County, Georgia, after the 2020 presidential election.
Related: ‘He Didn’t Mention Potential Wire Fraud… Unacknowledged Abortions or Serial Adultery’: Herschel Walker Slammed By Critics After Writing Op-Ed ‘Lecturing on Right and Wrong’
Giuliani didn’t do much to curry favor in the case after refusing to turn over discovery documents. He did concede last month that the statements he made about Freeman and Moss were defamatory, but Judge Howell said those concessions “hold more holes than Swiss cheese” after Giuliani made stipulations to try to move past the discovery obligations while working to dismiss the case altogether.
“The reservations in Giuliani’s stipulations make clear his goal to bypass the discovery process and a merits trial — at which his defenses may be fully scrutinized and tested in our judicial system’s time-honored adversarial process — and to delay such a fair reckoning by taking his chances on appeal, based on the abbreviated record he forced on plaintiffs,” Howell wrote in a 57-page opinion.
Howell ordered Giuliani and his businesses to pay a combined $133,000 to reimburse legal fees the election workers incurred.
He also has the chance to turn over discovery before the trial for this case, which will determine the amount of other damages he is responsible…
Read the full article here