'End of Mr. Giuliani' if jury awards millions in damages to election
workers, lawyer says
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[December 12, 2023]
By Andrew Goudsward
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A lawyer for two Georgia election workers accused
Rudy Giuliani on Monday of "destroying" his clients' reputations by
falsely accusing them of working to rig the 2020 U.S. presidential
election against Donald Trump.
A jury heard opening arguments in a civil defamation trial focused only
on how much Giuliani will have to pay the two workers, Wandrea “Shaye”
Moss, a voter registration officer, and her mother Ruby Freeman, who was
a temporary worker for the election. A federal judge has already
determined that the former New York mayor and Trump lawyer is liable for
defamation.
Lawyers for Moss and Freeman said they would ask the jury to award tens
of millions of dollars in damages at the close of the trial.
If the jury awards Freeman and Moss what they are seeking, his lawyer,
Joseph Sibley said, it "will be the end of Mr. Giuliani."
Moss and Freeman accused Giuliani of orchestrating a “sustained smear
campaign” by falsely accusing them of election fraud as Giuliani
searched for evidence to bolster Trump’s effort to overturn his election
loss to Democrat Joe Biden. The pair are expected to testify at the
trial, which is due to conclude this week.
Von DuBose, a lawyer for the two women, told jurors in his opening
statement that Giuliani and other Trump allies "stole the lives of Ms.
Freeman and Ms. Moss by destroying their names."
DuBose played a sampling of recorded messages Freeman and Moss received
in the wake of the election that were filled with racist and sexist
slurs and accusations the pair had committed "treason."
Giuliani, who sat in the courtroom during opening arguments, also may
take the witness stand. Sibley, Giuliani's lawyer, conceded that
Giuliani "did something wrong" but said the attacks on Freeman and Moss
"involved a lot of people."
"You’re going to see a lot of evidence of harm, but not much evidence
that Mr. Giuliani was the cause," Sibley told the jury in his opening
statement.
According to court documents, Giuliani referenced surveillance footage
that he falsely claimed showed the workers hiding “suitcases” full of
illegal ballots under tables at a vote processing center in Atlanta, and
counting ballots multiple times.
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Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani arrives to deliver remarks
on the September 11 attacks during a news conference in New York,
U.S., September 9, 2022. REUTERS/Amr Alfiky/File Photo
He accused them of surreptitiously passing around a USB drive. The
purported computer drive was actually a ginger mint, the two later
said.
A state investigation found the two were properly and legally
counting votes. Moss and Freeman, who are Black, alleged they were
subjected to a torrent of racist abuse and violent threats.
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, who is overseeing the case, has
already found Moss and Freeman are entitled to damages on their
claims of defamation, infliction of emotional distress and
conspiracy.
The judge ruled in August that Giuliani had made it difficult for
them to prove their case at trial by failing to turn over evidence
as required.
The jury’s verdict could worsen financial problems for Giuliani, who
has faced a series of legal and professional woes for his work for
Trump after the election.
Giuliani was indicted in August in a sweeping racketeering case in
Georgia against Trump and several of his allies, in part for his
alleged targeting of Freeman and Moss. Giuliani has pleaded not
guilty.
Reuters first reported the details of the ordeal Moss and Freeman
endured in December 2021, when they described threats of lynching
and racial slurs, along with alarming visits by strangers to their
homes.
Moss and Freeman settled defamation claims with the far-right One
America News Network for an undisclosed sum last year.
(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward; Editing by Andy Sullivan, Daniel
Wallis and Lisa Shumaker)
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