‘A great patriot’: Trump defends Giuliani after federal agents raid home and office
Federal agents raided Rudy Giuliani’s Manhattan home and office Wednesday, seizing computers and cellphones in a major escalation of the Justice department’s investigation into the business dealings of former president Donald Trump’s personal lawyer.
Giuliani, the 76-year-old former New York City mayor once celebrated for his leadership after 9/11, has been under federal scrutiny for several years over his ties to Ukraine. The dual searches sent the strongest signal yet that he could eventually face federal charges.
Agents searched Giuliani’s Madison Avenue apartment and Park Avenue office, people familiar with the investigation told the Associated Press. The warrants, which required approval from the top levels of the justice department, signify that prosecutors believe they have probable cause that Giuliani committed a federal crime – though they do not guarantee that charges will materialize.
A third search warrant was served on a phone belonging to Washington lawyer Victoria Toensing, a former federal prosecutor and close ally of Giuliani and Trump. Her law firm issued a statement saying she was informed that she is not a target of the investigation.
The full scope of the investigation is unclear, but it at least partly involves Giuliani’s dealings in Ukraine, law enforcement officials have told the AP.
In a statement issued through his lawyer, Giuliani accused federal authorities of a “corrupt double standard”, invoking allegations he’s pushed against prominent Democrats, and said that the justice department was “running rough shod over the constitutional rights of anyone involved in, or legally defending, former President Donald J Trump.”
Trump told Fox Business on Thursday that Giuliani was “the greatest mayor in the history of New York” and “a great patriot”.
“It’s very, very unfair,” he said of what happened Wednesday. “Rudy loves this country so much, it is so terrible when you see things that are going on in our country with the corruption and the problems and then they go after Rudy Giuliani.“
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday on CNN that the White House was given no heads’ up on the fact the raid was coming. The justice department, she said, “is independent now. They’re gonna make their own decisions, take their own actions. That’s how the president wants it.”
A justice department spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The US attorney’s office in Manhattan and the FBI’s New York office declined to comment.
The federal investigation into Giuliani’s Ukraine dealings stalled last year because of a dispute over investigative tactics as Trump unsuccessfully sought a second term. Giuliani subsequently took on a leading role in disputing the election results on the Republican’s behalf.
Many people in Trump’s orbit have been ensnared in previous federal investigations, including special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Russian election interference. Some, like former Gen Michael Flynn, Roger Stone and Paul Manafort, were pardoned. While there were discussions about a pre-emptive pardon for Giuliani, it did not materialize.
Giuliani was central to the thenpresident’s efforts to dig up dirt against Democratic rival Joe Biden and to press Ukraine for an investigation into Biden and his son, Hunter – who himself now faces a criminal tax investigation by the justice department.
Giuliani’s lawyer, Robert Costello, said the warrants involved an allegation that Giuliani failed to register as a foreign agent and that investigative documents mentioned John Solomon, a former columnist and frequent Fox News commentator with close ties to Giuliani, who pushed baseless or unsubstantiated allegations involving Ukraine and Biden during the 2020 election.
Contacted Wednesday, Solomon said it was news to him that the justice department was interested in any communications he had with Giuliani, though he said it was not entirely surprising given the issues raised in the impeachment trial.
“He was someone that tried to pass information to me. I didn’t use most of it,” Solomon said of Giuliani. “If they want to look at that, there’s not going to be anything surprising in it.”
Solomon’s former employer, The Hill newspaper, published a review last year of some of his columns and determined they were lacking in context and missing key disclosures. Solomon previously worked for the Associated Press, departing the news organization in 2006.
The federal Foreign Agents Registration Act requires people who lobby on behalf of a foreign government or entity to register with the Justice Department. The once-obscure law, aimed at improving transparency, has received a burst of attention in recent years, particularly during Mueller’s investigation, which revealed an array of foreign influence operations in the US.
Federal prosecutors in the Manhattan office Giuliani himself once led – springing to prominence in the 1980s with high-profile prosecutions of Mafia figures – had pushed last year for a search warrant for records.
The issue was widely expected to be revisited by the justice department once Attorney General Merrick Garland assumed office, given the need for the department’s upper echelons to sign off on warrants served on lawyers.