Shropshire Star

Judge holds Rudy Giuliani in contempt of court over Georgia election workers

Judge Howell found Mr Giuliani violated court orders barring him from defaming Wandrea ‘Shaye’ Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman.

By contributor By Michael Kunzelman, Associated Press
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Rudy Giuliani head and shoulders
Rudy Giuliani outside court in Washington on Friday (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

Rudy Giuliani has been found in contempt of court for continuing to spread lies about two former Georgia election workers after a jury awarded the women a 148 million-dollar (£121 million) defamation judgment.

US district judge Beryl Howell in Washington, DC, is the second federal judge this week to find the former New York City mayor in contempt of court.

Judge Howell found Mr Giuliani violated court orders barring him from defaming Wandrea “Shaye” Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman.

She ordered him to review trial evidence and other materials from the case, and warned him that future violations could result in possible jail.

Ms Moss and Ms Freeman sued Mr Giuliani for defamation for falsely accusing them of committing election fraud in connection with the 2020 election. His lies upended their lives with racist threats and harassment.

Shortly before the hearing began, Mr Giuliani slammed the judge in a social media post, calling her “bloodthirsty” and biased against him and the proceeding a “hypocritical waste of time”.

Mr Giuliani, 80, smiled and chuckled as the judge explained why she was holding him in contempt of court.

Judge Howell said it is “outrageous and shameful” for Giuliani to suggest that he is the one who has been treated unfairly in this case.

“This takes real chutzpah, Mr Giuliani,” she said.

After the judge finished reading her decision from the bench, Mr Giuliani asked her when she wrote it. He asked her why he had to travel to Washington to attend the hearing if she had already reached a decision in advance.

“Remarkable,” he said.

“It is remarkable,” the judge replied.

“Remarkable that you can do that in three or four minutes,” Mr Giuliani added.

Mr Giuliani continued to complain about the judge as he left the court.

“It was a farce,” he said, describing the judge as “completely biased and prejudiced”.

Rudy Giuliani
Rudy Giuliani outside the court in Washington, DC (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

Mr Giuliani briefly gave evidence during Friday’s hearing, only to authenticate records about his personal finances.

The judge did not fine Mr Giuliani for his most recent defamatory comments about the case, but she said would impose daily fines of 200 dollars (£164) if he does not certify within 10 days that he has complied with her order to review trial testimony and other case-related material.

“I don’t care what she did. She is a completely farcical judge,” he said outside the courtroom. “She didn’t consider a damn thing I said. She wrote it beforehand.”

A jury sided with the mother and daughter, who are black, in December 2023 and awarded them 75 million dollars (£61 million) in punitive damages plus roughly 73 million dollars (£59 million) in other damages.

“Mr Giuliani started lying about plaintiffs in December of 2020, and refused to stop after repeatedly being told that his election-rigging conspiracy theory about plaintiffs was baseless, malicious, and dangerous,” the plaintiffs’ lawyers wrote.

Mr Giuliani’s lawyers argued that the plaintiffs had not presented “clear and convincing” evidence that he violated a court order in the defamation case in comments that he made on November podcasts about alleged ballot counting irregularities in Georgia.

“Giuliani acted with the good faith belief that his comments did not violate the (judgment) and he should not be subject to contempt sanctions,” his lawyers wrote.

On Monday in New York, Judge Lewis Liman found Mr Giuliani in contempt of court for related claims that he failed to turn over evidence to help the judge decide whether he can keep a Palm Beach, Florida, condominium.

Mr Giuliani, who testified in Liman’s Manhattan courtroom on January 3, said he did not turn over everything because he believed the requests were overly broad, inappropriate or even a “trap” set by plaintiffs’ lawyers.

In the witness box, Ms Moss and Ms Freeman described fearing for their lives after becoming the target of a false conspiracy theory that Mr Giuliani and other Republicans spread as they tried to keep Donald Trump in power after he lost the 2020 election to Democrat Joe Biden.

Ms Moss told jurors she tried to change her appearance, seldom leaves her home and suffers from panic attacks.

“Money will never solve all my problems,” Ms Freeman told reporters after the jury’s verdict.

“I can never move back into the house that I call home. I will always have to be careful about where I go and who I choose to share my name with. I miss my home. I miss my neighbours, and I miss my name.”

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