The
committee of the D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility found
that Giuliani, formerly Trump's personal lawyer, a top Manhattan
federal prosecutor and mayor of New York City, violated two
legal ethics rules with the “frivolous” lawsuit filed in federal
court in Pennsylvania.
The lawsuit, which a federal judge dismissed, sought to
invalidate hundreds of thousands of votes following Trump’s
defeat in the swing state. The D.C. panel found that Giuliani
made sweeping claims of voter fraud that he did not have
evidence to support.
The committee said Giuliani’s conduct "transcends all his past
accomplishments" and was “calculated to undermine the basic
premise of our democratic form of government: that elections are
determined by the voters.”
Giuliani was dubbed "America's mayor" following the Sept. 11,
2001, attack on New York's World Trade Center.
“We are obviously disappointed with the committee’s
recommendation but look forward to filing a vigorous appeal to
the Board on Professional Responsibility and the court," said
Giuliani lawyer Barry Kamins.
The committee’s recommendation will now be considered by the
full D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility, which oversees
attorney discipline cases in Washington, D.C. The D.C. Court of
Appeals will make the final decision on whether Giuliani should
be disbarred.
The committee heard several days of testimony in December about
Giuliani’s work on post-election challenges as part of an
attorney ethics case brought by the disciplinary arm of the D.C.
bar.
Giuliani's lawyer previously argued that the Pennsylvania
lawsuit raised legitimate legal issues about social distancing
restrictions imposed on election observers and policies in some
counties that allowed voters to address mistakes on mail
ballots.
Trump put Giuliani in charge of the legal strategy to challenge
the results of the 2020 election won by Democrat Joe Biden. He
was one several lawyers allied with the Republican president who
pressed debunked claims of rampant election fraud.
(Reporting by Andrew Goudsward; Editing by David Bario and
Leslie Adler)
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