Rudy Giuliani lawyers seek to quit defamation claim case over ‘fundamental disagreement’

Rudy Giuliani lawyers seek to quit defamation claim case over ‘fundamental disagreement’


Rudy Giuliani (C) arrives at the New York court following a judge’s order compelling his appearance in the defamation case filed by Georgia election workers in New York, United States on November 07, 2024. 

Lokman Vural Elibol | Anadolu | Getty Images

Lawyers representing Rudy Giuliani in a lawsuit related to a massive defamation judgment against him are seeking to quit the case in New York federal court, citing significant disagreements with the former Trump campaign attorney over how to handle the matter.

The move came a week after the case’s judge threatened to hold him in contempt of court if he failed to surrender personal property to satisfy some of the $146 million judgment in favor of two Georgia election workers he defamed after the 2020 election while representing current President-elect Donald Trump.

Giuliani’s lawyer Kenneth Caruso in filing Wednesday night wrote that he and co-counsel David Labkowski had three grounds for seeking to withdraw from the case in U.S. District Court in Manhattan.

Those grounds included “the client insists upon taking action with which the lawyer has a fundamental disagreement,” and “the client insists upon presenting a claim or defense that is not warranted under existing law.”

Read more CNBC politics coverage

This third ground cited in the filing was “the client fails to cooperate in the representation or otherwise renders the representation unreasonably difficult for the lawyer to carry out employment effectively.”

Four paragraphs of the motion are blacked out in the publicly available copy of the document.

Caruso earlier had asked Judge Lewis Liman to keep the entire motion sealed, citing the need to avoid disclosing confidential information or material that is “likely to be embarrassing or detrimental to the client if disclosed.”

Liman rejected a full sealing but allowed Caruso to file a public copy that redacted paragraphs that contained confidential information related to his legal work for Giuliani, a former New York City mayor and top federal prosecutor.

Giuliani’s spokesman Ted Goodman, in a statement to CNBC, said, “Mayor Giuliani has not been informed by Mr. Caruso of this action.”

“Surely Mr. Caruso would talk to the mayor, or at the very least inform him of such a decision,” Goodman said.

Giuliani represented Trump in the heels of the 2020 election, when the then-president was seeking to reverse his loss to President Joe Biden.

Giuliani during that time falsely claimed that Ruby Freeman and Wandrea Moss committed ballot fraud at a Georgia vote-counting site. The women, who are mother and daughter, later sued Giuliani, alleging defamation.

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., in August 2023 issued a default judgment against Giuliani in the case after he repeatedly failed to comply with orders requiring him to turn over evidence to the women’s attorneys.

A trial jury in December awarded the women $146 million in damages from Giuliani for defaming them.

The women’s lawyer has complained that Giuliani has stonewalled his efforts to obtain an array of personal items that Giuliani has been ordered to surrender to satisfy at least a fraction of the judgment.

Those items include luxury watches, baseball memorabilia and a 1980 Mercedes-Benz.



Source

Trump vows to target ‘woke’ museums with same playbook used on Columbia, Harvard
Politics

Trump vows to target ‘woke’ museums with same playbook used on Columbia, Harvard

The Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History is seen from the Washington Monument on June 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. Kevin Carter | Getty Images President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he has ordered his lawyers to snuff out what he calls “woke” content at museums by copying the playbook his administration is using […]

Read More
Chinese national living in U.S. gets 8 years in prison for smuggling weapons, tech to North Korea
Politics

Chinese national living in U.S. gets 8 years in prison for smuggling weapons, tech to North Korea

Photos of a gun and parts of military electronics that were found on Shenghua Wen’s phone, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Courtesy: U.S. Department of Justice A Chinese national living in the U.S. was sentenced to eight years in prison for conspiring to illegally smuggle guns, ammunition and sensitive U.S. technology to North […]

Read More
Trump expands 50% steel and aluminum tariffs to include 407 additional product types
Politics

Trump expands 50% steel and aluminum tariffs to include 407 additional product types

U.S. President Donald Trump walks with North American Flat-Rolled Segment Senior Vice President and Chief Manufacturing Officer Scott Buckiso, Plant manager of Irvin and Fairless Plant Donald German and Mon Valley Works United Steel Corporation Vice President Kurt Barshick, as he visits U.S. Steel Corporation–Irvin Works in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, U.S., May 30, 2025. Leah […]

Read More