Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.

Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.

Missing boy found by rangers after wandering for 5 days in lion-infested game park

HARARE

An
8-year-old
boy
who
went
missing
from
his
rural
Kariba
home
was
finally
located
safe
by
rangers
after
wandering
alone
for
five
days
in
wildlife
infested
Matusadonha
Game
Park
in
Mashonaland
West.

Tinotenda
Pudu
wandered
away,
lost
direction
and
unknowingly
headed
into
the
perilous
Matusadonha
Game
Park,
according
to
Mashonaland
West
Proportional
Representation
MP,
Mutsa
Murombedzi
who
succinctly
captured
the
horror
in
a
social
media
post
on
her
X
handle.

“A
true
miracle
in
remote
Kasvisva
community,
Nyaminyami
in
rural
Kariba,
a
community
where
one
wrong
turn
could
easily
lead
into
a
game
park.
8-year-old
Tinotenda
Pudu
wandered
away,
lost
direction
and
unknowingly
headed
into
the
perilous
Matusadonha
game
park,”
she
said.

“After
5
long,
harrowing
days
in
the
jungle
near
Hogwe
River,
which
feeds
into
Ume
River,
the
boy
has
been
found
alive
by
the
incredible
rangers
from
Matusadona
Africa
Parks.

“His
ordeal,
wandering
23km
from
home,
sleeping
on
a
rocky
perch,
amidst
roaring
lions,
passing
elephants,
eating
wild
fruits
and
just
the
unforgiving
wild
is
too
much
for
an
8-year-old.”

Eight-year-old
Tinotenda
Pudu
got
lost
and
for
5
days,
he
wandered
alone
in
a
lion-infested
jungle

Added
the
legislator,
“We
are
overwhelmed
with
gratitude
to
the
brave
park
rangers,
the
tireless
Nyaminyami
community
who
beat
night
drums
each
day
to
get
the
boy
hear
sound
and
get
the
direction
back
home
and
everyone
who
joined
the
search.

“Above
all,
we
thank
God
for
watching
over
Tinotenda
and
leading
him
back
home
safely.
This
is
a
testament
to
the
power
of
unity,
hope,
prayer
and
never
giving
up.”

Tonotenda,
according
to
the
MP,
survived
on
eating
a
wild
fruit
called
Nchoomva
in
Tonga.

“It
is
Tsvanzva
like
or
its
actually
the
Tsvanzva.
Then
water
he
would
go
on
the
dry
riverbank
and
use
hands
and
a
stick
to
dig
a
Mukàla
in
Tonga
or
what
we
call
Mufuku
in
Shona
and
drank
water
from
there.”

Tinotenda
was
reportedly
very
frail
when
he
was
rescued
and
had
to
be
put
on
a
drip
to
regain
his
strength.

“On
water
what
saved
him
is
the
technique
learnt
from
a
young
age
in
dry
and
drought
prone
areas
of
drawing
water
from
a
dry
riverbank

digging
a
mufuku,”
Murombedzi
said.

While
in
the
jungle,
Tinotenda
reportedly
heard
a
park
rangers
vehicle
and
tried
to
run
towards
the
sound
but
was
late
only
to
see
vehicle
markings
in
the
off
the
beaten
path
in
the
game
park.

He
then
went
back
to
the
rocky
outcrop
but
luckily
when
the
park
rangers
used
the
same
path
on
their
return,
they
saw
fresh
little
human
footprints
and
scoured
the
area
and
found
him.

“This
was
probably
his
last
chance
of
being
rescued
after
5
days
in
the
wilderness,”
Murombedzi
said.

Capitec Bank Closes Bank Accounts Of ZEP Holders

 

According
to
Ngqabutho
Mabhena,
the
chairperson
of
the
Zimbabwe
Community
in
South
Africa,
the
closure
of
accounts
has
impacted
many
Zimbabweans
living
in
South
Africa,
who
rely
on
these
accounts
for
day-to-day
financial
transactions
and
remittances
to
their
families
in
Zimbabwe.

On
November
28,
2024,
just
as
the
ZEP
was
set
to
expire,
South
African
Home
Affairs
Minister
Leon
Schreiber
announced
that
the
validity
of
the
permits
would
be
extended
for
an
additional
12
months,
until
November
28,
2025.

This
decision
provided
relief
to
thousands
of
Zimbabweans
living
in
South
Africa
under
the
ZEP
status,
allowing
them
more
time
to
adjust
their
status
or
make
alternative
arrangements.

Despite
the
government’s
extension
of
the
ZEP
validity,
the
closure
of
bank
accounts
has
raised
questions
about
the
interpretation
of
the
extension
and
the
treatment
of
Zimbabweans
living
in
South
Africa.

In
his
statement,
Mabhena
called
on
permit
holders
to
take
directive
15
of
2024
to
their
branches
so
they
can
receive
assistance.

False Social Media Claims About Ecobank Heist Recovery Lead To US$13,500 Theft In Chitungwiza

The
Zimbabwe
Republic
Police
(ZRP)
has
dismissed
as
false
the
reports
claiming
that
part
of
the
US$4.4
million
seized
from
security
guards
at
an
Ecobank
branch
by
armed
robbers
on
October
3,
2024,
had
been
recovered.

In
a
statement
issued
this
Wednesday,
January
1,
2025,
ZRP
spokesperson
Commissioner
Paul
Nyathi
clarified
that
the
rumours
circulating
on
social
media
were
baseless.

Commissioner
Nyathi
said
it
is
untrue
that
any
portion
of
the
cash
stolen
in
Bulawayo
was
found
at
a
house
in
Unit
F,
Seke,
Chitungwiza.

Contrary
to
the
claims,
he
revealed
that
after
a
viral
social
media
post
alleging
the
recovery
of
the
loot,
members
of
the
public
broke
into
a
house
in
Chitungwiza
owned
by
a
local
businessman
and
stole
US$13,500
while
the
businessman
was
not
at
home.
Below
is
Commissioner
Nyathi’s
statement:

The
Zimbabwe
Republic
Police
dismisses
viral
social
media
posts
on
the
alleged
discovery
of
part
of
USD
4
million
Bulawayo
bank
robbery
heist
at
a
certain
house
in
Unit
F,
Seke,
Chitungwiza.

The
allegations
are
false
and
should
be
dismissed
with
the
contempt
they
deserve.

The
Zimbabwe
Republic
Police
warns
the
public,
especially
criminal
elements
against
abuse
of
social
media
platforms
to
engage
in
criminal
activities
as
revealed
by
this
incident.

The
Police
has
established
that
after
the
viral
social
media
post,
the
public
forced
entry
into
the
local
businessman’s
house,
damaged
property
and
some
took
away
USD
13
500.00.

The
businessman
runs
a
hardware
in
Harare
Central
Business
District
and
was
away
at
the
time
of
the
incident.

The
public
did
not
find
part
of
the
USD
4
million
heist
as
alleged
on
the
social
media
platforms.

The
public
is
urged
to
be
cautious
and
avoid
being
reactionary
to
false
social
media
messages.

Meanwhile,
the
Zimbabwe
Republic
Police
is
conducting
investigations
into
the
unlawful
entry
and
theft
of
USD
13
500.00.

Commissioner
Nyathi
added
that
more
details
will
be
provided
in
due
course
regarding
the
theft
of
US$13,500.

Zimbabwean Activist Arrested, Tortured Over Mozambique Election Rigging Claims

 


The
Standard
 reported
that
Rusere,
who
was
arrested
in
connection
with
videos
claiming
that
Zimbabweans
voted
in
Mozambique’s
disputed
October
9
elections,
appeared
at
the
Harare
magistrates
court
on
Christmas
Eve.

He
was
remanded
in
custody
by
Harare
Magistrate
Rufaro
Panavanhu
to
December
30
for
a
bail
application.

Rusere
filed
complaints
before
the
magistrate,
claiming
he
was
blindfolded
and
tortured
upon
his
arrest
before
being
driven
to
Harare
at
night
to
appear
in
court.

He
is
being
charged
with
two
counts
of
violating
immigration
laws
and
the
Data
Protection
Act.

Prosecutors
alleged
that
Rusere
was
residing
in
Botswana
without
a
valid
passport
and
is
currently
of
no
fixed
abode.

They
claimed
that
on
December
23,
2024,
Rusere
was
deported
through
the
Plumtree
border
post
after
being
caught
without
a
valid
passport
in
that
country.

Rusere
is
said
to
have
left
Zimbabwe
on
an
unknown
date
without
possessing
a
valid
passport
and
through
an
unidentified
port
of
entry
or
exit.

It
is
further
alleged
that
on
an
unknown
date,
Rusere
originated
and
distributed
video
messages
meant
to
incite
unrest
in
Zimbabwe
and
other
parts
of
the
SADC
region.

Prosecutors
claimed
that
the
videos
alleged
Zimbabweans
were
caught
on
camera
casting
their
votes
in
Mozambique’s
elections
held
on
October
9.

As
a
result,
some
Zimbabweans
reportedly
responded
on
various
social
media
platforms
by
threatening
to
engage
in
violent
activities
in
solidarity
with
the
opposition
in
Mozambique.

Prosecutors
argued
that
Rusere
was
likely
to
commit
more
offences
because
he
is
the
current
chairperson
of
the
Southern
Africa
Lawyers
for
Human
Rights
Commission.

They
contended
that
if
granted
bail,
Rusere
might
make
public
comments
about
the
situation
in
Mozambique
and
Zimbabwe
to
incite
hatred
and
violence
against
member
states.

Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.

Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.

Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.

Rudy Giuliani Finishes 2024 As He Began It … In Deep Shit – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Drew
Angerer/Getty
Images)

Rudy
Giuliani
is
running
through
the
tape
in
2024,
and
so
is
his
badabing-badabang
lawyer
Joe
Cammarata.
Although
only
one
of
them
is
in
the
running
for

ATL’s
2024
Lawyer
Of
The
Year
.
There’s
always
2025,
Joe!

The
pair
are
currently

bumstumbling

through
two
contempt
motions
in
front
of
Judge
Lewis
Liman
in
the
collection
action
brought
by
Ruby
Freeman
and
Shaye
Moss.
One
involves
Rudy’s
failure
to
comply
with
discovery,
for
which
the
plaintiffs
would
like
to
bar
him
presenting
evidence
that
he
lives
in
Florida
and
is
thus
entitled
to
assert
that
state’s
unlimited
homestead
exemption.
(Giuliani
appears
to
have
declared
himself
a
Florida
resident
in
July,
just
before
he
got
himself
booted
out
of
bankruptcy,
allowing
the
plaintiffs
to
resume
collection
efforts.
Convenient!)

The
other
issue
involves
Giuliani’s
refusal
to
comply
with
Judge
Liman’s
turnover
orders,
despite
strong
signals
from
the
court
that
something

very
unpleasant

would
happen
if
he
didn’t.
Rudy
and
his
lawyers
have
essentially
thrown
up
their
hands
in
dumbfounded
astonishment
when
instructed
that
they
needed
to
deliver
not
just
the
car
but
the
title
as
well.
Who
knew
that
handing
over
the
keys
to
the
apartment,
but
not
the
deed
(which
is
still
in
joint
tenancy
with
his
ex-wife,
several
years
after
the
divorce)
would
not
get
him
full
credit?

But
Cammarata,
whose
practice
consists
largely
of
divorce
cases,
has
come
up
with

ONE
WEIRD
TRICK

to
make
all
that
unpleasantness
go
away.

What
if

nothing
counts
because
Freeman
and
Moss
forgot
to
say
the
magic
words
first?

It
appears
that
according
to
the
Court
docket,
Plaintiffs
as
the
Court
appointed
receivers
failed
to
comply
with
CPLR
§
6402,
and
never
filed
an
“Oath”
with
the
Court
as
required
by
CPLR
§
6402
before
entering
their
duties
to
act
as
receivers.
Hence,
the
receivership
has
not
yet
technically
or
legally
begun.
The
New
York
Civil
Practice
Law
and
Rules
applies
to
the
Judgment
being
enforced
herein.
The
Oath
was
required
to
be
signed
by
Plaintiff
Ruby
Freeman
and
Plaintiff
Wandrea’
Moss
as
the
receivers
and
an
oath
must
have
been
administered
by
any
person
authorized
to
take
acknowledgment
of
deeds
by
the
real
property
law
of
New
York
State,
and
then
filed
with
the
Court
before
the
Plaintiffs
undertook
the
duties
as
Receivers.

Checkmate,
libs!


Or

not.

Indeed, NY
CPLR
§
6402

does
require
temporary
receivers
to
take
an
oath.
But
there’s
no
requirement
that
such
an
oath
be
docketed
with
the
court.
In
their

reply
,
Freeman
and
Moss’s
lawyer
Michael
Gottlieb,
a
litigation
partner
at
Willkie
Farr
(along
with
five
other
lawyers),
attached
said

oaths
,
signed
three
days
after
the
court’s
receivership
order,
noting
that
“there
is
no
requirement
that
the
oaths
be
filed—but
even
if
there
were,
now
that
the
oaths
have
been
filed,
any
merit
in
Mr.
Giuliani’s
argument
would
be
moot.”

Gottlieb
et
al
also
documented
Rudy’s
ongoing
shenanigans
regarding
his
sports
memorabilia,

With
respect
to
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt,
Mr.
Giuliani
now
claims
there
“is
no
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
that
I
possess”
and
that
“the
Signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
hanging
in
the
New
York
Cooperative
apartment
at
the
time
the
apartment
was
turned
over.”
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
to
have
suddenly
lost
track
of
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
is
not
credible
for
multiple
independent
reasons.
First,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
former
counsel
represented
to
the
Court
at
the
November
7
Hearing
that
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
located
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
Second,
the
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
was
not
present
at
the
New
York
Apartment
when
counsel
for
PlaintiffsReceivers
visited
on
October
31,
2024,
as
evidenced
by
comparing
the
photo
of
the
real
estate
listing
of
the
room
where
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
jersey
was
hanging
with
the
one
Plaintiffs’
counsel
submitted
from
the
October
visit.
Third,
one
of
Mr.
Giuliani’s
trial
witnesses
and
oldest
friends,
Monsignor
Alan
Placa—who
Mr.
Giuliani
recently
testified
would
be
a
credible
and
trustworthy
witness
testified
under
oath
during
his
recent
deposition
that
he
had
not
traveled
to
New
York
in
seven
years
but
that
he
had
personally
seen
the
framed,
signed
Joe
DiMaggio
shirt
within
the
last
two
years,
and
specifically
“at
the
apartment

actually,
it
was
here
in
Florida”
at
the
Palm
Beach
Condo.
Similarly,
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claim
that
there
“was
no
Reggie
Jackson
picture”
is
belied
by
his
own
Bankruptcy
Schedule,
and
his
former
counsel’s
representation
to
this
Court
that
the
signed
Reggie
Jackson
was
present
at
the
CTS
facility
in
Ronkonkoma.
And
even
if
Mr.
Giuliani’s
claims
about
either
signed
sports
memorabilia
had
any
indicia
of
credibility,
he
fails
to
describe
any
efforts
he
has
made
to
locate
them,
as
he
must
to
avoid
contempt.

Placa
is
a
former
priest
who
retired
under

interesting

circumstances
which
were
always
going
to
make
him
a


problematic
witness
.
In
a

deposition

he
testified
variously
that
he:
was
a
lawyer;
understood
his
role
as
deponent;
kept
calendar
entries
of
Rudy’s
travel
to
Florida;
and
yet
failed
to
produce
them
because
“I
read
through
[the
subpoena]
quickly
and
didn’t
feel
that
I
had
anything
that
was
responsive
at
all.”
He
also
insisted
that
he
had
no
idea
how
a
LinkedIn
profile
showing
him
as
senior
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
to
be,
since
he
never
drew
a
salary
or
went
into
the
office
more
than
a
few
times.
Although
he
did
admit
that
six
FEC
disclosures
in
the
name
of
Alan
Placa,
VP
at
Giuliani
Partners
came
from
him.

Rudy’s

deposition

went
similarly
swimmingly.
Asked
why
he
failed
to
renew
his
drivers
license,
he
said
“I
have
fatwas
issued
against
me
by
the
Ayatollah,
personally.”

He
refused
to
disclose
his
email
address
because:

Ninety-nine
percent
of
it
contains
matters
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
this
case
and
a
lot
of
them
are
privileged.
A
lot
of
them
are
personal
and
it
would
seem
to
me
that
it
constitutes
overbroad
discovery,
prying
into
things

using
this
litigation
for
the
purpose
of
prying
into
things
that
are
frankly
none
of
your
business,
that
have
been
utilized
in
the
past
for
leaking,
for
giving
information
to
other
people,
so
I
don’t
give
my
email
out
generally
anyway.
I
give
it
out
to
people
that
I
believe
will
use
it
for
a
proper
purpose.

Cammarata
instructed
him
not
to
answer,
because
“I
believe
we
have
a
protective
order
with
that
information.”
(Nope.)

Also,
it
does
not
seem
to
have
occurred
to
them
that
discussing
his
testimony
over
lunch
might
waive
the
privilege
to
said
conversation.

“Any
discussions
I
had
during
the
break
with
my
attorney
and
beyond
what
I
said,
which
I
probably
shouldn’t
have
said
at
all,
is
privileged,”
he
shouted,
after
admitting
that
he
had,
indeed,
talked
about
the
deposition
with
his
lawyer.
“But
the
answer
is
I
will
not
answer
questions
about
what
I
talk
to
my
attorney
about.
I
think
I’m
entitled
to
that
privilege
as
an
American
citizen.”

TL,
DR:
Giuliani
is
an

amazing
witness
,
who
will
certainly
have
the
discipline
not
to,
say,

invoke
the
advice
of
counsel
defense
and
waive
privilege

about
why
his
prior
lawyers
ran
for
the
hills.
Or
lie
on
the
stand.
Or
assert
non-existent
privileges
in
defiance
of
the
court’s
prior
order.
Or
shout
at
the
judge.


Freeman
v.
Giuliani
 [Docket
via
Court
Listener]





Liz
Dye
 lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.