The settlement was signed Thursday afternoon, just hours after the former New York City Mayor had been set to testify.
Former NYC Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has settled a defamation lawsuit brought by two Georgia election workers and will keep his homes.
Rudy Giuliani will keep his apartments and his World Series rings in exchange for unspecified "compensation" to two election workers and a promise not to further defame them.
A judge on Monday found Rudy Giuliani to be in civil contempt of court in a case brought by two Georgia election workers that the former New York City mayor falsely accused of trying to help steal the 2020 U.S. presidential election for Democrat Joe Biden.
Lawyers for two former election workers defamed by the onetime Trump lawyer are trying to seize his assets to help satisfy their $146 million judgment against him.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has reached a settlement agreement with two Georgia election workers, allowing him to keep many of his assets and properties in exchange for him never again engaging in the defamation that led to a judgment against him nearly two years ago.
The trial, heard without a jury, was supposed to begin Thursday morning at a federal court in Manhattan to decide whether Giuliani must surrender the assets to two former Georgia election workers who won the judgment against him.
Avishag Shaar-Yashuv for the New York Times Tel AvivDemonstrators on Saturday night, hours before the cease-fire and hostage deal was scheduled to take effect. TikTok Ban TikTok Starts Going Dark ...
At least three people were killed in the assault on the capital, and at least one died and 11 were wounded in a separate strike in the southern city of ... Rojas for The New York Times.
Rudy Giuliani reached a deal Thursday that lets the cash-strapped ex-New York City mayor keep his homes and belongings, including prized World Series rings, in
There’s a bit of a mystery surrounding who may have offered the financial backing for Rudy Giuliani to settle with a pair of 2020 election workers from Georgia that he repeatedly defamed. Under the agreement,