Ex-Trump lawyer Giuliani ordered to pay $148 million for defaming poll workers
Washington, United States — A jury ordered Donald Trump’s former lawyer Rudy Giuliani to pay $148 million in damages on Friday for defaming two Georgia poll workers with his false claims they engaged in election fraud.
The eight-person federal jury awarded Ruby Freeman and her daughter Wandrea “Shaye” Moss more than $16 million each for defamation, $20 million each for emotional distress and $75 million in punitive damages.
READ: Giuliani surrenders in Trump election subversion case, $150,000 bond set
The 79-year-old former New York mayor was found liable in August by US District Judge Beryl Howell of defaming the Fulton County poll workers with his 2020 election lies on behalf of former president Trump.
Giuliani, who led Trump’s legal efforts to overturn the results of the election, posted a video of the pair that falsely accused them of engaging in fraud during ballot-counting and made numerous other baseless claims about them.
Speaking to reporters outside the downtown Washington courthouse following the damages award, Moss said the “past few years have been devastating.”
Article continues after this advertisement“The flame that Giuliani lit with those lies and passed to so many others to keep that flame blazing changed every aspect of our lives, our homes, our family, our work, our sense of safety, our mental health,” she said.
Article continues after this advertisementFreeman said she was thankful that the jury held Giuliani “accountable.”
“Today is not the end of the road,” she said. “We still have work to do. Rudy Giuliani was not the only one who spread lies about us and others must be held accountable too.”
But Giuliani denounced the huge damages award as “absurd” and told reporters he would appeal.
“I am quite confident when this case gets before a fair tribunal it’ll be reversed so quickly,” he said as a protestor stood nearby holding a sign reading “Big Lie.”
Giuliani also appeared to double down on his baseless allegations against the 64-year-old Freeman and the 39-year-old Moss.
“I have no doubt that my comments were made and they were supportable and are supportable today,” he said. “I just did not have an opportunity to present the evidence that we offered.”
Giuliani defended his decision not to testify in his own defense, saying it “didn’t seem like it was going to do much to persuade anybody.”
Racist threats
Freeman and Moss, who are Black, told the jury during the four-day trial that the false accusations of election fraud made against them by Giuliani had upended their lives and they were the target of racist threats.
The defamation case is just one of a number of legal challenges facing Giuliani, who has been indicted on racketeering charges in Georgia along with Trump and others for allegedly conspiring to overturn the 2020 election results in the southern state.
READ: Trump, Giuliani accused in lawsuit of conspiring to incite Capitol riot
Giuliani was New York mayor from 1994 to 2001, guiding the city through the shock of the September 11 attacks and becoming known as “America’s Mayor” — before signing up as Trump’s personal lawyer while he was in the White House.
Giuliani’s license to practice law has been suspended in New York and in Washington for “false and misleading statements” he made as part of his efforts to overturn the results of the election won by Joe Biden.
Hunter Biden, Joe Biden’s son, has also filed a lawsuit against Giuliani accusing him of computer fraud for accessing personal data on his computer.
In 2020, in a bid to embarrass Biden ahead of the election, Giuliani and Trump allies circulated data from a laptop that Hunter Biden had abandoned at a computer repair shop in Delaware.