Yea I have just the pitbull lawyer for Trump:
Yah, you may be right. If I ever get a ticket for Jay Walking, I'll call on him to defend me. That way, I'll get off on easy with just life without parole.
You people and your partisan hackery are a joke. Very few attorneys have ever come close to the accomplishments Giuliani achieved in his career as an attorney.
NYC.gov:
Biography of Rudolph Giuliani
Upon graduation [from NYU law school, magna cum laude], Rudy Giuliani clerked for Judge Lloyd MacMahon, United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York. In 1970, Giuliani joined the office of the U.S. Attorney. At age 29, he was named Chief of the Narcotics Unit and rose to serve as executive US Attorney. In 1975, Giuliani was recruited to Washington, D.C., where he was named Associate Deputy Attorney General and chief of staff to the Deputy Attorney General. From 1977 to 1981, Giuliani returned to New York to practice law at Patterson, Belknap, Webb and Tyler.
In 1981, Giuliani was named Associate Attorney General, the third highest position in the Department of Justice. As Associate Attorney General, Giuliani supervised all of the US Attorney Offices' Federal law enforcement agencies, the Bureau of Corrections, the Drug Enforcement Agency, and the US Marshals.
In 1983, Giuliani was appointed US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, where he spearheaded the effort to jail drug dealers, fight organized crime, break the web of corruption in government, and prosecute white-collar criminals. Few US Attorneys in history can match his record of 4,152 convictions with only 25 reversals.
Biography.com:
https://www.biography.com/political-figure/rudolph-giuliani
During his six years as U.S. attorney, Giuliani worked tirelessly to jail drug dealers, prosecute white-collar criminals and disrupt organized crime and government corruption. Giuliani's 4,152 convictions (against only 25 reversals) distinguish him as one of the most effective U.S. Attorneys in American history.
New York Times:
HIGH-PROFILE PROSECUTOR
Every era has a law-enforcement figure or two who captures the public imagination, who turns the job of police officer or prosecutor into ''crime buster'' and makes the fight against evil appear to be a personal vendetta. ...
Of late, Rudolph W. Giuliani, United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, has marched into this arena. ... The Italian Government has presented the 41-year-old Giuliani with an award for battling the Mafia. The Thomas E. Dewey Association made him the speaker at its dinner this year.
...
Part of Giuliani's secret has been hard work, an innovative legal mind and a courtroom flair. At the same time he was supervising 130 attorneys in the nation's largest Federal prosecutor's office, he was personally devising the imaginative strategy for one of the most significant Mafia cases in recent times.
THE BEST PROSECUTORS, THEY SAY, MIX STRONG INTELLECT with good street smarts. Giuliani has plenty of both. ...
By 30, Giuliani was the [justice department's] third-ranking prosecutor. ... Giuliani engag[ed] in battles for cases with another young star, Richard Ben-Veniste, who went on to become a special prosecutor during the Watergate scandal. ...
Giuliani's role in two cases stood out. He was a key prosecutor in the police corruption case that would later form the basis for ''Prince of the City,'' the Robert Daley book later made into a film by Sidney Lumet. He also successfully prosecuted Representative Bertram L. Podell, Democrat of Brooklyn, in a dramatic bribery trial. Under Giuliani's intense cross-examination, Podell faltered, became so nervous he poked out his eyeglass lens, asked for a recess and gave up, pleading guilty.
In 1975, Giuliani accepted his first of three Republican political appointments. He hadn't started as a Republican. As a registered Democrat, he had worked for Robert F. Kennedy's senatorial campaign in the 1960's and voted for George McGovern in 1972. But in 1975, after a job offer in the Ford Justice Department, he voted Republican for the first time. ''I came to think that McGovern and the Democrats had a dangerous view,'' he says, refering to global politics. ''By the time I moved to Washington, the Republicans had come to make more sense to me.''
...
Money has never been his driving force, says Gross, a friend. ''Rudy just wants to be where the action is.'' As United States Attorney, Giuliani earns $72,300, a fraction of what he might make in private practice.
Giuliani's upward climb has been aided by a series of influential mentors, who rewarded him because he put in long hours, showed strong loyalty and made them look good. Federal District Judge Lloyd F. MacMahon was the first. Giuliani was his clerk. ''Judge MacMahon calls us all his sons,'' says Patrick D. Daugherty, another former clerk, ''but Rudy is his favorite son.''
...
[L]egal experts agree Giuliani's fashioning of the Mafia commission case has importance beyond the individual leaders indicted. It sent a symbolic message to the public: Law enforcement is sophisticated enough to go after the top people all at once - the board of directors. ''If we can prove the existence of the Mafia commission in court beyond a reasonable doubt,'' Giuliani says, ''we can end this debate about whether the Mafia exists. We can prove that the Mafia is as touchable and convictable as anyone. And without their mystery, they will lose power.''
TheMobMuseam.org:
Rudolph Giuliani
[W]hen Rudolph Giuliani stepped down after six years as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, he was perhaps the most famous law enforcement official in the United States. He left a legacy of successful prosecutions of leaders of New York’s “Commission” of organized crime families, the Mafia’s international heroin and cocaine ring in the “Pizza Connection” case, as well as high-profile political corruption and Wall Street criminal cases.
...
[In one of Giuliani's federal prosecutions] Fifty-two New York cops were indicted on corruption-related allegations based on the evidence. Giuliani also won a conviction against Brooklyn area U.S. Congressman Bertram Podell, a Democrat who served several months in federal prison for accepting a $41,000 bribe.
...
Giuliani announced that his top priority as U.S. attorney was to defeat organized crime in New York, where the chiefs of the so-called “Five Families” lived and operated. ...
Giuliani decided to prosecute the leaders of the families and their upper-level cohorts together under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, for allegedly conspiring to commit felonies including contract murders, loan sharking, extortion, labor racketeering and drug trafficking. It was the first time RICO, passed by Congress in 1970, was employed to prosecute a major federal case.
He argued the case before a federal grand jury and in February 1985 obtained indictments against a laundry list of New York’s Mob leaders and their lieutenants: Bonanno family boss Phil Rastelli and capo Anthony Indelicato; Colombo boss Carmine Persico and member Ralph Scopo; Gambino boss Paul Castellano; Genovese boss Anthony Salerno and member Gennaro Langella; Lucchese boss Anthony Corallo, underboss Salvatore Santoro and consigliere Christopher Furnari. Soon afterward, Castellano was shot and killed outside a restaurant in Manhattan and Rastelli was tried in a separate RICO case.
Side note: the restaurant referred to is called Sparks Steak House, in Manhattan. It is literally always packed, and next to impossible to get a reservation (at least that was the case a decade or so ago). I've been there a couple of times with a reporter for ABC in NYC who's done stories on some of my cases. The steaks are nothing to write home about (Peter Luger is much better IMO), and it's so cramped that you are literally banging elbows with people at adjacent tables, but the mob boss hit is such a cool story that it gives the place a great aura (the sidewalk out front is still stained red from Castellano's blood BTW).