A bombshell lawsuit out of Manhattan accuses Rudy Giuliani of forcing a former employee to submit to sex acts as a condition of her employment — including making her give him oral sex while he took calls from then-President Donald Trump on speaker phone. "He often demanded oral sex while he took phone calls on speaker phone from high-profile friends and clients, including then-President Trump," ex-staffer Noelle Dunphy claims in the 70-page lawsuit filed Monday. "Giuliani told Ms. Dunphy that he enjoyed engaging in this conduct while on the telephone because it made him 'feel like Bill Clinton,'" according to the lawsuit, which seeks $10 million in unpaid wages and damages. Dunphy says she was an emotionally vulnerable domestic violence victim when Giuliani hired her as director of business development for the Giuliani Companies in January, 2019, a job she held for two years. She says Giuliani had sex with her when she was too drunk to consent shortly after he hired her, on an evening when he required she stay over in a private guest suite at his Upper East Side apartment. Giuliani demanded she drink Scotch with him, then barged into her suite as she emerged from the shower, she alleges. "He sat on the bed and pulled down his pants," the lawsuit alleges. The complaint then features a still image from the film "Borat: Subsequent Moviefilm" in which Giuliani can be seen lying on the bed with his hand down the front of his suit pants. The film, the lawsuit says, portrayed "Giuliani acting in a similar manner to how he acted with Ms. Dunphy." He grabbed her and forced her to give him oral sex, she said, during which, "Giuliani also smacked Ms. Dunphy in the face and then told her that the smack was "cute." "Her tasks that weekend included bringing him Scotch on demand and brainstorming ideas for interviews, shows, and Netflix series," the lawsuit alleges. The lawsuit also alleges — buried on page 25 — that Giuliani asked Dunphy for help "selling pardons" for $2 million a pop. Giuliani told her that he and Trump "would split" the fee, the lawsuit alleges. "He also asked Ms. Dunphy is she knew anyone in need of a pardon, telling her that he was selling pardons for $2 million, which he and President Trump would split," the lawsuit says. Dunphy said she continued to work for Giuliani despite being "shocked and saddened by what had happened" because she feared losing the $1 million salary he had promised as well as free legal representation he had also agreed to give her. Giuliani also "often demanded that she work naked, in a bikini, or in short shorts with an American flag on them that he bought for her," the lawsuit alleges. "When they were apart, they would often work remotely via videoconference, and during those conferences Giuliani almost always asked her to remove her clothes on camera," the suit alleges. "He often called from his bed, where he was visibly touching himself under a white sheet." Giuliani frequently required her to perform oral sex on him as a condition of the job, including "while he took phone calls on speak phone from high-profile friends and clients, including then-President Trump," the lawsuit alleges. She believes that some of those individuals were, like Trump, law clients of Giuliani, she alleges. "I think of you as my daughter," Giuliani once told her while engaging in sexual contact with her, the lawsuit alleges. "Is that weird?" Giuliani allegedly added. "She was continually subjected by Giuliani to a hostile work environment, misogynistic, racist, and antisemitic communications, constant sexual attacks, threats when she brought up the salary she was owed, and threats when she finally found the courage to confront him with her fears and the possibility of legal action," the lawsuit alleges. Giuliani ultimately only ever paid her $12,000, claiming that he needed to defer her salary during his divorce from then-wife Judith Giuliani, the lawsuit says. "He claimed that his 'crazy' ex-wife and her lawyers were watching his cashflow, and that his ex-wife would 'attack' and 'retaliate' against any female employee that Giuliani hired," the lawsuit alleged of Judith Giuliani. Dunphy accuses Giuliani of sexual assault, battery, gender discrimination and harassment, fostering a hostile work environment, retaliation, breach of contract, and violations of state labor laws. "This complaint sets forth extremely detailed allegations of outrageous abuses of power by one of the most powerful and connected individuals in the country," Dunphy's lawyer Justin T. Kelton told Insider in a statement. "Ms. Dunphy's lawsuit is about seeking justice and showing, again, that nobody in this country is above the law. We are proud to support Ms. Dunphy in her brave pursuit of this matter." Giuliani, through his spokesman Ted Goodman, "unequivocally" denied the allegations: "Mayor Giuliani's lifetime of public service speaks for itself and he will pursue all available remedies and counterclaims."
A new rape civil lawsuit filed against Donald Trump's former lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, says the pair devised a scheme to make presidential pardons available for purchase for $2 million each.
I said they should have charged him for what happened at the end of Borat 2. All the signs were there.
Rudy Giuliani sued for defamation by supermarket employee he accused of assault The Associated Press May 17, 2023, 6:49 PM NEW YORK (AP) — A man who spent a night in jail for smacking Rudy Giuliani on the back and calling him a “scumbag” is suing him and several New York City police officers for false arrest and defamation. Daniel Gill brought the federal lawsuit in Manhattan court on Wednesday, accusing Giuliani of spinning a tale of political violence from an act of harmless heckling. He says members of the NYPD went along with the deception despite video clearly disproving the account. The lawsuit is the second filed this week against Giuliani. On Monday, a woman who said she previously worked for Giuliani filed a lawsuit in New York accusing him of coercing her into sex and withholding nearly $2 million in unpaid wages. Giuliani “vehemently” denied the allegations through a spokesperson. Giuliani made headlines last June after claiming he was attacked by a supermarket employee in Staten Island during a campaign stop for his son, Andrew, who was running for New York governor. He said an irate man accused him of wanting to kill women, then hit him in the back so hard he felt “like somebody shot me.” Gill, who had no criminal record, was arrested on charges of felony assault. Surveillance video of the incident soon appeared to undercut Giuliani’s story. It showed Gill briskly walking by Giuliani and smacking him lightly on the back with an open palm. Giuliani appeared unfazed by the incident. Body-camera footage obtained by Gill’s attorney also shows Giuliani acknowledging to officers that he didn’t suffer any injuries. He urged them to make an arrest anyway, citing his own experience as the former mayor of New York City. “I need a police car to put him in handcuffs and arrest him and put him in jail, which is what I would’ve done if I was mayor, and that’s why you had no crime when I was mayor, and that’s why we’re one of the most crime-ridden cities in America now,” Giuliani said, while sitting in the back of a campaign van. “The next guy he hits may not be as big and healthy as me, and he may knock him to the ground and kill him,” he continued. Gill spent 21 hours in jail following his arrest. The charges were later downgraded to a misdemeanor, then ultimately dismissed. Ted Goodman, a communications advisor to Giuliani, said the lawsuit should be dismissed because police made their own decision to arrest Gill. “An unbiased observer will see this meritless complaint as absurd—with its extraneous political hyperbole, like in paragraph 22 when the attorney felt it (necessary) to refer to the specific area of Staten Island as a ‘bastion of white conservatism and Trump support,’ ” Goodman said in a statement. An attorney for Gill, Ron Kuby, said his client faced a barrage of death threats following the incident and lost his long-time job at the supermarket. “Giuliani’s capacity for punching down, attacking people who are poor or working class, it’s astonishing,” Kuby said. “He’s just a bully.” The lawsuit demands $2 million in damages. In addition to Giuliani, it names four members of the NYPD and the city of New York. A spokesperson for the NYPD deferred comment to the city’s Law Department, which said it will review the case.
I am sure Rudy can call trump to help, I mean look at all the lying and grifting rudy has done for the old man..................oh wait, trump only sees people as transactional and doesn't have any real friends. Oh rudy......your screwed and it couldn't happen to a nicer man
Giuliani interviewed in Jan. 6 investigation in order to save his own bacon, Rudi may have flipped on Orange hair. he may have entered into a proffer agreement with Jack Smith's team