Giuliani files for bankruptcy protection
Says he owes millions besides damages in case
$148 MILLION
Bankruptcy will not prevent Giuliani from paying damages to the election workers.
Rudy Giuliani filed for bankruptcy Thursday, a day after a federal judge ordered him to start paying the $148 million in damages he owes to two former Georgia election workers for spreading lies that they had tried to steal the 2020 election from Donald Trump.
Giuliani owes millions of dollars in legal fees as well as unpaid state and federal income taxes, according to the filing.
Last week, a jury ordered Giuliani to pay two former Georgia election workers, Ruby Freeman and W Moss, $148 million for baseless accusations he had made about them cheating when they were counting votes in Fulton County, Georgia, on Nov. 3, 2020.
On Wednesday, the judge overseeing the election worker case, Beryl Howell, ordered Giuliani to start paying the two women immediately out of concern that he might “conceal his assets” if he were allowed to wait the typical 30 days.
“The filing should be a surprise to no one,” Giuliani’s political adviser, Ted Goodman, said in a statement. “No person could have reasonably believed that Mayor Rudy Giuliani would be able to pay such a high punitive amount.”
The filing seeking protection from creditors under Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code, he said, “will afford Mayor Giuliani the opportunity and time to pursue an appeal, while providing transparency for his finances under the supervision of the bankruptcy court, to ensure all creditors are treated equally and fairly throughout the process.”
In total, Giuliani said in the filing, he owes creditors $152.7 million as well as other potential damages he faces in pending lawsuits.
Giuliani owed more than $700,000 in back federal taxes and almost $300,000 in delinquent state taxes.
His bankruptcy filing said he also owed about $1.3 million to a law firm that has represented him in various criminal investigations in recent years. He owes an additional $387,000 to a firm that has shepherded him through disbarment proceedings in New York and Washington stemming from his efforts to keep Trump in power.
The bankruptcy filing was the latest in a long line of woes that Giuliani, a former crusading federal prosecutor and mayor of New York, has suffered in the three years since he took the job as the lead lawyer in Trump’s attempts to reverse his loss.
His legal work for the former president has led to a lawsuit filed against him by Dominion Voting Systems for outlandish claims that the company helped to rig the presidential race against Trump. Giuliani has also been indicted in Georgia in a racketeering case with the former president on charges of tampering with that state’s election.
The bankruptcy filing also cited Giuliani’s involvement as a defendant in suits brought by Hunter Biden, President Biden’s son, and Smartmatic, another voting technology company that became ensnared in conspiracy theories related to Trump’s loss.
Giuliani refused to turn over details about his finances in the defamation case brought by Freeman and Moss. Thursday’s bankruptcy filing was the clearest look yet at the extent of his often murky financial troubles.
Bankruptcy will not prevent Giuliani from paying damages to Freeman and Moss, because those damages are considered an “intentional tort,” lawyers said.
In October, the IRS placed a lien on Giuliani’s property in Palm Beach, Florida, for his failure to pay more than $500,000 in income taxes. Giuliani and his ex-wife tried to sell it for $3.3 million in 2019 but did not find a buyer, The Palm Beach Daily News reported at the time.
Giuliani is also trying to sell his Upper East Side apartment in New York for $6.1 million.
Giuliani made millions of dollars a year in private law practice after he left public office. His divorce from his third wife exposed the couple’s once-lavish lifestyle with a $230,000a-month spending habit, six houses, and 11 country club memberships.