Rudy Giuliani has been a lawyer a long time, 55 years to be exact. That’s longer than many readers of this column have been alive. And he took pains to highlight his long career in front of Judge Beryl Howell. Howell was evaluating whether the former New York City mayor had defamed Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss by falsely claiming after the 2020 election that they had committed election fraud. After Giuliani failed to comply with lawsuit subpoenas, Howell ruled that his wild claims were simply false. “Giuliani has submitted declarations with concessions turned slippery on scrutiny and excuses designed to shroud the insufficiency of his discovery compliance,” Howell wrote in a 57-page opinion Wednesday.
Now Giuliani has been held in default, meaning his liability for defaming the Georgia election workers is settled. His fate is sealed.
Now Giuliani has been held in default, meaning his liability for defaming the Georgia election workers is legally settled. His fate is sealed. The only question now is how much he will have to pay. A jury will determine how much Freeman and Moss were harmed and what damages are appropriate.
But this was Giuliani’s case to lose. Famously, defamation cases are hard for plaintiffs to win, and purposefully so. Since the New York Times v. Sullivan in 1964, the Supreme Court has set a high bar for plaintiffs in libel cases because the First Amendment requires “breathing space” to citizens and the press. False statements are not always defamatory. For false statements about famous and powerful people, there must be “actual malice,” meaning the speaker knows that they are false or makes them with “reckless disregard” for the truth. Freeman and Moss are not powerful folks, and for them the legal path is easier.
As we all know, Freeman and Moss’ ballot counting became grist for a mill of lies and a mob that followed. They were accused of election fraud, falsely as Giuliani himself now admits. Racial slurs and threats of lynchings and hangings poured in. Strangers turned up at their homes, and they were forced into hiding. Moss’ teenage son was also targeted by threats and racist messages and started failing in school. Trevian Kutti, a publicist for hip-hop artist and Trump supporter Kanye West, claimed that Freeman would be arrested and sought to pressure her into confessing to election fraud. Of course, Freeman had nothing to confess.
Giuliani’s lies helped sow chaos and fear, which brings us back to defamation. Each state has laws protecting citizens from lies, but the burden of proof for defamation plaintiffs is so high that only a tiny percentage of defamation cases succeed. This case is different for two big reasons. First, according to court papers filed in July, Giuliani did not contest that his statements about Freeman and Moss were false. But, he argued, Freeman and Moss had suffered no damage as a result of those statements. (Ted Goodman, a Giuliani spokesman, claimed in a statement that Giuliani “did not contest it in order to move on to the portion of the case that will permit a motion to dismiss.” Obviously that motion to dismiss did not succeed.)








