Tag Archives: Rudy

Broke Lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis Prove Trump Will Never Run Out of Marks to Con – The Daily Beast

  1. Broke Lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis Prove Trump Will Never Run Out of Marks to Con The Daily Beast
  2. Rudy Giuliani made desperate appeal to Trump to pay his legal bills in Mar-a-Lago meeting CNN
  3. Rudy Giuliani Can’t Pay His Bills After Hitching His Wagon to Trump’s Failed Election Coup Vanity Fair
  4. Trump indictment: Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani struggling under massive legal bills after defending Trump WABC-TV
  5. A distressed Rudy Giuliani made the hike all the way down to Mar-a-Lago to personally beg Trump to help pay off some of his legal bills, CNN reports Yahoo News

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Rudy Farias’ mother, accused of faking son’s disappearance, returns after going ‘on the run’: ‘She’s a very greedy person’ – New York Post

  1. Rudy Farias’ mother, accused of faking son’s disappearance, returns after going ‘on the run’: ‘She’s a very greedy person’ New York Post
  2. Bizarre case of ‘missing’ Texas teen Rudy Farias takes new twist with latest accusations Fox News
  3. Houston activist: HPD ‘lied’ about Rudy Farias sexual abuse claim Chron
  4. News from July 3 to 9: Rudy Farias case, San Jacinto Co. sheriff accused of corruption, HISD cutting jobs FOX 26 Houston
  5. Houston Man Whose Mom Maintained He Was Missing Since He Was 17 No Longer Wants Contact with Her, Aunt Says Oxygen
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Family of Rudy Farias demands charges, transparency in investigation of fake 8-year disappearance – KPRC Click2Houston

  1. Family of Rudy Farias demands charges, transparency in investigation of fake 8-year disappearance KPRC Click2Houston
  2. Mystery surrounds Rudy Farias, missing Houston teen who wasn’t really missing Yahoo News
  3. Rudy Farias case: Quanell X calls for charges against Rudy’s mother | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  4. Rudy Farias case: Longtime Houston police detective doesn’t think activist Quannel X’s involvement helps investigation KTRK-TV
  5. Teenager reported missing 8 years ago has been at living with mom all along PhilStar Life
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rudy Gobert gets boos, lecture from Malik Beasley after ending Jazz return with garbage time lay-up

Rudy Gobert’s return to Utah as a member of the Minnesota Timberwolves was bound to be emotional, and it was, just not entirely in a good way.

The former Utah Jazz center played his first game as an opponent at the Vivint Arena on Friday, five months after the mega-deal that sent him to the Twin Cities and seemingly started the Jazz’s rebuild in full force. The night had all the trappings of a longtime player return, from the tribute video to the reflections on a nine-season tenure in Salt Lake City.

Gobert opened the game with a dunk, but the controversy came when he closed it with a lay-up.

At that point, the Jazz were up 116-108 with fewer than 10 seconds left. Aggressive defense by Utah ended up leaving Gobert undefended with the ball under the basket. Rather than let time run out on a nice win for Minnesota, Gobert opted to drop in a simple lay-up.

Jazz fans didn’t appreciate the move, nor did Malik Beasley, one the many players traded from the Timberwolves in exchange for Gobert. After time expired, Beasley was seen giving Gobert a talking-to until the pair was separated.

Per Andy Larsen of the Salt Lake Tribune, Beasley criticized Gobert’s lay-up after the game:

“Just disrespectful. It’s one of the unwritten rules of basketball. I told him that.”

Meanwhile, Gobert said he was disappointed the hubbub prevented him from embracing former teammates and coaches, then implied Beasley was looking for attention, via the Tribune’s Eric Walden:

“I’ve been taught to play basketball to the last second. For me, there was never any intent to disrespect anybody. These guys who stepped in front of me, they weren’t going to do anything anyway. So, I didn’t get to shake hands with my guys. It kind of killed my moment a little bit, but it is what it is. Some guys just want attention.”

Gobert finished the game with 22 points on 8-of-11 shooting with 13 rebounds, helping improve the Timberwolves to 13-12 after a disappointing, and alarming, start to his tenure. The Jazz fell to 15-13, their seventh loss in their last 10 games.

Rudy Gobert’s return to Utah had its ups and downs during Friday’s Timberwolve-Jazz game. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)



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Timberwolves’ Rudy Gobert ejected for tripping, tussling with Thunder’s Kenrich Williams

Rudy Gobert got a bit frustrated during Saturday’s Thunder-Timberwolves game. (AP Photo/Andy Clayton-King)

Rudy Gobert’s tenure with the Minnesota Timberwolves is not going according to plan. He might have hit a low point on Saturday.

In the second quarter of the Timberwolves’ game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Saturday, Gobert received a flagrant 2 foul after a run-in with Thunder wing Kenrich Williams.

The kerfuffle began when Gobert tripped over a fallen Williams while jumping for a rebound. Gobert fell to the ground himself, at which point Williams pushed his legs out of the way to get up and run down the court. Gobert responded by clearly sticking his legs out to trip Williams.

Williams reacted as you would expect, and soon a crowd was trying to break up an off-balance shoving match.

The result of the play: an ejection for Gobert and a technical foul for Williams. Williams made one of two free throws, while D’Angelo Russell made a lone free throw for the tech.

Gobert exited the game with six points on 3-of-3 shooting with four rebounds in nine minutes played. He entered Saturday averaging 13.6 points on 64.5% shooting from the field, 11.8 rebounds and 1.4 blocks per game.

The Timberwolves bet big on Gobert this summer, trading four first-round picks, a pick swap and a bevy of players for the three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year. It was hoped that Gobert and Minnesota star Karl-Anthony Towns could be the rare big men to co-exist on the court, but the result so far has been an 11-11 record and ninth place in the Western Conference before this weekend.

Towns is currently out several weeks with a calf injury. That figured to give Gobert some more space to operate, but the Timberwolves ended up having to figure out how to navigate with neither on Saturday.

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Rudy Giuliani, a target in Atlanta probe into Trump 2020 election subversion scheme, to appear before grand jury

The indication that he is a target of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ probe marked an escalation of the investigation and raises questions about Trump’s criminal exposure in the probe. Willis’ office has also informed 16 Trump-supporting operatives who were presented fraudulently as presidential electors in 2020 that they are targets of her investigation, but the focus on Giuliani brings the investigation into Trump’s inner circle.

Bob Costello, an attorney for Giuliani, confirmed to CNN earlier this week that Giuliani will appear Wednesday before the special grand jury convened for the investigation, but Costello indicated that the former New York mayor would not necessarily be responsive to the questions he was asked.

“If they want to play hardball, we know how to play hardball,” Costello said.

Costello declined to say whether Giuliani would invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, but suggested that Giuliani would not answer questions about his communications with Trump.

“If you think he’s going to talk to you about conversations he had with his client, you’re delusional,” Costello said. Everything, he says, “depends on the questions they ask.”

Other witnesses who have appeared before the grand jury have been asked to testify to Giuliani’s participation in 2020 hearings and meetings with Georgia lawmakers, where Giuliani pushed bogus claims about election fraud.

Among the potential crimes Willis is investigating is making false statements to state and local government bodies, as well as solicitation of election fraud, and conspiracy.

Investigators’ interest in Giuliani’s promotion of election-rigging claims to lawmakers

Of interest to the Atlanta investigators are hearings before Georgia lawmakers where Giuliani and other Trump allies promoted conspiracy theories about supposed 2020 election-rigging. At a December, 3, 2020, Georgia Senate subcommittee hearing, Giuliani played heavily edited video of Fulton County election workers, and he urged the legislators to appoint a slate of pro-Trump electors in disregard of the statewide results showing that Joe Biden had won. He also appeared virtually before a Georgia House committee to discuss alleged election irregularities on December 10, 2020.

Giuliani and other Trump allies appeared at another hearing before Georgia lawmakers on December 30, 2020, where he reiterated the false claims that the state’s election had been plagued by fraud.

His allegations have been debunked numerous state and federal officials. Among those pushing back have been Trump-appointed officials, including former Atlanta US Attorney Byung “Bjay” Pak, who confirmed to the US House January 6, 2021, investigation that the claims of election fraud put forward by Giuliani and others had been investigated by federal authorities and found to be not true.

Democratic lawmakers who have testified before the Fulton County grand jury were asked to recount their experience attending those hearings, with investigators signaling a focus on the unusual fashion in which the hearings had come together, lawmakers’ impressions of the information that was being shared and the suggestion that lawmakers pursue an alternate slate of electors.

Giuliani has decried Willis’ probe as “a political stunt” and a sign that “we’re starting to live in a fascist state.”

“As I recall correctly, I appeared in Georgia as attorney for Donald J. Trump, so I’m going to be prosecuted for what I did as an attorney,” he said on his podcast on Monday.

Multiple probes onto Trump’s election reversal schemes

For months, the public activity of the Fulton County probe made it appear as the most significant legal risk for Trump and his inner circle for their gambits to reverse his 2020 defeat. Only recently has it become clear that the US Justice Department is investigating the 2020 election-related conduct of Trump allies as well, but the targets of that investigation are not known.

Giuliani will be appearing before the Fulton County grand jury Wednesday having been subpoenaed in July. With his failure to appear at a New York court hearing challenging the subpoena, he was ordered by the New York judge to testify. Other Giuliani attempts to push off the appearance — including with a claim that recent heart surgery prevented him from traveling — were unsuccessful.

Other attorneys who represented Trump during the 2020 election have also sought to challenge subpoenas for testimony before the Fulton County grand jury.

CNN’s Sara Murray, Jason Morris and Gloria Borger contributed to this report.

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Photo shows Rudy Giuliani being escorted from White House after ‘nuts’ Trump election conspiracist meeting

A top aide to Mark Meadows has shared with the January 6 committee a photo of her then-boss escorting Rudy Giuliani out of the White House after a contentious meeting with Donald Trump and West Wing officials.

The photo was part of accounts from Ms Hutchinson and others about an explosive meeting in the Oval Office and around the White House on 18 December, 2021, during which Mr Giuliani and Sidney Powell attempted along with Gen Mike Flynn to convince Mr Trump to seize voting machines and take his plans to overturn the election even further.

But the group clashed with the White House counsel and other attorneys for the White House who rejected their ideas as idiotic and not based in reality, while repeatedly pressing them for evidence of fraud that they did not have.

And according to Ms Hutchinson’s text message from that day, it ended with the former mayor being escorted from the presidential residence under Mr Meadows’s watchful eye to ensure he didn’t “wander” back to the Oval Office.

The meeting was rife with insults and accusations of disloyalty, according to multiple attendees and witnesses who testified on Tuesday. Ms Powell and her colleagues apparently pushed the president to name her a special counsel with the power to investigate election fraud, and to take other, drastic actions including seizing voting machines from states around the country.

Mark Meadows escorts Rudy Giuliani out of the White House

(Screenshot/PBS NewsHour)

Those ideas were rejected by Mr Cipollone and Eric Herschmann, a fellow White House attorney, who said they repeatedly pressed Ms Powell and Mr Giuliani for evidence of their claims.

The group responded with a “general disregard” for the importance of backing up one’s claims with facts, Mr Cipollone and Mr Herschmann testified.

The rumours that Mr Trump had considered assigning Ms Powell to the role of special counsel were previously reported; what was not known publicly was the extent to which White House legal experts fought back against the fringe members of Donald Trump’s inner circle who were pushing a wide and almost inconcievably-broad spectrum of election fraud conspiracies.

And it paints a picture of a White House in total disarray in its final weeks as Mr Giuliani, Mr Flynn and Ms Powell apparently made it all the way to a meeting with Donald Trump in the Oval Office without a single high-level staffer finding out before it happened.

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Rudy Gobert explains why he thinks the Jazz traded him away

Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert arrives for Game 3 of the team’s NBA basketball first-round playoff series against the Dallas Mavericks on April 21, 2022, in Salt Lake City. Gobert has been traded by the Jazz to the Minnesota Timberwolves. (Rick Bowmer, Associated Press)

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

SALT LAKE CITY — Rudy Gobert stood in front of a backdrop covered with Timberwolves logos as he lifted a No. 27 Minnesota jersey. Yep, it’s going to take longer than five days to get used to that.

Minnesota held its introductory press conference for Gobert on Tuesday, officially beginning the former Jazz center’s new NBA life.

To the Timberwolves, the trade that sent four players and several draft picks back to the Jazz was an easy decision. The Wolves are a small-market team; opportunities to add an All-Star in the prime of their careers with multiple years still left on their contract don’t come around often. Sure, the price was steep — and you could argue they overpaid — but to them, the risk was worth it.

So after the Minnesota brass lauded Gobert and his game — calling him a game-changing player and a future Hall of Famer — the question was addressed to Gobert: Why would Utah, another small-market franchise, trade you away?

“That’s a good question. I mean, obviously losing (former Jazz coach Quin Snyder),” Gobert began. “Quin was there for eight years; he was a big part of what we were doing. The window for winning is not always big. And for us, in Utah, that’s kind of what happened. I think the organization felt like we had maybe passed that window that we had over the last few years. I think they’re still obviously going to be a very competitive team, but they just felt like with all the assets that they could get with me, it was better for them to go that way.”

Gobert said that in the end, though, both sides could see it as a victory. The Timberwolves hope to compete for a title right now, and Gobert will certainly help them do that. The Jazz, meanwhile, gained more options for their future.

“I think it could potentially be a win-win situation,” Gobert said. “They also put me in a great situation to win. And for me, that’s why I’m really grateful for that. They put me on a team where I can keep flourishing and hopefully win a championship. And then for them, I really hope that they’re going to be able to get better and better and hopefully get to that stage that we were a few years ago. Even though we didn’t get past the second round, we were first in the West — that doesn’t happen often.”

The three time Defensive Player of the Year realizes that all these major moves come with risk, but he’s thankful that he’s on a team that has a chance to compete at a high level.

“It’s never easy. It’s always speculative. You never know what’s right, what’s wrong, and sometimes you gotta make decisions, and that’s what they did. … I’m grateful they put me in a position to win,” he said.

Gobert admitted he wanted to spend his whole career with the same team; he embraced Utah — regularly giving back to the community through his charitable foundation and also his time. He built a home in the Salt Lake Valley and took immense pride in what the Jazz had built as a team. But, he admitted on Tuesday, there is excitement in something new.

“I’m the type of guy that was thinking early on that it would be cool to spend my whole career in the same place,” he said. “But also, I always wonder how cool it would be to get to a new place and in a new system and a new environment. So it’s kind of like whatever happens, it’s positive.

“I spent nine amazing years in Utah, we built something that was very unique and that is never going to go away,” he continued. “Even though we didn’t win a championship, I think those years were great years in terms of winning. We won the most games in the last four years in the NBA — even though there’s no ring at the end, it’s still a pretty cool accomplishment. All those years and all that grind have made me a better player, and a better person, and now I’m in a situation where hopefully I can take this team to where we want to be. And that’s very, very exciting.”

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Ryan Miller has covered the Utah Jazz for KSL.com since 2018.

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Utah Jazz trade Rudy Gobert to Timberwolves

Intrigue had been building all of Friday that the Utah Jazz had a big move coming, that league executives had begun to believe that the team might be trending toward a teardown and rebuild.

When the move finally came it was not merely big. It was seismic.

The Jazz are trading one of their foundational pieces, All-NBA center and three-time Defensive Player of the Year Rudy Gobert, to the Minnesota Timberwolves, according to a report from ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.

In return, Utah will get two-way wing Malik Beasley, defensive-oriented guard Patrick Beverley, forwards Jarred Vanderbilt and Leandro Bolmaro, rookie center Walker Kessler (the No. 22 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft), and four future first-round picks.

Those picks will be unprotected selections from the Wolves in 2023, ’25, and ’27, plus a top-five protected pick in 2029. The Jazz can also elect to exercise a pick swap in 2026, should Minnesota finish with a worse record.

Gobert and star guard Donovan Mitchell have been Utah’s centerpieces for the past half-decade. However, although the Jazz have qualified for the NBA playoffs the past six seasons, the team has never made it past the second round.

The team blowing a 2-0 series lead in the 2021 Western Conference semifinals to a Clippers team playing without injured superstar Kawhi Leonard, and then this year’s first-round ouster to a Dallas Mavericks team that went without All-NBA guard Luka Doncic for three games had the effect of making Utah’s future uncertain.

Would the team try to swap out the pieces around Gobert and Mitchell? Or opt for a more drastic change?

The moves of the past month now spell out the latter option.

In the beginning of June, head coach Quin Snyder opted to resign after eight years at the helm, saying he felt it was time for the team to have a new voice.

Earlier this week, the Jazz agreed to a five-year contract with Celtics assistant Will Hardy — a deal considered unusually long for a first-time head coach, and having the effect of generating speculation that the team was showing to commitment to him with big change about to arrive.

On Thursday, with the opening of free agency, Utah’s front office sent starting forward Royce O’Neale — a strong 3-point shooter and the team’s best perimeter defender — to the Brooklyn Nets for a 2023 first-round pick. CEO Danny Ainge and general manager Justin Zanik also opted against retaining Juancho Hernangomez, and declined to make qualifying offers to Eric Paschall and Trent Forrest.

On Friday morning, ESPN personality and NBA insider Brian Windhorst went on a lengthy and mysterious televised tangent indicating that league executives were wondering, “Why would the Jazz do that?”

Hours later, the answer came.

Gobert, a three-time All-Star, three-time DPOY, one-time All-NBA Second Team honoree, and three-time All-NBA Third Team selection, has been with the Jazz since 2013.

He was selected with the No. 27 pick in that year’s draft by the Denver Nuggets, who sold his draft rights to Utah. The Nuggets’ general manager that year was Tim Connelly — the man who just a short time ago took a new position as the Timberwolves’ president of basketball operations.

For his career, Gobert has averaged 12.4 points, 11.7 rebounds, and 2.1 blocks per game, on 65.3% field-goal shooting. However, he has developed into one of the league’s best players in recent years. In the 2021-22 season, he led the NBA in rebounds (14.7) and FG% (71.3%) while also averaging 15.6 points and 2.1 blocks.

While he became beloved among the team’s fans for almost single-handedly propping up a defense devoid of perimeter stoppers, for his year-over-year development and improvement, and for his feisty, underdog attitude, his time in Utah was not without its controversies.

He and Mitchell famously feuded in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. The NBA went into a months-long hiatus after Gobert became the league’s so-called “Patient Zero” — the first player to test positive for COVID-19. Mitchell became irate when he became the second to test positive the next day, accusing his teammate of being flippant and careless.

Though the two eventually mended what The Athletic infamously called an “unsalvageable” relationship, the premise of tension between them never fully went away.

Indeed, this past season, as the Jazz struggled with injuries, a COVID outbreak that rendered most of the month of January a lost cause, and a series of blown double-digit leads which all combined to hang over the team like a black cloud, there became additional signs of strain.

As Gobert returned from his COVID-related absence, he blasted the team’s defense without him, taking a thinly-veiled shot at Mitchell by noting that Phoenix Suns counterpart Devin Booker was “playing his ass off” defensively. Less than two months later, Mitchell returned the favor following a loss in Dallas. With Gobert having missed the game due to a leg injury, the guard pointedly went on to praise the “guys that suited up.”

So, where do the Jazz go from here?

There may well be more moves to come soon. In the interim, the team now has a haul of future first-round picks, plus a moveable piece in Beverley, some young talent in Beasley and Vanderbilt, and fliers on young and unproven Kessler and Bolmaro.

Getting draft picks back as the primary return of such a trade is a risky move, considering that Gobert’s addition to a Minnesota squad already considered an ascending, young team (it features All-NBA big man Karl-Anthony Towns, and electric former No. 1 overall pick Anthony Edwards) could perhaps ensure that none of those picks will wind up better than mid-20s selections.

And yet, Ainge’s history as GM and president of the Celtics has illustrated his preference for amassing such picks, in the hope that they can become valuable assets.

As for the players …

Beverley is a 33-year-old, 6-foot-1 defensive nuisance who formerly played at an All-Defensive Team level, but is perhaps below that now. He has career averages of 8.8 points, 4.3 rebounds, 3.5 assists, and 1.1 steals who has shot 37.8% from 3-point range.

Beasley is a 6-4 wing who averaged a career-high 19.9 points in 2020-21, but who dipped to 12.1 points per game this past season in going from a starting role to one off the bench. The 25-year-old is a career 38.6% shooter behind the arc.

Vanderbilt is a 6-9, 214-pound power forward who started 67 games for the Wolves this past season. The 23-year-old averaged 6.9 points and 8.4 rebounds on 58.7% shooting from the field.

Bolmaro was a first-round pick in the 2020 draft, going No. 23 overall. The Argentine wing (6-6, 200) did not come over to the NBA this past season, however, and played sparingly — 1.4 points and 1.1 rebounds per game in 35 mop-up appearances that averaged 6.9 minutes per.

Kessler, meanwhile, was regarded as the best defensive center in college basketball this past season. After playing a limited role as a freshman at North Carolina, he transferred to Auburn, where he had a breakout performance, averaging 11.4 points, 8.1 rebounds, and 4.6 blocks per game. While the 7-1, 245-pounder is considered an excellent drop-big rim protector, he is not thought to have much switching capability.

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Rudy Giuliani slapped: Video shows former NYC mayor slapped inside Staten Island supermarket, employee arrested

STATEN ISLAND, New York City (WABC) — Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani spoke out on Monday after he was slapped on the back while grocery shopping over the weekend, in an incident that was caught on surveillance video.

A ShopRite employee, 39-year-old Daniel Gill, was arrested and initially charged with second-degree assault, a felony, although those charges were later downgraded.

Gill appeared in court Monday, wearing his ShopRite uniform, to face misdemeanor charges of third-degree assault, third-degree menacing, and second-degree harassment. He was released on his own recognizance by Judge Gerianne Abriano.

Police say Gill slapped Giuliani on the back while he was campaigning for his son, Andrew Giuliani, in the state’s gubernatorial race, handing out flyers at the store on Staten Island.

“I got hit as if a boulder hit me,” Giuliani said during his virtual press conference. “It knocked me forward a step or two. It didn’t knock me down, but it hurt tremendously.”

The former mayor said he really didn’t know what had hit him at the time, and he was shocked as he had campaigned there for himself, his son, and other colleagues some 500 times, maybe as many as 1,000, he estimated.

After the slap, Giuliani says the man kept swearing and ranting to him about “killing women,” and when he wouldn’t stop, he decided to call the police and have the man arrested.

“This has to stop,” he said. “It could have been much worse of course.”

According to prosecutors, Gill said, “What’s up scumbag?” after smacking Giuliani on his back.

The smack caused Giuliani “to stumble forward” and caused “redness, swelling and substantial pain to the back and left side of his body,” according to the complaint.

The defense said Gill has worked at the story for four years and had no intention of causing the former mayor any physical injury.

“The video is clear,” his attorney, Susan Platis, said. “The video is clear that this was just a tap on the back.”

Giuliani, 78, was not seriously injured and refused medical treatment.

“Innocent people are attacked in today’s New York all of the time,” Andrew Giuliani said in a statement. “This particular incident hit very close to home. The assault on my father, America’s Mayor, was over politics. We will not be intimidated by left-wing attacks. As governor, I will stand up for law and order so that New Yorkers feel safe again. This message has resonated with voters throughout my campaign, leading up to Tuesday’s primary.”

Andrew Giuliani plans to hold a 7:30 p.m. rally on Tuesday at the store where his father got slapped.

Gill, who did not talk to reporters other than to say, “Have a good day, everyone,” is due back in court on August 17.

The Legal Aid Society, which is representing Gill, issued the following statement:

“The charges facing Daniel Gill, who has no previous contact with the criminal legal system, are inconsistent with existing law. Our client merely patted Mr. Giuliani, who sustained nothing remotely resembling physical injuries, without malice to simply get his attention, as the video footage clearly showed. Mr. Gill was then followed and threatened by one of Mr. Giuliani’s associates who allegedly poked Mr. Gill in the chest and told him that he was going to be ‘locked up’. He was then needlessly held by the NYPD in custody for over 24 hours. Given Mr. Giuliani’s obsession with seeing his name in the press and his demonstrated propensity to distort the truth, we are happy to correct the record on exactly what occurred over the weekend on Staten Island.”

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