Rudolph Giuliani in bankruptcy after being ordered to pay 148

Rudolph Giuliani in bankruptcy after being ordered to pay 148 million in compensation

A few days ago, the former mayor of New York was ordered to pay 148 million in compensation to two former election auditors whom he had accused of fraud as Donald Trump's lawyer

Rudolph Giuliani files for bankruptcy. A few days ago, the former mayor of New York was ordered to pay 148 million in compensation for defaming two former election workers from Atlanta, whom Donald Trump's then-lawyer had accused of voter fraud in the Georgia elections won by Joe Biden in 2020.

The enormous sum adds to a long list of debts for the former iron-fisted prosecutor, who is no longer able to pay the legal costs in the numerous cases brought against him for his role in pursuing the unfounded allegations of electoral fraud were following Trump's defeat in 2020. In the bankruptcy declaration filed today in a federal court in Manhattan, Giuliani listed $500 million in debts against $10 million in assets.

In recent months, the Republican had put his New York home up for sale for $6.5 million. And it also emerged that he had unsuccessfully tried to get financial help from Trump to pay his lawyers, who are suing him for unpaid fees.