U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Sean Lane ruled last week that Giuliani
should be kicked out of bankruptcy over his failure to make
required financial disclosures, but the decision did not
immediately take effect.
Giuliani, Donald Trump's former lawyer, still owes bankruptcy
expenses of about $350,000 to creditors who were forced to hire
investigative accountants to fill gaps in his financial reports.
Lane said during a Wednesday court hearing in White Plains, New
York, that he was "at a loss" about what to do next, given
Giuliani's ongoing lack of cooperation with the bankruptcy
court.
Lane suggested he might keep Giuliani in bankruptcy while the
court investigates ways to make him pay the creditor fees, or
force the former mayor to fly back to New York to testify about
his available cash.
"There are a lot of things that your client doesn't want to
happen, that can happen," Lane told Giuliani's attorneys.
Lane ordered Giuliani to present a plan for paying the creditor
fees within 24 hours.
Giuliani, 80, sought bankruptcy protection in December after a
Washington, D.C., court ordered him to pay $148 million to two
Georgia election workers whom he falsely accused of rigging
votes in the 2020 presidential election won by Democrat Joe
Biden.
The bankruptcy prevented the former Georgia election workers,
Wandrea "Shaye" Moss and her mother Ruby Freeman, from
collecting on that judgment. It also froze other lawsuits
against Giuliani stemming from his work for Trump, the former
Republican president, seeking to overturn his loss in the 2020
election.
Rachel Strickland, an attorney for Moss and Freeman, said
Wednesday that Giuliani was up to "shenanigans, yet again," and
had continued to spend without authorization from the only bank
account that he had discussed recently with his creditors.
Since last week, Giuliani spent about half of the $60,000 that
was in the account -- $25,000 on maintenance fees for his
Florida condo and on expenses in Milwaukee, where the former New
York City mayor is attending the Republican National Convention,
Strickland said.
When Giuliani's bankruptcy is dismissed, creditors will be able
to resume lawsuits against him, and it also frees Giuliani to
appeal the $148 million defamation judgment.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth; Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and
Cynthia Osterman)
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