Plea Deal Reports ‘Particularly Devastating’ for Giuliani: Ex-Prosecutor

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Former New York City mayor and Donald Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani may be in particular peril if reports that he will not be offered a plea deal in the Georgia election interference case are accurate, according to a legal expert.

Former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Harry Litman was reacting to a report from The Guardian that neither Giuliani, Trump, or former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows will be offered a plea deal after being charged in Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ investigation into alleged criminal attempts to overturn the 2020 election results, and instead will be made to go to trial.

The trio were indicted along with 16 others in the sprawling RICO case, four of whom—former Trump lawyers Jenna Ellis, Sidney Powell, and Kenneth Chesebro, and bail bondsman Scott Hall—have since taken a plea deal and agreed to testify against the other defendants. The reports, which could still change, that Trump, Giuliani and Meadows will not be offered plea deals suggest that Willis’ office sees the three men as the biggest targets in their investigation and that the flipping of other indicted defendants for their testimony is to achieve the primary goal of prosecuting them.

Trump, Meadows, Giuliani and the remaining 12 defendants have pleaded not guilty to all the charges against them in the Georgia investigation, with Willis proposing a trial date of August 2024 for all the defendants who have not taken a plea deal.

Rudy Giuliani, speaks to reporters after being booked at the Fulton County Jail on August 23, 2023. Giuliani will reportedly not be offered a plea deal in the Georgia election inference case.
CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP/Getty Images

In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Litman said that if plea deal reports in Fulton County are accurate, they would be “particularly devastating” for Giuliani given his financial difficulties and the case against him.

“He’s broke and now will have no leverage to plead out except for a tiny break for acceptance of responsibility,” Litman wrote. “So he’ll need to spend $ he doesn’t have for a conviction he likely can’t escape.”

Newsweek reached out to Giuliani’s spokesperson via social media and Fani Willis’s office via email for comments.

Giuliani’s financial woes have seen his former lawyer, Robert Costello, suing him over claims the former mayor owes him more than $1.35 million in unpaid legal fees. Giuliani is said to owe nearly $550,000 in unpaid taxes from 2021.

He is also being sued by Noelle Dunphy, a former employee who alleges Giuliani sexually abused her and owes her $2 million in back wages. Giuliani denies the allegations.

His spokesperson, Ted Goodman, previously said Giuliani has no intention of taking a plea deal if offered one in the Georgia case.

“The only deal the mayor is making is to tell the truth and unfortunately, every single prosecutor in this case is a partisan Democrat focused on their own partisan political ambitions and keeping President Donald Trump out of the White House,” Goodman said.

Goodman, in similar rhetoric to Trump, the front-runner in the 2024 GOP presidential primary, also said the case in Georgia is a politically motivated effort to “keep President Trump out of the White House and to take down the people around him.”

In a statement to The Guardian, Trump’s lawyer, Steve Sadow, said the former president has no interest in negotiating a plea deal with Georgia prosecutors.

“Any comment by the Fulton County district attorney’s office offering ‘deals’ to President Trump is laughable because we wouldn’t accept anything except dismissal and maybe negotiate the terms of that office’s apology to President Trump and the American people,” Sadow said.