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,
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.
Giuliani reached a tentative settlement agreement with the Georgia election workers he defamed on Thursday, hours after his Manhattan bench trial over his continued ownership of his Palm Beach
The settlement was signed Thursday afternoon, just hours after the former New York City Mayor had been set to testify.
Giuliani said the settlement will allow him to keep all of his personal belongings, which he had been turning over to the election workers.
Cash-strapped former mayor won’t be forced to forfeit assets but he must pay the women, according to attorneys
Rudy Giuliani is set to be the first witness at a trial over whether he can keep his Florida condominium and three World Series rings or must turn them over to satisfy a $148 million judgment awarded
Rudy Giuliani will again square off in court against two Georgia election workers Thursday, this time seeking to keep his Florida condominium and other prized possessions from the women who won a $146 million defamation judgment against him.
The details of the settlement are not public, but the former New York City mayor can keep his properties and belongings.
The former mayor will be the first witness in the case without a jury, as Giuliani fights to keep his Florida apartment.
A lawyer for the former NYC mayor declined to say if someone else is paying the $148M defamation award he owed Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman.