Rudy Giuliani expected to testify in defamation trial after two days of gut-wrenching testimony from election workers
Rudy Giuliani says he intends to testify Thursday in his defamation damages trial in an attempt to push back on claims that he should pay two Georgia election workers millions of dollars in damages for spreading conspiracy theories about them after the 2020 election.
“I intend to. You always leave them guessing, right?” the former Donald Trump attorney told reporters outside the courthouse Wednesday after the trial recessed for the day.
Giuliani’s testimony will come after the two workers – Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Shaye Moss – provided gut-wrenching testimony over the course of two days about how the lies spread by him damaged their reputations and upended their lives.
Freeman and Moss are asking an eight-person jury in Washington, DC, to order Giuliani to pay them millions of dollars in damages for the emotional and reputational harm they say they’ve suffered.
The case has refocused attention on the human impact of disinformation spread by Trump and his allies after the 2020 election as the former president awaits his own criminal trial in the same courthouse.
Giuliani has already been found liable for defamation and owes Freeman and Moss over $230,000 after failing to respond to parts of their lawsuit.
Giuliani, a former federal prosecutor, does not plan to call any other witnesses as part of his defense.
In emotional testimony Wednesday, Freeman described the flood of threats she received after Giuliani disseminated lies about her and her daughter. At one point, her attorney had her review for the jury some of the racist messages she received following the 2020 election.
“Hope they lock you up and throw away the key, you disgusting B*tch traitor,” one of the messages read.
“I received so many on my phone that at one time my phone crashed and just died,” Freeman testified.
She appeared visibly shaken as the various messages were shown. She read aloud from some of them, at times appearing to hold back tears.
“Pack your s–t. They are coming for you. I’m not far behind. I’m coming for you also. Trash will be taken to the street in bags,” another read.
“I took it as though they were going to cut me up and put me into trash bags and take it out to my street,” Freeman said.
A day earlier, Moss similarly walked the jury through how her life has changed after Giuliani began attacking the two women.
“It feels like I’m trapped under someone else’s boot of power,” she testified Tuesday. “I can’t do anything, I feel helpless, and the only thing that’s surrounding me is the lies.”
While Giuliani conceded in July that he did make defamatory statements about Moss and Freeman, he attempted to argue that his statements did not cause any damage to the two women and that his comments about voter fraud in Georgia in the 2020 election were protected speech.
During opening statements on Monday, his attorney Joseph Sibley acknowledged that some harm was done to Freeman and Moss and that the jury would be awarding damages against his client. But he argued that the amount sought by the plaintiffs far exceeded what Giuliani should have to pay them as a result of his conduct.
Sibley said at one point that what the plaintiffs are asking for in damages is “the civil equivalent of the death penalty.”
“They’re trying to end Mr. Giuliani,” he told the jury.
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