When we last checked in with Rudy Giuliani, things weren’t looking so hot for Donald Trump’s former personal attorney. Aside from having gone from “America’s mayor” to “what the hell happened to that guy”—which is a big aside!—Giuliani was facing a whole bunch of very serious legal issues including but not limited to: his apartment and office being raided as part of a criminal investigation into his Ukraine dealings; a Justice Department probe of his work involving Turkey; a defamation lawsuit from Dominion Voting Systems over his 2020 election lies; and the temporary suspension of his license to practice law. And as it turns out, things haven’t gotten much better for the former mayor of New York City, unless being forced to crowdfund his legal defense—and raising just 0.1918% of his goal—can somehow be construed as “better.”
Yes, weeks after his buddy Bernie Kerik asked people to spare whatever they could for Giuliani‘s legal bills, the “Rudy Giuliani Legal Defense Fund” has raised a mere $9,590, or less than 0.2% of the $5 million goal. (It’s not clear if the RGLDF is a separate entity the “Rudy Giuilani Freedom Fund” that Kerik helped create.) Kerik, the former NYC police commissioner, knows a little something about legal woes, having pleaded guilty in 2010 to tax fraud and other charges, before being pardoned, of course, by Donald Trump. You may also recall Kerik from other hits like reportedly conducting an affair at an apartment near Ground Zero that had been reserved for 9/11 rescue workers. On the fundraising page, the organizers encourage whatever kind of person identifies as a Giuliani groupie to pony up as much cash as they can to defend the former president’s former attorney, explaining “The swamp is revolting by placing a bull’s eye on the backs of every Trump loyalist. That puts Rudy at the top of their list. Rudy’s fate will determine if America still is a Republic governed by We The People!” Sadly for Rudy, that pitch has apparently mostly fallen on deaf ears.
What are Trump’s thoughts on the precarious financial situation that Giuliani finds himself in? According to a new tell-all from author Michael Wolff, very little! Per the Independent:
To be fair, Giuliani probably should have seen this coming, given that Trump is famously known for stiffing his contractors, from dishwashers to painters to architects, and when confronted about it saying things like, “Maybe he didn’t do a good job and I was unsatisfied with his work.”
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Alabama representative offers familiar legal argument re why he can’t be sued for helping incite January 6 riot
Like Donald Trump, Congressman Mo Brooks thinks he should escape responsibility for his part in encouraging the insurrection because he’s an employee of the government and that somehow makes it okay. Per The Washington Post:
In their filing, Brooks’s attorneys claimed that the congressman was fulfilling his job as an elected official by spewing lies and dangerous rhetoric. “Brooks represented the interests of his constituency when Brooks challenged the Electoral College vote submittals of states whose election processes were less than reliable in the judgment of Brooks,” the filing reads. “It makes no difference whether Brooks was right or wrong.”
West Virginia governor tells anti-vaxxers to stop being so stupid
Harsh but fair! Per the New York Post:
On Wednesday, Justice will announce the winners of the third round of the “Do it for Babydog” lottery, the Post noted, which is apparently named after the governor’s English bulldog for some reason. (Are there large swaths of people who will get a vaccine not for their themselves or their friends and families but for a semi-famous dog? We’ll find out!) Prizes include $1 million cash, college scholarships, hunting licenses, weekend getaways, fishing licenses, and, this being West Virginia, rifles and shotguns.
Mitt Romney bids his car elevator adieu
Good night sweet prince. Per The Salt Lake Tribune:
The car-elevator plans were probably one of the less controversial aspects of Romney’s 2012 bid for office, the more contentious matters being the binders full of women; his claim that 47% of Americans are poor slobs; and, of course, his decision to strap the family dog to the roof of his car for a 12-hour drive.
Elsewhere!
Biden announces door-to-door outreach, outlines other strategies to boost vaccinations (Washington Post)
What’s keeping democracy experts up most at night? An overturned election (NBC News)
Pentagon cancels $10 billion JEDI contract challenged by Amazon (Washington Post)
Jeff Bezos Hits Wealth Record of $211 Billion on Pentagon Move (Bloomberg)
JPMorgan, Goldman Call Time on Work-From-Home. Their Rivals Are Ready to Pounce (WSJ)
Japan Enlists Cutesy Mascot to Sell its Low-Yielding Bonds (Bloomberg)
J.D. Vance says he regrets since-deleted tweets criticizing Trump (Politico)
The FBI seized a LEGO set of the US Capitol building from a January 6 riot suspect (Insider)
Big cats, bears, ferrets get COVID-19 vaccine at Oakland Zoo (AP)
— Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s Decades-Long Relationship With Leslie Wexner
— Trump’s Deranged Replacement Theory Might’ve Lost Him the Election
— Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk Want to Burn Their Cash in Space
— Three Texans Bust Myths About the Alamo’s Famous “Last Stand”
— The Guy Who Could Send Trump to Prison May Soon Cooperate With the Feds
— Bill and Melinda Gates’s Epic Divorce Saga Enters Its Next Phase
— Juneteenth, Critical Race Theory, and the Winding Road Toward Reckoning
— Trump Is Now Urging People Not to Vaccinate Their Kids Against COVID
— From the Archive: Microsoft’s Odd Couple, in the Words of Paul Allen
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