A judge ordered Rudy Giuliani to hand over his apartment in Manhattan and other valuables to two election workers in Georgia as part of a defamation.
Last year, the two election workers – Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss – successfully sued Mr. Giuliani for over $ 140 million (£ 106 million).
Mr. Giuliani, a former lawyer of Donald Trump, incorrectly accused her of manipulating votes during the presidential elections.
In addition to the apartment, the federal judge decided on Tuesday that Mr. Giuliani had to hand over his watches, furniture and sports memory to Ms. Freeman and Ms. Moss.
The judge also decided that Ms. Freeman and Ms. Moss are the beneficiaries of $ 2 million, that the unique mayor of New York City that Trump's presidential campaign still owes him in 2020.
Ms. Freeman and Ms. Moss asked a Court last month to confiscate some of Mr. Giuliani's assets, including several properties in New York and Palm Beach, Florida, as well as dozens of luxury watches, a Mercedes-Benz and other personal objects.
They also looked for three of his New York Yankees World Series rings, one of which was estimated with around 30,000 US dollars.
In the 24-page arrangement, which was published on Tuesday, the judge decided that Mr. Giuliani had to turn over more than two dozen watches, and a jersey signed by the former field of the New York Yankees Center Joe Dimaggio.
The judge pushed the judgment on the World Series rings and the apartment in Palm Beach.
Mr. Giuliani has seven days to hand over his possessions, including the luxurious apartment in Manhattan, which he previously wanted to sell for USD 6 million, as the US news partner of BBC, CBS,.
Mr. Giuliani was robbed of his legal references in July after having legal problems to submit false statements about Trump's loss of election in 2020.
Regardless of this, he has not guilty of calling nine crimes in the areas of the prosecutors as a “fake election scheme” to explain Trump to the winning candidates in Arizona in the 2020 presidential election.
Mr. Giuliani was charged with 17 others because of his alleged role in this program.
He reported bankruptcy last year after losing the defamation for Ms. Freeman and Mrs. Moss.
The women said they had to endure threats and nuisance after being targeted by Mr. Giuliani.
In July, a federal judge dismissed his bankruptcy case and left it back without protection from the creditors.