New York Daily News

A SLAP FOR SLAPPING GIULIANI

Rap vs. supermarke­t employee reduced to misdemeano­r

- BY BRITTANY KRIEGSTEIN, DENIS SLATTERY AND ROCCO PARASCANDO­LA With Michael Gartland

Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani says the slap he received from a pro-choice supermarke­t worker shows New York City has turned into the “Wild, Wild West” — but the charges against his assailant were downgraded Monday, with the suspect’s lawyer describing the “assault” as a mere tap on the back.

“He hit me to knock me down,” the 78-year-old Giuliani said of suspect Daniel Gill. “If that doesn’t merit jail time in New York, we’re in the Wild, Wild West.”

Giuliani stressed that he could have fallen and died, adding that an elderly uncle died from a fall.

“I got hit on the back as if a boulder hit me,” Giuliani claimed. “It hurt tremendous­ly. I did not know what it was. I had no idea what it was. And all of a sudden I heard someone yell something at me, dirty curse words and some more dirty curse words as he retreated, ran away. Then he turned around and said I was a woman-killer.”

But Daniel Gill’s lawyer Susan Platis told a judge in Staten Island Criminal Court the slap “appears to be a tap on the back” and that the only threat came afterward when someone with Giuliani followed Gill, poked him in the chest and threatened him.

Gill, who at 39 is half Giuliani’s age, was initially charged by police with felony assault because the victim is older than 65.

But the Staten Island district attorney’s office decided instead on misdemeano­r assault plus two other misdemeano­rs, for menacing and harassment.

The former mayor was campaignin­g with his son, Andrew, a Republican candidate for governor, when he used the bathroom in a ShopRite in Charleston, S.I., on Sunday. That’s when Gill struck the elder Giuliani across the back and allegedly said, “What’s up, s--mbag?”

Gill told Giuliani his pro-life stance kills women, an apparent reference to the Supreme Court decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

“He kept cursing, he wouldn’t stop,” Giuliani said. “He kept menacing and threatenin­g me. So I said let’s get him arrested, let’s make an example out of him because this is going on too much all around the country.”

Assistant District Attorney Darren Albanese said Giuliani complained of “substantia­l pain” in his back, “took a step forward losing his balance” and might need to see a doctor.

Albanese wondered in court if Gill “would use the good judgment required to return to court when told to do so” given that the incident occurred in front of many witnesses.

But Gill’s lawyer noted Gill has no prior arrests and argued he should not be subject even to supervised release.

The video of the encounter, she said, “is actually not helpful to the prosecutio­n.”

“I think it actually shows a tap on the back, which is not criminal conduct,” Platis said in court. “There’s no intent here to harm anyone. [Giuliani] may have been surprised and stunned being touched in the back ... but he’s a public figure, Your Honor. Being spoken to and things being said to him should be of no surprise and should be anticipate­d.”

Judge Gerianne Abriano released Gill without bail but issued an order of protection prohibitin­g him from going near the former Manhattan U.S. attorney.

Gill may also now be without a job, with Tom Mannix, the brother of the ShopRite’s owner, saying Gill has been suspended, pending terminatio­n.

Outside the ground-floor Staten Island apartment where he lives alone, Gill said he had been advised not to talk with the media.

Pressed, he said he has a degree in communicat­ion, used to work in radio and now considers himself “the face of this economy.”

“I have a college degree,” he said, “and I’m working a minimum wage job.”

Earlier, in a virtual news conference, Giuliani talked tough.

“I don’t care for me,” he said. “I can take care of myself. This little punk isn’t going to hurt me. The Mafia threatened me twice . ... He did it for a specific reason — because I’m pro-life. I gotta get hit because I’m pro-life?”

Giuliani served as former President Donald Trump’s personal attorney and has featured prominentl­y in the ongoing hearings in the House of Representa­tives about the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol. The former mayor has been suspended from practicing law in New York for promoting false conspiracy theories that the 2020 presidenti­al election was stolen from Trump.

While describing the grocery store kerfuffle, Giuliani also railed against Mayor Adams.

“We have an epidemic of crime in this city, when people are dying and he’s partying,” Giuliani said of the current mayor. “I’ll tell you I was in the basement of Gracie Mansion until 4 in the morning. Right now, your record is worse than de Blasio . ... How can you go to the parties when your people are dying? And by the way, the majority of them are Black people. I cared a lot more about them than you do with all your bull — I saved their lives.”

Adams fired back through a spokesman. “Rudy Giuliani is a national embarrassm­ent who supported a former president that allowed gun violence to explode exponentia­lly over the course of his four years in office,” Adams spokesman Fabien Levy said.

“Adams has made public safety his top priority, and that is why we have seen shootings go down for 10 weeks straight, with shootings down 30% in both April and May compared to the previous year.”

 ?? ?? Rudy Giuliani (main and l. at Staten Island supermarke­t Sunday) says slap shows city has turned into the “Wild, Wild West.”
Rudy Giuliani (main and l. at Staten Island supermarke­t Sunday) says slap shows city has turned into the “Wild, Wild West.”

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