A judge approved a deal to dismiss Rudy Giuliani’s bankruptcy on Friday, which will bring an end to a case that has for months frustrated his creditors and, at times, even the judge.
The dismissal of Giuliani’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy will mean his creditors can soon begin to go after his assets to recover some of the money they’re owed. That includes Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, two Georgia election workers whom Giuliani defamed over the 2020 election and to whom he owes nearly $150 million in a civil judgment.
A former lawyer for Donald Trump, Giuliani filed for bankruptcy in December 2023 after being handed the verdict in Freeman and Moss’ defamation case. His seeking bankruptcy protections meant that the Georgia women could not begin to collect on the judgment, and it froze proceedings in the other civil lawsuits against him (he has denied any wrongdoing in those cases).
But the disgraced lawyer’s bankruptcy bogged down in what his creditors characterized as his stonewalling and lack of cooperation. Giuliani’s lawyers eventually requested that his bankruptcy be converted to Chapter 7 so that his assets could be liquidated, then later proposed the case be dismissed entirely.








