Rudy Giuliani hit with $1.6 million legal fee judgment
Rudy Giuliani, once hailed as America's Mayor, now faces a staggering $1.6 million bill for unpaid legal fees tied to his efforts challenging the 2020 election results. This latest blow adds to an already bruising series of setbacks for the former New York City leader.
According to the Washington Examiner, Judge Arthur Engoron ruled on Tuesday that Giuliani must pay $1.36 million in legal fees to Robert Costello, a lawyer from Davidoff Hutcher & Citron LLP, plus interest that pushes the total to about $1.6 million. The judge also ordered Giuliani to cover additional costs Costello’s firm incurred while pursuing this lawsuit over unpaid bills.
Giuliani argued he never received invoices for the legal work, but Engoron dismissed that claim with a firm hand. It's a ruling that cuts deep, especially for someone who has long positioned himself as a defender of justice, now on the receiving end of its gavel.
Defending Trump, Paying the Price
Costello’s firm represented Giuliani in over 10 lawsuits across state and federal courts, as well as in disciplinary proceedings concerning his law license in Washington, D.C. These cases largely stemmed from Giuliani’s vocal and legal challenges to President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss.
The legal bill totaled $1,574,196.10, but Giuliani paid a mere $214,000, leaving a gaping hole that Costello sought to fill through this lawsuit. One has to wonder if the cost of loyalty to a cause, however passionately held, was worth this financial reckoning.
Ted Goodman, Giuliani’s spokesman, didn’t mince words, slamming the decision as a partisan jab. He declared, “The idea that Judge Arthur Engoron is permitted to sit on a case involving President Donald Trump’s good friend and former personal lawyer, Mayor Rudy Giuliani, flies in the face of justice.” Goodman’s pledge to appeal signals this fight is far from over, though the odds seem stacked against a reversal.
A String of Legal and Personal Woes
Beyond this hefty fee judgment, Giuliani’s post-2020 actions have landed him in a quagmire of consequences. He was disbarred in New York for repeatedly making false statements about the election, a stain on a career once defined by grit and resolve.
Then came a $148 million defamation lawsuit loss to two Georgia election workers he accused of stealing the 2020 vote, a verdict that speaks to the high price of unproven claims. It’s a stark reminder that words, especially in the public square, carry weight far beyond the moment they’re spoken.
These legal battles paint a picture of a man who, in standing by his convictions, has stumbled into a minefield of accountability. While some may see this as lawfare against a Trump ally, others might argue it’s simply the system holding fast to its rules, no matter who stands before it.
Personal Setbacks Compound the Struggle
On top of the courtroom losses, Giuliani suffered severe injuries in a high-speed car crash in New Hampshire this August. The accident left him with a fractured vertebra, an injured left arm and lower leg, plus numerous cuts and bruises.
This physical toll adds a human layer to a story already heavy with legal and financial burdens. It’s hard not to feel a pang of sympathy for someone who, regardless of politics, has endured such a rough patch at this stage of life.
Yet, even as we acknowledge the personal hardship, the question lingers: do these injuries mirror a broader crash in judgment over recent years? The parallel isn’t lost on those watching this saga unfold with a mix of concern and critique.
A Cautionary Tale for Political Warriors
Giuliani’s current predicament serves as a sobering lesson for anyone diving headfirst into the turbulent waters of political loyalty and legal risk. Once a towering figure in the fight against crime in New York, he now battles to preserve his own standing against a tide of consequences.
While his supporters may cry foul over perceived political targeting, the hard truth remains that unpaid bills and unfounded claims have real-world fallout, no matter the intent behind them. It’s a reminder that even the fiercest warriors for a cause can find themselves outflanked by the very systems they once championed.
As this chapter closes with a $1.6 million debt and an appeal on the horizon, Giuliani’s story isn’t just about one man’s fall. It’s a mirror held up to an era of intense division, where the cost of conviction can be as steep as the fight itself, leaving us to ponder what battles are truly worth the price.





