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Rudy Giuliani’s son pleads in federal court not to take his father’s Yankees World Series rings

Rudy Giuliani’s son pleads in federal court not to take his father’s Yankees World Series rings

Last December, Rudy Giuliani was ordered to pay the Georgia election officials he defamed the astronomical sum of $148 million, money he certainly doesn’t have. But he definitely a few money, as well as assets worth a lot of money, like, say, his four Yankees World Series rings, which his son is desperately trying to keep out of the hands of workers trying to collect what they’re owed.

THE New York Post reports that Andre Giuliani argued in court documents filed this week that the rings — which date from 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000 — were gifts from her father and should not be given to Ruby Freeman And Shaye Moss, who won their case against Rudy last year and said the former mayor had to “sign over certain assets” to them, like the rings. In the younger Giuliani’s filing, his lawyers wrote that “an order requiring transfer of these rings to plaintiffs would permanently deprive Andrew of his ownership therein.”

Andrew claimed his father told him in May 2018: “I told you when I got them that they would be yours one day, and I want to give them to you now.” The son added that “as a child and young adult, I had spent many nights with my father watching Yankees games and bonding over our love for the team, and I was delighted to receive the rings…. My understanding then and now is that these four World Series rings were a gift from my father and have belonged to me since May 26, 2018.”

Like the Job Note, Freeman and Moss also attempt to take possession of some of Rudy’s properties, luxury watches and a Mercedes-Benz. Last May, a bankruptcy court judge effectively labeled the ex-mayor a deadbeat after learning that he had apparently made no effort to pay Freeman and Moss the money owed. “They didn’t do anything. They didn’t sell anything. They haven’t fixed anything.” Rachel Strickland, a lawyer representing election workers said of Rudy’s team, accusing the former mayor of being voluntarily fired from his radio job. “I agree with you,” US bankruptcy judge Sean Lane responded, according to Politico. “And I am disturbed by the state of this case.” According to ABC News, the former mayor is appealing the $148 million judgment in federal court.

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