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Rudy Giuliani must give control of luxury items and Manhattan apartment to Georgia election workers he defamed, judge rules

Ouch. How many more cultists will ruin their lives for Trump during the 2024 MAGA election steal attempt?

Rudy Giuliani must give control of luxury items and Manhattan apartment to Georgia election workers he defamed, judge rules

A federal judge on Tuesday ordered former Donald Trump attorney and New York mayor Rudy Giuliani to turn over all his valuable possessions and his Manhattan penthouse apartment to the control of Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the Georgia election workers he defamed and to whom he now owes $150 million.

Judge Lewis Liman of the federal court in Manhattan said Giuliani must turn over his interest in the property to the women in seven days, to a receivership they will control. The judge’s turnover order of the luxury items is swift and simple, but the penthouse apartment will have its control transferred so Freeman and Moss can sell it, potentially for millions of dollars.

The women, who counted Georgia ballots after the 2020 election, will also be entitled to about $2 million in legal fees Giuliani has said the Trump campaign still owes him, the judge ruled.

In addition to the Trump campaign fees and the New York apartment, Giuliani must also turn over a collection of several watches, including ones given to him by European presidents after the September 11, 2001, attacks; a signed Joe DiMaggio jersey and other sports memorabilia; and a 1980 Mercedes once owned by the Hollywood star Lauren Bacall. Additionally, the judge ordered that Giuliani turn over his television, items of furniture, his television and jewelry.

Fisher waiting on a call

"If it's the right situation and the right thing, yeah, probably so to say it 100 percent. But I know myself, and I'm still young enough to feel good and in great shape," he said. " I also think sitting back a year, getting perspective on some things, catch your breath, it's been good. Yeah, I probably do."

For now, Fisher is doing just fine, splitting time at a ranch outside College Station, Texas, and at his home in Tallahassee, Florida. He's traveling the countryside, hunting big game and watching his stepson play football on Friday nights.
As his mentor, Bobby Bowden, once told him: if he's wanted, somebody will eventually tap him on the shoulder.

CBS
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