Matter of Giuliani (2021-00506) PC
Matter of Giuliani (2021-00506) PC
Matter of Giuliani (2021-00506) PC
In the Matter of
RUDOLPH W. GIULIANI
(ADMITTED AS RUDOLPH WILLIAM GIULIANI),
an attorney and counselor-at law:
RUDOLPH W. GIULIANI,
(OCA ATTY. REGISTRATION NO. 1080498),
Respondent.
Disciplinary proceedings instituted by the Attorney Grievance Committee for the First
Judicial Department. Respondent was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York at a
Term of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court for the Second Judicial
Department on June 25, 1969.
Appearances:
Barry Kamins, Esq. and John Leventhal, Esq., Aidala, Bertuna & Kamins, P.C.,
for respondent.
Motion No. 2021-00491 - May 3, 2021
PER CURIAM
Judiciary Law §90(2) and the Rules for Attorney Disciplinary Matters (22 NYCRR)
§1240.9(a)(5), immediately suspending respondent from the practice of law based upon
claimed violations of rules 3.3(a); 4.1; 8.4(c) and 8.4(h) of the Rules of Professional
Conduct (22 NYCRR 1200.0) (Rules of Conduct or RPC). Respondent was admitted to
practice as an attorney and counselor at law in the State of New York on June 25, 1969,
under the name Rudolph William Giuliani. He maintains a law office within the First
Judicial Department.
For the reasons that follow, we conclude that there is uncontroverted evidence
lawmakers and the public at large in his capacity as lawyer for former President Donald
J. Trump and the Trump campaign in connection with Trump’s failed effort at reelection
in 2020. These false statements were made to improperly bolster respondent’s narrative
that due to widespread voter fraud, victory in the 2020 United States presidential
election was stolen from his client. We conclude that respondent’s conduct immediately
threatens the public interest and warrants interim suspension from the practice of law,
pending further proceedings before the Attorney Grievance Committee (sometimes AGC
or Committee).
2
The Nature of this Proceeding
suspension from the practice law in the State of New York. Under certain circumstances,
such serious interim relief is available, pending a full formal disciplinary proceeding.
Interim suspension is available even where formal charges have not yet been filed (22
NYCRR 1240.9[a]).
All attorneys who are licensed to practice law in New York are subject to the
Rules of Conduct, which establish a framework for the ethical practice of the law and a
lawyer’s duties as an officer of the legal system (Preamble to the Rules of Professional
Conduct, ¶¶ 1, 8). Violation of these rules may lead to professional discipline (22 NYCRR
1240). The ultimate purpose of any disciplinary proceeding, however, is not to impose
punishment for breaches of the Rules of Conduct, but rather "to protect the public in its
reliance upon the integrity and responsibility of the legal profession" (Matter of
Nearing, 16 AD2d 516, 518 [1st Dept 1962]; see Matter of Gould, 4 AD2d 174 [1st Dept
1957]).
Each Judicial Department of the Appellate Divisions of the New York Supreme
Court is responsible for the enforcement of the Rules of Professional Conduct within its
either upon receipt of a written complaint, or acting sua sponte, are charged with
directing the attorney under investigation to submit written responses or appear for a
formal interview, and other actions necessary to investigate the complaint (22 NYCRR
1240.7). Once the investigation is complete, the Committee may commence a formal
3
proceeding in which the attorney has the right to be heard. If the Committee concludes
that the attorney may face public discipline, then, consistent with the objective of
“protect[ing] the public, maintain[ing] the integrity and honor of the profession, or
deter[ing] others from committing similar misconduct,” the matter is brought before the
Appellate Division (22 NYCRR 1240.7[d][2][v]; see also 1240.8; Matter of Nearing, 16
AD2d at 518). The Court is tasked with the responsibility of reviewing the record and
deciding whether there has been any misconduct and if so, what the appropriate
In certain cases, the Committee may, during the pendency of its investigation,
make a motion to the Court for an attorney’s interim suspension. Interim suspension is
protect the public from the respondent’s violation of the Rules (22 NYCRR 1240.9; see
Matter of Liebowitz, 2020 WL 7421390 [SD NY 2020]). At bar, the AGC is proceeding
NYCRR 1240.9[a][5]; Matter of Aris, 162 AD3d 75, 81 [1st Dept 2018]; Matter of
Pomerantz, 158 AD3d 26, 28 [1st Dept 2018]).1 Importantly, when an attorney is
4
ballots were then counted in the election. This factual statement regarding the number
of ballots mailed out before the election was simply untrue. The true facts are that 3.08
million absentee ballots were mailed out before the general election, which more than
accounted for the over 2.5 million mail-in ballots that were actually tallied.
Notwithstanding the true facts, respondent repeatedly advanced false statements that
there were 600,000 to 700,000 fabricated mail-in ballots, which were never sent to
voters in advance of the election.5 Respondent made these false claims during his
November 8, 2020 radio program, Uncovering the Truth with Rudy Giuliani & Dr.
Maria Ryan, during a November 25, 2020 meeting of the Republican State Senate
meeting of the Michigan House Oversight Committee, during his December 17, 2020
broadcast of the radio show Chat with the Mayor, and he repeated it during an episode
of Steve Bannon's the War Room: Pandemic podcast on December 24, 2020.
Respondent does not deny that his factual statement, that only 1.8 million mail-in
ballots were requested, was untrue. His defense is that he did not make this
member of his “team” who “inadvertently” took the information from the Pennsylvania
website, which had the information mistakenly listed (Giuliani affidavit ¶49). There is
simply no proof to support this explanation. For instance, there is no affidavit from this
supposed team member who is not identified by name or otherwise, nor is there any
copy of the web page that purportedly listed the allegedly incorrect data. In fact, the only
5These numbers roughly correlate to mail-in ballots received, less the false amount of
mail-in ballots respondent claims were sent out, as adjusted for the overall percentage of
mail-in votes that were cast for Biden.
10
guest and host), podcasts, television appearances and one court appearance.
Respondent concedes that the statements attributed to him in this motion were all made
in the context of his representation of Donald J. Trump and/or the Trump campaign
Preliminary Issues
Respondent raises an overarching argument that the AGC's investigation into his
conduct violates his First Amendment right of free speech.2 He does not attack the
constitutionality of the particular disciplinary rules; he seemingly claims that they are
to not knowingly misrepresent facts and make false statements in connection with his
greater regulation than speech by others" (Gentile v State Bar of Nevada, 501 US 1030,
1051 [1991]). Unlike lay persons, an attorney is "a professional trained in the art of
persuasion" (Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Assn., 436 US 447, 465 [1978]). As officers of the
court, attorneys are "an intimate and trusted and essential part of the machinery of
justice" (Gentile v State Bar of Nevada, 501 US at 1072 [internal quotation marks
knowledge, and therefore, "a crucial source of information and opinion" (Gentile v State
Bar of Nevada, 501 US at 1056 [internal quotations marks omitted]). This weighty
to protect the public in its reliance upon the integrity and responsibility of the legal
6
Pennsylvania formally cancelled Mr. Frazier’s eligibility to vote on February 8, 2012,
respondent fails to provide a scintilla of evidence for any of the varying and wildly
during the 2020 presidential election. Although respondent assured the public that he
was investigating this claim, respondent has not provided this tribunal with any report
or the results of any investigation which supports his statements about how many dead
claims his statements were justified because the state of Pennsylvania subsequently
agreed to purge 21,000 dead voters from its rolls in 2021. This fact, even if true, is
beside the point. This statistic concerns the whole state. Purging voter rolls does not
prove that the purged voters actually voted in 2020 and per force it does not prove they
voted in Philadelphia. It does not even prove that they were dead in November 2020.
Moreover, the number of statewide purged voters (21,000) bears no correlation to the
(either 8,000 or 30,000). Clearly any statewide purging of voters from the voting rolls
in 2021 could not have provided a basis for statements made by respondent in 2020,
because the information did not exist. Regarding Mr. Frazier, respondent claims he
reasonably relied on the reporting of a “blogger.” The blog article provided on this
motion, however, never claims that Mr. Frazier voted in the 2020 election. Nor could it,
15
Witness). Merely providing names and conclusory assertions that respondent had a
basis for what he said, does not raise any disputed issue about whether misconduct has
occurred.
show, Chat with the Mayor, at least on January 5, January 7, and January 22, 2021. He
then repeated this statement on the April 27th episode of his radio show, after this
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent stated to lawmakers, and the public at large, that more than 2,500
Georgia felons voted illegally. The Georgia Secretary of State also investigated this claim.
with the list of people who actually voted in November 2020, the Secretary of State
identified a universe of 74 potential felony voters, who were then investigated. Even if all
74 identified persons actually voted illegally, the number is nowhere near the 2,500 that
respondent claimed and the number would, in any event, be statically irrelevant in
supporting a claim that the election was stolen (see Bognet v Secretary Commonwealth
of Pa., 980 F3d 336, 351 [3d Cir 2020], cert granted, judgment vacated sub nom
Bognet v Degraffenreid ---US---, 2021 WL 1520777, 2021 US LEXIS 1952 [2021] [for
the plaintiff to have standing, challenged votes must be sufficient in number to change
outcome]; Sibley v Alexander, 916 F Supp 2d 58, 62 [DC 2013] [the plaintiff failed to
satisfy redressability element where the three challenged electoral votes would not
19
change outcome of election]).10 Respondent’s statements that there were 2,500 voting
felons is false.
Respondent claims to have relied on the unproduced affidavit of Mr. Geels for
this information as well. Respondent states that Mr. Geels opined that “there could have
been” more than 2,500 incarcerated felons who voted (Giuliani affidavit ¶62). This
conclusory, rendering it insufficient for the same reasons as is Mr. Geels' reported
On January 5, 2021, during a War Room podcast respondent stated that at least
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent stated that dead people voted in Georgia during the 2020
presidential election. He claimed that he had the names of 800 dead people who voted
based upon the number of people who had passed away in 2020. Respondent further
stated that this number was really in the thousands. At another point he claimed that
6,000 dead people had voted. This claim was refuted by the Georgia Secretary of State.
After reviewing public records, the Secretary of State concluded that potentially two
votes may have been improperly cast in the name of dead voters in the 2020 election
and those instances were being investigated. Respondent's claim of thousands of dead
voters is false. So is respondent’s claim of 800 dead voters. The two potentially dead
voters discovered by the Secretary of State during its investigation is not statistically
10On December 1, 2020, former Attorney General William Barr stated that the
Department of Justice had uncovered nothing indicating massive election fraud and that
there was nothing showing that the outcome of the election would be different.
20
relevant to affect election results and does not support any narrative of fraud.
Respondent does not claim that either of the identified experts he relied upon for
information about the Georgia election made any statement to him whatsoever
regarding the number of dead people in whose names votes were allegedly cast in the
2020 election and he does not provide any other source for the false numerical
On December 22, 2020, during a War Room podcast, respondent stated that
6,000 dead people voted. On January 3, 2021, during an episode of Uncovering the
Truth, respondent stated that 10,515 dead people voted. On January 5, 2021, during a
War Room podcast, respondent stated that 800 or more dead people voted in the
Georgia election. On the April 7, 2021 episode of his radio show Chat with the Mayor,
respondent challenged the Georgia Secretary of State’s finding that only potentially two
votes were cast in the name of dead voters, despite having no evidence to refute the facts
developed after investigation of public records. The April 7th false statement was made
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Georgia election officials engaging in the illegal counting of mail-in ballots. Although
respondent acknowledged that he had viewed the surveillance videos in their entirety
21
2021]) the version of the videos shown to the public was comprised only of snippets.11
The gist of his claim was that illegal ballots were being surreptitiously retrieved from
suitcases hidden under a table and then tabulated. In fact, the entirety of the videos
shows the “disputed” ballots were among those in a room filled with people, including
election monitors, until about 10:00 pm. At about 10:00 p.m., the boxes – not suitcases
– containing the ballots were placed under a table in preparation for the poll watchers to
leave for the evening. Those boxes were reopened and their contents retrieved and
scanned when the state official monitor intervened, instructing the workers that they
should remain to tabulate the votes until 10:30 p.m. that evening. When viewed in full
context and not as snippets, the videos do not show secreting and counting of illegal
ballots. Based upon the claim, however, the Georgia Secretary of State conducted an
investigation. The video tapes were viewed in their entirety by the Secretary’s office, law
enforcement, and fact checkers who, according to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger,
could conclude that there was an illegal counting of the mail-in ballots. If, as respondent
claims, he reviewed the entire video, he could not have reasonably reached a conclusion
that illegal votes were being counted. We disagree that the video can be viewed as
evidence of illegal conduct during the vote tabulation process or that it provided a
22
Respondent showed the snippets of video and/or made false statements
regarding its content on at least the following occasions: the podcast Rudy Giuliani’s
Common Sense on December 4, 2020, the radio show Uncovering the Truth on
December 6, 2020 and then again on the same radio show on December 27, 2020 and
January 3, 2021; on December 3, 2020 at a hearing before the Georgia State Legislature;
and yet again on December 8, 2020 and December 10, 2020 on respondent’s Chat with
the Mayor radio program, and on December 19, 2020, and January 5, 2021 as a guest
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent made false and misleading statements that “illegal aliens” had voted
in Arizona during the 2020 presidential election. These false facts were made by
respondent to perpetuate his overall narrative that the election had been stolen from his
client.
legislators at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Phoenix. It was acknowledged during that
other words, there was no data available from which to draw any conclusion about
same session, that there were “say” five million “illegal aliens” in Arizona and that “[i]t is
beyond credulity that a few hundred thousand didn’t vote . . . .” Undeterred by the lack
of any empirical evidence, in a December 17, 2020 episode of Chat with the Mayor,
respondent queried “Do you think more than 10,000 illegal aliens voted in
Arizona?....We know that way more than 10,000 illegal immigrants voted.” During an
appearance on the War Room podcast on December 24, 2020 respondent once again
23
claimed with respect to the number of undocumented noncitizens who voted in Arizona
that “the bare minimum is 40 or 50,000, the reality is probably about 250,000 . . . .” He
then used these unsubstantiated figures to support a claim that Trump won Arizona by
about 50,000 votes (id.). After the New Year, in another episode of the War Room
podcast, the number of “illegal immigrants” respondent was claiming had voted illegally
changed yet again. This time respondent claimed there were 32,000 of such illegal
votes. Respondent admitted in the podcast that he did not have the “best sources” to
justify this estimate, but stated that he was relying on “newspaper and records” for his
claims (id.). Respondent later either reiterated and/or agreed with statements made by
others, that undocumented noncitizens had voted in Arizona in the 2020 election; he
made these statements during the March 9th, 11th, and April 27, 2021 broadcasts of his
Chat with the Mayor radio show and on April 21, 2021 during an appearance on the
War Room podcast. Respondent made these misstatements most recently after the AGC
On their face, these numerical claims are so wildly divergent and irreconcilable,
that they all cannot be true at the same time. Some of the wild divergences were even
stated by respondent in the very same sentence. Moreover, at the November 30, 2020
hearing, when it was brought to respondent’s attention that no study to support the
conclusions had been done, respondent persisted in making these false factual
statements. In January 2021, respondent even admitted that he did not have the “best
sources” to justify the numbers he was stating as fact. Nonetheless, respondent has
failed to produce any sources, whether “best” or marginal, to support any of the figures
he has presented to the public with authority. He has not identified, let alone produced
24
the “newspaper and records” he claimed were the bases for his assertions when he made
them.
Respondent does not tell us what Senator Townsend actually said to him or when she
said it. We do not have an affidavit or any statement from Senator Townsend. We simply
have none of the information Senator Townsend is claimed to have collected. Saying
that Senator Townsend collected information does not explain any of respondent’s
numbers, let alone why they are wildly divergent. Respondent’s claim, that he also relied
on “other witnesses” who testified that thousands of individuals voted despite any proof
of citizenship, lacks detail and is not specific enough to be considered by this Court as
probative. Not one of those witnesses is identified, none of their testimony is provided,
nor has respondent provided an affidavit from any of them. Respondent cannot rely on
this “evidence” to controvert that he knowingly made false statements to the public
about the number of "illegal aliens" or "illegal immigrants" voting in the Arizona 2020
presidential election.
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c ).
8.4 (h) because his conduct adversely reflects on his fitness as a lawyer.
because the record is insufficiently developed on those claims in this motion for interim
relief. The additional claims may be part of any formal charges that the AGC will
25
Pennsylvania formally cancelled Mr. Frazier’s eligibility to vote on February 8, 2012,
respondent fails to provide a scintilla of evidence for any of the varying and wildly
during the 2020 presidential election. Although respondent assured the public that he
was investigating this claim, respondent has not provided this tribunal with any report
or the results of any investigation which supports his statements about how many dead
claims his statements were justified because the state of Pennsylvania subsequently
agreed to purge 21,000 dead voters from its rolls in 2021. This fact, even if true, is
beside the point. This statistic concerns the whole state. Purging voter rolls does not
prove that the purged voters actually voted in 2020 and per force it does not prove they
voted in Philadelphia. It does not even prove that they were dead in November 2020.
Moreover, the number of statewide purged voters (21,000) bears no correlation to the
(either 8,000 or 30,000). Clearly any statewide purging of voters from the voting rolls
in 2021 could not have provided a basis for statements made by respondent in 2020,
because the information did not exist. Regarding Mr. Frazier, respondent claims he
reasonably relied on the reporting of a “blogger.” The blog article provided on this
motion, however, never claims that Mr. Frazier voted in the 2020 election. Nor could it,
15
because the claims made in the article (in which respondent was quoted) are based upon
Respondent made these false statements at least twice before the AGC brought
this motion; first at a November 7, 2020 press conference at Four Seasons Total
Landscaping and again during the November 25, 2020 meeting of the Republican State
evidence provided in this very motion, that Mr. Frazier is not on the Pennsylvania voting
rolls, respondent continued to endorse this fictionalized account in the March 4, March
11 and March 14, 2021 episodes of his broadcast radio show Chat with the Mayor, all of
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c ).
Respondent repeated to lawmakers and the public at large numerous false and
statements, as particularized below, were all knowingly made with the object of casting
doubt on the accuracy of the vote. Respondent's general claim, without providing this
Court with any documentary support, that he relied on “hundreds of pages of affidavits
not suffice to controvert the specific findings that he knowingly made the false
Systems Inc.'s voting machines manipulating the vote tallies to support his narrative
that votes were incorrectly reported. Georgia, however, had completed a hand count of
8 The blogger's representation regarding what the public record revealed was inaccurate.
16
all ballots cast in the presidential audit.9 The hand audit, which relied exclusively on the
printed text on the ballot-marking device, or bubbled-in the choice of the absentee
ballot, confirmed the results of the election with a zero percent risk limit. Respondent's
statement that the vote count was inaccurate, without referencing the hand audits, was
misleading. By law, this audit was required to take place following the election and be
completed no later than December 31, 2020 (Ga Ann § 21-2-498). Respondent’s
statements were made while the hand audit was proceeding and after it concluded. We
understand that Dominion has sued respondent for defamation in connection with his
claims about their voting machines (Complaint, US Dominion, Inc. v Giuliani, 1:21-cv-
Consequently, we do not reach the issue of whether respondent’s claims about the
statements about the results of the Georgia election count are false. Respondent
provides no basis in this record for disputing the hand count audit. Respondent made
these statements at least on December 3, 2020 when appearing before the Georgia
radio show Uncovering the Truth, during a December 22, 2020 episode of his radio
show Chat with the Mayor, he alluded to it in a December 27, 2020 episode of
9In this motion, because the AGC only relies on the audit referred to in the Georgia
Secretary of State’s January 6, 2021 letter to Congress, we only consider this one audit.
Georgia’s election results were, however, actually audited three times, and no evidence
of widespread fraud was discovered (Daniel Funke, Fact check: No evidence of fraud in
Georgia election results (June 1, 2021),
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2021/06/01/fact-check-georgia-
audit-hasnt-found-30-000-fake-ballots/5253184001/ [last accessed June 12, 2021]).
17
Uncovering the Truth, and then again during a January 5, 2021 episode of the War
Room podcast.
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
voters illegally voted in the Georgia 2020 election. The Georgia Office of the Secretary of
State undertook an investigation of this claim. It compared the list of all of the people
who voted in Georgia to their full birthdays. The audit revealed that there were zero (0)
underage voters in the 2020 election. While a small number of voters (four) had
requested a ballot prior to turning 18, they all turned 18 by the time the election was
held in November 2020. Respondent does not expressly deny the truth of this
including one by Bryan Geels, in believing the facts he stated were true. None of these
affidavits were provided to the Court. Respondent claims that Mr. Geels opined that
there were “more than 65,000 individuals who voted had registered to vote prior to
their 17th birthday” (Giuliani affidavit ¶62). At a bare minimum, the statement
attributed to Mr. Geels does not support respondent’s claim that the number of
underage teenage voters was 165,000. But respondent’s statement about what was said
reasons. We do not have the affidavit that respondent claims Mr. Geels prepared and he
relied on. We do not know when the affidavit was provided to respondent. We do not
know what data or source information Mr. Geels relied on in reaching his conclusion,
nor do we know what methodology Mr. Geels used for his analysis. Other than
respondent calling him an “expert,” we do not know Mr. Geels' actual area of expertise
or what qualifies him as such (see Guide to NY Evid Rule 7.01, Opinion of Expert
18
Witness). Merely providing names and conclusory assertions that respondent had a
basis for what he said, does not raise any disputed issue about whether misconduct has
occurred.
show, Chat with the Mayor, at least on January 5, January 7, and January 22, 2021. He
then repeated this statement on the April 27th episode of his radio show, after this
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent stated to lawmakers, and the public at large, that more than 2,500
Georgia felons voted illegally. The Georgia Secretary of State also investigated this claim.
with the list of people who actually voted in November 2020, the Secretary of State
identified a universe of 74 potential felony voters, who were then investigated. Even if all
74 identified persons actually voted illegally, the number is nowhere near the 2,500 that
respondent claimed and the number would, in any event, be statically irrelevant in
supporting a claim that the election was stolen (see Bognet v Secretary Commonwealth
of Pa., 980 F3d 336, 351 [3d Cir 2020], cert granted, judgment vacated sub nom
Bognet v Degraffenreid ---US---, 2021 WL 1520777, 2021 US LEXIS 1952 [2021] [for
the plaintiff to have standing, challenged votes must be sufficient in number to change
outcome]; Sibley v Alexander, 916 F Supp 2d 58, 62 [DC 2013] [the plaintiff failed to
satisfy redressability element where the three challenged electoral votes would not
19
change outcome of election]).10 Respondent’s statements that there were 2,500 voting
felons is false.
Respondent claims to have relied on the unproduced affidavit of Mr. Geels for
this information as well. Respondent states that Mr. Geels opined that “there could have
been” more than 2,500 incarcerated felons who voted (Giuliani affidavit ¶62). This
conclusory, rendering it insufficient for the same reasons as is Mr. Geels' reported
On January 5, 2021, during a War Room podcast respondent stated that at least
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent stated that dead people voted in Georgia during the 2020
presidential election. He claimed that he had the names of 800 dead people who voted
based upon the number of people who had passed away in 2020. Respondent further
stated that this number was really in the thousands. At another point he claimed that
6,000 dead people had voted. This claim was refuted by the Georgia Secretary of State.
After reviewing public records, the Secretary of State concluded that potentially two
votes may have been improperly cast in the name of dead voters in the 2020 election
and those instances were being investigated. Respondent's claim of thousands of dead
voters is false. So is respondent’s claim of 800 dead voters. The two potentially dead
voters discovered by the Secretary of State during its investigation is not statistically
10On December 1, 2020, former Attorney General William Barr stated that the
Department of Justice had uncovered nothing indicating massive election fraud and that
there was nothing showing that the outcome of the election would be different.
20
relevant to affect election results and does not support any narrative of fraud.
Respondent does not claim that either of the identified experts he relied upon for
information about the Georgia election made any statement to him whatsoever
regarding the number of dead people in whose names votes were allegedly cast in the
2020 election and he does not provide any other source for the false numerical
On December 22, 2020, during a War Room podcast, respondent stated that
6,000 dead people voted. On January 3, 2021, during an episode of Uncovering the
Truth, respondent stated that 10,515 dead people voted. On January 5, 2021, during a
War Room podcast, respondent stated that 800 or more dead people voted in the
Georgia election. On the April 7, 2021 episode of his radio show Chat with the Mayor,
respondent challenged the Georgia Secretary of State’s finding that only potentially two
votes were cast in the name of dead voters, despite having no evidence to refute the facts
developed after investigation of public records. The April 7th false statement was made
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Georgia election officials engaging in the illegal counting of mail-in ballots. Although
respondent acknowledged that he had viewed the surveillance videos in their entirety
21
2021]) the version of the videos shown to the public was comprised only of snippets.11
The gist of his claim was that illegal ballots were being surreptitiously retrieved from
suitcases hidden under a table and then tabulated. In fact, the entirety of the videos
shows the “disputed” ballots were among those in a room filled with people, including
election monitors, until about 10:00 pm. At about 10:00 p.m., the boxes – not suitcases
– containing the ballots were placed under a table in preparation for the poll watchers to
leave for the evening. Those boxes were reopened and their contents retrieved and
scanned when the state official monitor intervened, instructing the workers that they
should remain to tabulate the votes until 10:30 p.m. that evening. When viewed in full
context and not as snippets, the videos do not show secreting and counting of illegal
ballots. Based upon the claim, however, the Georgia Secretary of State conducted an
investigation. The video tapes were viewed in their entirety by the Secretary’s office, law
enforcement, and fact checkers who, according to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger,
could conclude that there was an illegal counting of the mail-in ballots. If, as respondent
claims, he reviewed the entire video, he could not have reasonably reached a conclusion
that illegal votes were being counted. We disagree that the video can be viewed as
evidence of illegal conduct during the vote tabulation process or that it provided a
22
Respondent showed the snippets of video and/or made false statements
regarding its content on at least the following occasions: the podcast Rudy Giuliani’s
Common Sense on December 4, 2020, the radio show Uncovering the Truth on
December 6, 2020 and then again on the same radio show on December 27, 2020 and
January 3, 2021; on December 3, 2020 at a hearing before the Georgia State Legislature;
and yet again on December 8, 2020 and December 10, 2020 on respondent’s Chat with
the Mayor radio program, and on December 19, 2020, and January 5, 2021 as a guest
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c).
Respondent made false and misleading statements that “illegal aliens” had voted
in Arizona during the 2020 presidential election. These false facts were made by
respondent to perpetuate his overall narrative that the election had been stolen from his
client.
legislators at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Phoenix. It was acknowledged during that
other words, there was no data available from which to draw any conclusion about
same session, that there were “say” five million “illegal aliens” in Arizona and that “[i]t is
beyond credulity that a few hundred thousand didn’t vote . . . .” Undeterred by the lack
of any empirical evidence, in a December 17, 2020 episode of Chat with the Mayor,
respondent queried “Do you think more than 10,000 illegal aliens voted in
Arizona?....We know that way more than 10,000 illegal immigrants voted.” During an
appearance on the War Room podcast on December 24, 2020 respondent once again
23
claimed with respect to the number of undocumented noncitizens who voted in Arizona
that “the bare minimum is 40 or 50,000, the reality is probably about 250,000 . . . .” He
then used these unsubstantiated figures to support a claim that Trump won Arizona by
about 50,000 votes (id.). After the New Year, in another episode of the War Room
podcast, the number of “illegal immigrants” respondent was claiming had voted illegally
changed yet again. This time respondent claimed there were 32,000 of such illegal
votes. Respondent admitted in the podcast that he did not have the “best sources” to
justify this estimate, but stated that he was relying on “newspaper and records” for his
claims (id.). Respondent later either reiterated and/or agreed with statements made by
others, that undocumented noncitizens had voted in Arizona in the 2020 election; he
made these statements during the March 9th, 11th, and April 27, 2021 broadcasts of his
Chat with the Mayor radio show and on April 21, 2021 during an appearance on the
War Room podcast. Respondent made these misstatements most recently after the AGC
On their face, these numerical claims are so wildly divergent and irreconcilable,
that they all cannot be true at the same time. Some of the wild divergences were even
stated by respondent in the very same sentence. Moreover, at the November 30, 2020
hearing, when it was brought to respondent’s attention that no study to support the
conclusions had been done, respondent persisted in making these false factual
statements. In January 2021, respondent even admitted that he did not have the “best
sources” to justify the numbers he was stating as fact. Nonetheless, respondent has
failed to produce any sources, whether “best” or marginal, to support any of the figures
he has presented to the public with authority. He has not identified, let alone produced
24
the “newspaper and records” he claimed were the bases for his assertions when he made
them.
Respondent does not tell us what Senator Townsend actually said to him or when she
said it. We do not have an affidavit or any statement from Senator Townsend. We simply
have none of the information Senator Townsend is claimed to have collected. Saying
that Senator Townsend collected information does not explain any of respondent’s
numbers, let alone why they are wildly divergent. Respondent’s claim, that he also relied
on “other witnesses” who testified that thousands of individuals voted despite any proof
of citizenship, lacks detail and is not specific enough to be considered by this Court as
probative. Not one of those witnesses is identified, none of their testimony is provided,
nor has respondent provided an affidavit from any of them. Respondent cannot rely on
this “evidence” to controvert that he knowingly made false statements to the public
about the number of "illegal aliens" or "illegal immigrants" voting in the Arizona 2020
presidential election.
The above identified misstatements violate RPC 4.1 and RPC 8.4(c ).
8.4 (h) because his conduct adversely reflects on his fitness as a lawyer.
because the record is insufficiently developed on those claims in this motion for interim
relief. The additional claims may be part of any formal charges that the AGC will
25
interpose in the full disciplinary proceeding that will follow this interim suspension. We
find, nonetheless, that the incidents we have identified in this decision satisfy the
Uncontroverted claims of misconduct alone will not provide a basis for interim
interest (22 NYCRR 1240.9[a]). We recognize that this case presents unique
connection with whether an immediate threat of harm to the public has been
established.
means that there is harm to the public (Matter of Nearing, 16 AD2d at 516). One
misconduct is continuing (Matter of Singer, 301 AD2d 336, 337 [1st Dept 2002]). Even
threatening the public can be based on the risk of potential harm when considered in
[1st Dept 2005]). Many cases where the seriousness of the offending conduct alone
satisfies the immediate threat requirement for an interim suspension concern the
mishandling of money (see Matter of Hornstein, 121 AD3d 1 [1st Dept 2014]; Matter of
Jackson, 103 AD3d 10 [1st Dept 2013]; Matter of Schachter, 100 AD3d 45 [1st Dept
2010]; Matter of Tannenbaum at 67). The broader principle to be drawn from these
very serious, the continued risk of immediate harm to the public during the pendency of
26
the underlying disciplinary proceeding is unacceptable. For example, we have ordered
interim suspensions where the offense is serious, although the risk of recurrence is
slight, because the attorney intends to resign from the practice of law (Matter of
Kressner, 72 AD3d 112 [1st Dept 2010]). Another consideration, related to the
adopt this factor in reliance on sister state authority on the same issue (see Tapp v
Ligon, 2013 Ark 259, 428 SW3d 492 [2013] [interim suspension likened to a
based on all the available evidence, that a significant sanction will be imposed on the
Consideration of these factors in this case leads us to conclude that the AGC has
offense is incredibly serious, and the uncontroverted misconduct in itself will likely
proceedings.
has and will continue to exercise personal discipline to forbear from discussing these
matters in public anymore. He also claims that because legal matters following the 2020
election have concluded, he will no longer be making any statements about the election
27
Notwithstanding respondent’s claim that he has exercised self-restraint by not
publicly commenting on the election, there are numerous instances demonstrating the
opposite. Focusing only on the false statements that support our conclusion of
uncontroverted misconduct (and not his statements about 2020 election matters
generally), respondent has made or condoned the following false statements just since
the AGC brought this application for his interim suspension: On his March 4, 2021 radio
show Chat with the Mayor, respondent reprised his claim that Joe Frazier had voted
from the grave. On the March 9th episode of his radio show Chat with the Mayor,
respondent stated in substance that immigrants voted illegally in the 2020 presidential
election. On the March 11th episode of his radio show Chat with the Mayor he again
referred to Joe Frazier and “illegals” voting in Arizona. On the March 14th episode of
Chat with the Mayor, respondent recounted the tale of Joe Frazier voting after he died
and joked with his co-host about the Philadelphia cemeteries emptying on election day.
On his April 8th episode of Chat with the Mayor, respondent disputed the fact that in
Georgia only two dead people had voted, even though, as previously indicated,
respondent had no informational basis for making that statement and disputing the
results of Georgia’s investigation. On the April 27th episode respondent once again
falsely stated that there were 65,000 underage teenage voters who had voted in Georgia.
Respondent also stated that there were 38,000 “illegal immigrants” voting in Arizona,
while at the same time estimating the number at maybe 5,000 or maybe 100,000 (id.).
28
Contrary to respondent’s assertion, there are many ongoing legal matters all over
the United States that arise from the narrative of a stolen election. Respondent himself
points to an ongoing audit of the 2020 ballots presently occurring in Maricopa County,
Arizona (Arizona Public Integrity Alliance v Fontes, 250 Ariz 58, 475 P3d 303 [2020]).
Another audit of the 2020 ballots has just been authorized in Fulton County, Georgia by
Chief Judge Brian Amero of the Henry County Superior Court (see Julia Harte, Judge
allows self-described anti-fraud group to review Georgia ballots [May 21, 2021],
https://www.reuters.com/business/legal/judge-allows-self-described-anti-fraud-group-
government and many state legislators are actively engaged in enacting competing laws
concerning voting in this country (see e.g. The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement
Act [S4263, 116th Cong. [2019-2020]; The Voting Rights Advancement Act [HR 4, 116th
Cong. [2019-2020]; The Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2019 [S561, 116th Cong.
[2019]; For the People Act of 2021 [HR 1, SR 1, 117th Cong. [2021]; Iowa SF 413 [signed
by the Governor of Iowa on March 8, 2021]; Georgia SB 202 [passed by the Georgia
House and Senate on March 25, 2021]; Florida SB 90 [signed by the Governor of Florida
on May 6, 2021], Texas S.B.7 12). Many of the state laws are facing serious court
challenges (see e.g. League of United Latin American Citizens of Iowa v Pate, ---F Supp
3d---, CVCV-061476 [Dist. Ct., Polk County Iowa]; New Georgia Project v
Raffensperger 484 F Supp 3d 1265 [ND Ga 2020], Georgia NAACP v Raffensperger, ---
12As of May 28, 2021, the Brennan Center for Justice reports that more than 14 states
have enacted new laws this year that will restrict voting rights (Voting Laws Roundup:
May 2021, BrennanCenter.org (May 28, 2021), https://www.brennancenter.org/our-
work/research-reports/voting-laws-roundup-May-2021 [last accessed June 2, 2021]).
29
F Supp 3d ---, No. 1:2021-CV-01259 [ND Ga 2021], AME Church v Kemp, ---F Supp 3d -
--, No. 1:2021-CV-01284 [ND Ga 2021], Asian Americans Advancing Justice -Atlanta v
Raffensperger, ---F Supp 3d ---, No. 1:2021-CV-01390 [ND Ga 2021], Concerned Black
Clergy v Raffensperger, ---F Supp 3d---, No. 1:2021-CV-01728 [ND Ga 2021], Coalition
For Good Governance v Raffensperger, ---F Supp 3d---, No. 1:20-CV-01677 [ND Ga
2020], Florida Rising v Lee, ---F Supp 3d---, No. 4:21-CV-00201 [ND Fla 2021]).
The risk that respondent will continue to engage in future misconduct while this
disciplinary proceeding is pending is further borne out by his past, persistent and
pervasive dissemination of these false statements in the media. This is not a situation
where the uncontroverted misconduct consisted of only a few isolated incidents. Rather,
each of the false statements identified and analyzed herein were made multiple times on
multiple platforms, reaching countless members of the public. They continued after this
motion was brought, and despite respondent facing imminent suspension from the
practice of law.
overstated. This country is being torn apart by continued attacks on the legitimacy of the
2020 election and of our current president, Joseph R. Biden.13 The hallmark of our
democracy is predicated on free and fair elections. False statements intended to foment
13E.g. A May 17-19 national poll conducted by Reuters/Ipsos reported that while only
3% of Democrats believe that Trump won the 2020 election, 53% of Republicans so
believe (Reuters, 53% of Republicans view Trump as true U.S. president,
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/53-republicans-view-trump-true-us-president-
reutersipsos-2021-05-24/ [last accessed June 2, 2021])
30
generally damage the proper functioning of a free society. When those false statements
are made by an attorney, it also erodes the public’s confidence in the integrity of
attorneys admitted to our bar and damages the profession’s role as a crucial source of
the entire legal profession and its mandate to act as a trusted and essential part of the
machinery of justice (Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Assn, 436 US at 447). Where, as here,
the false statements are being made by respondent, acting with the authority of being an
attorney, and using his large megaphone, the harm is magnified. One only has to look at
the ongoing present public discord over the 2020 election, which erupted into violence,
insurrection and death on January 6, 2021 at the U.S. Capitol, to understand the extent
of the damage that can be done when the public is misled by false information about the
elections. The AGC contends that respondent’s misconduct directly inflamed tensions
that bubbled over into the events of January 6, 2021 in this nation’s Capitol.
Respondent’s response is that no causal nexus can be shown between his conduct and
those events. We need not decide any issue of “causal nexus” to understand that the
falsehoods themselves cause harm.14 This event only emphasizes the larger point that
thousands of validly cast votes, is corrosive to the public’s trust in our most important
democratic institutions.
14Legal causation is an issue in criminal and civil actions that have arisen in the
aftermath of the January 6, 2021 Capitol riots. We understand that respondent is a
defendant in at least one civil action seeking to hold him responsible for the January 6,
2021 riots (Thompson v Trump, Giuliani, ---F Supp 3d---, 1:21-cv-00400, US District
Court, District of Columbia [Washington], January 25, 2021).
31
Before Judge Brann in the Boockvar case, respondent himself stated: “I don’t
know what’s more serious than being denied your right to vote in a democracy.” We
agree. It is the very reason why espousing false factual information to large segments of
from the practice of law in the State of New York, effective immediately, and until
All concur.
It is Ordered that the motion is granted and respondent is suspended from the
practice of law in the State of New York pursuant to Judiciary Law § 90(2) and 22
NYCRR 1240.9(a) (5), effective the date hereof, until such time as disciplinary matters
pending before the Committee have been concluded, and until further order of this
Court, and
the practice of law in any form, either as principal or agent, clerk or employee of
before any court, judge, justice, board or commission or other public authority; that
advice in relation thereto, all effective the date hereof, until such time as disciplinary
matters pending before the Committee have been concluded and until further order of
32
It is further Ordered that respondent is directed to fully comply with the
attorneys (see 22 NYCRR 1240.15), which are made a part hereof, and
It is further Ordered that, within 20 days of the date of service of this decision,
respondent may submit a request, in writing, to this Court for a post suspension hearing
33