{"id":142629,"date":"2023-09-04T01:14:12","date_gmt":"2023-09-04T01:14:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/?p=142629"},"modified":"2023-09-04T01:14:12","modified_gmt":"2023-09-04T01:14:12","slug":"rudy-giuliani-claims-feds-have-spent-millions-trying-to-take-him-down","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/world-news\/rudy-giuliani-claims-feds-have-spent-millions-trying-to-take-him-down\/","title":{"rendered":"Rudy Giuliani claims feds have spent millions trying to take him down"},"content":{"rendered":"
Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani has decried federal prosecutors for engaging in what he called a fishing expedition – by hitting him and Donald Trump with discovery requests in hopes of finding a charge that will stick.<\/p>\n
Aired in an interview Sunday, the assertion comes days after from the former attorney pleaded not guilty to subverting the\u00a02020 election\u00a0in Georgia,\u00a0and after a federal judge handed him a loss in a defamation suit brought by two poll workers.<\/p>\n
Aside from leaving egg on the face of the already embattled Republican, the judgement saw him slapped with a $132,000 bill for legal fees, and was automatically administered after he failed to turn over evidence in the case.<\/p>\n
Moreover, the ruling was delivered by a familiar face in January 6 Judge Beryl Howell, who\u00a0wrote in her 57-page ruling that Giuliani, 79,\u00a0provided only ‘a sliver of the financial documents [that were] required to be produced’.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n
His excuses for withholding them,\u00a0Howell wrote at the time, did not make sense – though on Giuliani on Sunday countered those claims with his own narrative, one that insisted feds have already spent up to $20million trying to take him down.<\/p>\n
Scroll down for video:\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani has decried federal prosecutors for engaging in what he called a fishing expedition – by hitting him and Donald Trump with discovery requests in hopes of finding a charge that will stick<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The assertion comes days after from the former attorney – seem here in his mugshot for racketeering charges – pleaded not guilty to subverting the 2020 election in Georgia, and after a federal judge handed him a loss in a defamation suit brought by two poll workers<\/p>\n ‘So it is punishment by process,’ he said, using an unofficial legal term to describe the supposed strategy of filing federal discovery\u00a0requests to get potentially incriminating evidence they would not otherwise.<\/p>\n He further theorized how the federal governments cases – which come separate from charges he, Trump, and 17 others are facing in Georgia for alleged election tampering – are ‘funded by outside sources.’<\/p>\n ‘For example,’ he said, bringing up the wrapped suit that saw two Fulton poll workers sue Giuliani for accusing them of manipulating ballots,\u00a0‘this case in Atlanta, which is a defamation case, one of the largest Wall Street law firms is representing them.’<\/p>\n ‘They don\u2019t do defamation cases,’ he continued, despite days ago conceding that he had made false statements about the workers.\u00a0<\/p>\n He added: ‘They probably have run about $15million to $20million in legal bills. And they have eight or ten people working on the case.’\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n ‘So, they file a discovery request, without any exaggeration, this high,’ he said, making a motion to suggest that a mammoth amount of evidence had been asked of him.<\/p>\n ‘Maybe ten percent of them are relevant to the case,’ he claimed. ‘The other percent they\u2019re trying to discover are the crimes that maybe I committed… Crimes that Donald Trump may have committed.’<\/p>\n Appearing to egg on any other prospective cases, the Republican – famed for his war against organized crime and the New York mob in the 90s – cheekily added: ‘Good luck!’<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The ruling was delivered by a familiar face in January 6 District Judge Beryl Howell, who wrote in her 57-page ruling that Giuliani, 79, provided only ‘a sliver of the financial documents [that were] required to be produced’<\/p>\n <\/p>\n His excuses for withholding them, Howell wrote at the time, did not make sense – though on Giuliani on Sunday countered those claims with his own narrative, one that insisted feds have already spent up to $20million trying to take him down<\/p>\n Meanwhile, Giuliani is facing\u00a0 13 felony counts including racketeering for allegedly pressuring officials to meddle in the election before his buddy Trump’s loss to Joe Biden.<\/p>\n \u00a0faced the humiliation of having his mugshot taken after getting booked at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta earlier this month.<\/p>\n In the images released by the Fulton County Sheriff’s office, Giuliani can be seen looking straight ahead, showing a slight frown with industrial lighting shining on his forehead and a sheriff’s badge on his right.<\/p>\n His mugshot came a day before the man he once represented, former President Donald Trump, turned himself for processing.<\/p>\n Trump himself bemoaned the arrest of his former lawyer online, saying the man accused of false statements, conspiracy, and soliciting officials to violate their oaths was fighting for ‘election integrity.’<\/p>\n ‘The greatest Mayor in the history of New York City was just ARRESTED in Atlanta, Georgia, because he fought for Election Integrity. THE ELECTION WAS RIGGED & STOLLEN. HOW SAD FOR OUR COUNTRY. MAGA!’ Trump wrote.<\/p>\n It was a stunning and symbolic turnaround for the former mob boss prosecutor, who now must fend off election fraud charges.<\/p>\n Giuliani famously used the RICO Act to take down the Mafia in the 1980s during his time as a Manhattan prosecutor. Now, he’s being charged with violating the anti-racketeering RICO Act in an effort to upend the 2020 election results.<\/p>\n He struck a defiant tone during a hectic scrum of Trump supporters, protestors and press following his release on $150,000 bail.<\/p>\n Asked by reporters after he exited the prison whether he regrets attaching his name to former President Trump, Giuliani chuckled and responded: ‘I am very honored to be involved in this case, because this case is a fight for our way of life.’<\/p>\n ‘This indictment is a travesty,’ he continued, calling it ‘an attack on the American people.’<\/p>\n <\/p>\n A defiant Rudy Giuliani spoke to a photographer for DailyMail.com Wednesday, saying he wasn’t surprised by the legal setback in a defamation case against him filed by Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss\u00a0<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The former New York City mayor also denied being intoxicated as he was giving advice to Trump around Election Day 2020 – something Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigators have been probing<\/p>\n He called himself the ‘most prolific prosecutor in American history’ and the most effective mayor ‘ever.’<\/p>\n ‘If they can do this to me, they can do this to you,’ he said defiantly during the scrum in which he was physically jostled around.<\/p>\n A protestor held up a sign calling Giuliani a ‘clown’ as he scurried to his vehicle.<\/p>\n Giuliani, who is facing 13 total charges, joined a flurry of eight other Trump allies who turned themselves into the Georgia prison before the Friday noon deadline last week.<\/p>\n Unlike his 18 co-defendants, though, he was hit with the addition federal suit brought by Fulton County poll workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman, which resulted in him owning up to erroneously accusing them of fixing election results.<\/p>\n Despite this, on Sunday, the former mayor insisted ‘I do not admit anything’ and that he was ‘not contesting’ the claims against him.<\/p>\n ‘We want to move on to the legal aspects of the cases,’ he remarked. ‘I’m not stupid enough to think I’m going to get a fair trial in front of [Judge Beryl] and the District of Columbia.’<\/p>\n ‘I’d have to be not a lawyer to think that,’ he sniped.<\/p>\n