
By Mike Scarcella
WASHINGTON, Jan 12 (Reuters) - Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and Trump administration lawyer Jeffrey Clark have asked a judge in Georgia to award them legal fees they spent fighting criminal charges of interfering in the 2020 presidential election, following similar requests by U.S. President Donald Trump and other defendants.
Like Trump, Clark and Giuliani argued they are entitled to legal fees under a new Georgia law designed to reimburse defendants when a prosecutor is disqualified and the case is dismissed. Prosecutors in November dropped the election interference case after Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was disqualified from overseeing the prosecution.
Clark in a court filing on Friday in Fulton County Superior Court said he is owed more than $1 million. Attorneys for Giuliani, who was a personal lawyer for Trump, also asked for reimbursement but have not yet submitted billing records.
Altogether, defendants in the case have asked for nearly $14 million so far, an attorney for Clark said on Monday. Lawyers for Giuliani did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Fulton County District Attorney’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Willis accused Trump and 18 co-defendants of conspiring to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results after a recording surfaced in the media of Trump asking its top electoral official to "find" him enough votes to win. All of the former defendants had pleaded not guilty.
“The complexity of the case, the experience of counsel, the prevailing rates in the community, and the successful result obtained all support the conclusion that the requested fees are reasonable,” Giuliani’s lawyers told the court in their filing.
The new Georgia law requires courts to award fees and costs to any defendant whose charges are dismissed after the prosecuting attorney is disqualified for improper conduct. Trump last week asked the court to award him more than $6.2 million in legal fees.
An attorney for Clark, Harry MacDougald, in a post on the X social media platform on Monday said “the reckoning for 5 years of a Trump-deranged bender is beginning.”
Clark, a former partner at law firm Kirkland & Ellis, served in the first Trump Justice Department. His request seeks more than $500,000 for his lawyers in the election case and more than $550,000 for work he said he performed himself, calculated at a rate of $700 per hour.
"The total amount requested on my behalf in this case is very reasonable for a matter of this complexity and with such dire potential adverse consequences for me and my family," Clark told the court.
Read more:
Trump requests $6 million in legal fees in Georgia election interference case
Rudy Giuliani must pay his defense lawyers $1.4 million, judge rules