Rudy Giuliani, once lauded as “America’s Mayor” for his leadership after 9/11, is now battling to hold onto his only remaining home: a Palm Beach apartment. The former New York City mayor and 2008 Republican presidential candidate failed to appear at federal court on Thursday that will determine the fate of his Florida home, following a series of legal and financial setbacks.
The hearing was to determine if Giuliani could keep his condo and three personalized Yankees World Series rings.
The New York Times has the latest:
Court has been adjourned until Jan. 21, the day after President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration. No reason has yet been given for Mr. Giuliani’s absence on Thursday.
It was an extraordinary development in a case where Mr. Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City, has already been held in contempt of court for his failure to hand over millions of dollars in assets to settle a nine-figure defamation suit. Two judges have warned Mr. Giuliani that further obstructions could land him in jail.

The judge in the trial, Lewis J. Liman, is expected to rule on whether Mr. Giuliani must surrender his condo in Palm Beach, Fla., which he claims is his primary residence, to pay down a multimillion-dollar judgment. The apartment was valued at $3.5 million.
The case stems from a 2021 defamation suit in which a jury awarded two Georgia election workers, Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Shaye Moss, $148 million for damage to their reputations after Mr. Giuliani claimed, repeatedly and without evidence, that they had manipulated ballots. The women said they faced death threats and had to go into hiding.
A Swift Downfall Amid Legal Battles
Giuliani’s troubles escalated dramatically in December 2023 when a jury ordered him to pay a staggering $148 million to Freeman and Moss. The jury found him liable for defamation after he accused the pair of manipulating votes during the 2020 presidential election, claims he repeated both in court and to reporters. Despite his public insistence that he had no regrets, the verdict left him grappling with an enormous financial burden.
Bankruptcy Dismissal Adds to the Pressure
The strain intensified in August 2024 when Giuliani’s bankruptcy case was dismissed. The dismissal ended the temporary protections that had shielded his assets, clearing the way for Freeman and Moss to pursue their defamation judgment. For months, the former mayor had managed to retain control of his financial holdings amid disputes over administrative costs with his creditors, but the recent decision stripped him of that reprieve.
A High-Stakes Judgment
Freeman and Moss initially sought $43.5 million in damages for the harm caused by Giuliani’s baseless allegations. However, the jury awarded them more than three times that amount, sending a clear message.
The trial to determine the fate of Giuliani’s condo comes at a time when his legal and financial troubles are rapidly converging. The outcome could result in him losing his permanent home, highlighting a stark contrast to his once-powerful image as a national leader and prominent Republican figure.
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I would like to know if it was true that these women were manipulating ballots. So many people were. Was Rudy Giuliani speaking the truth? Whether he was or not, it seems ridiculous to me that he should be treated this way. How dare self-seeking politicians destroy a good man’s life for simply stating what he believed to be true. If it has been proven to not be true, a sincere apology and perhaps a relatively small financial payment ($100,000?) should have been ample. Mr. Giuliani does not deserve these evil machinations.