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Apartment, Mercedes, watches… Justice orders Rudy Giuliani to part with his assets

The former lawyer for Donald Trump and former mayor of New York (1994-2001) was ordered at the end of 2023 to pay some $148 million to his two electoral agents in the state of Georgia.

A heavy court decision. A judge on Tuesday, October 23, ordered Donald Trump's former personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, to transfer part of his assets, including his apartment in New York, to the two electoral agents he defamed after the presidential election of 2020.

The former mayor of New York, who became an unwavering supporter of Donald Trump and spearheaded his campaign to invalidate the results of the 2020 presidential election, was sentenced at the end of 2023 to pay some $148 million to his two election workers in Georgia, a mother and her daughter.

Defamation

To the apartment located in the beautiful neighborhoods of Manhattan, are added fees not yet paid for an amount of 2 million dollars that Rudy Giuliani is demanding from Donald Trump's 2020 campaign, a 1980 Mercedes SL500, jewelry, numerous luxury watches and several collector's items, such as a jersey signed by baseball legend Joe DiMaggio, according to the list appearing in the decision rendered by a federal judge in New York.

From a video showing the two women passing an object – which turned out to be a mint tablet – during the counting of the ballots, the ex-mayor and ex-prosecutor of New York claimed that they exchanged a USB stick “as if they were doses of heroin or cocaine” to fake the results.

The complainants, both black, recounted how these accusations, taken up by Donald Trump on social networks, earned them a flood of insults and threats, often of a racist nature.

The former mayor of New York is at the center of suspicions of the justice system, which has indicted him in the states of Arizona and Georgia for his role in attempts to reverse the results of the presidential election won by Joe Biden.

The fall of Rudy Giuliani, 80, is as strong as his image had shone 20 years earlier, when the mayor of New York embodied resilience after the attacks of September 11, 2001 which brought the city to its knees and killed nearly 3,000 people. dead.

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