Guno צְבִי
We fight, We win
- A New York federal bankruptcy judge dismissed the Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection case of Rudy Giuliani, exposing the former Trump lawyer to his creditors seeking repayments of his massive debts in other court venues.
- Those creditors include two Georgia election workers to whom Giuliani owes $148 million in civil damages for defamation when he sought to overturn the loss of then-President Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election.
- Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane gave a scathing description of Giuliani’s conduct in the case when he issued the ruling.
The bankruptcy case’s dismissal comes 10 days after the state of New York disbarred Giuliani for his widespread lies about voter fraud leading to Trump’s defeat in 2020 to President Joe Biden. Giuliani, a former top federal prosecution in New York and senior Department of Justice official, is criminally charged in state courts in Georgia and Arizona with felonies related to his efforts to unto Trump’s defeat.
In his ruling dismissing the bankruptcy case, Judge Sean Lane wrote that he “finds that dismissal of this bankruptcy case with a one year bar to refiling is in the best interests of creditors.”