The former head of the now-defunct Girardi & Keese law firm — who is being sued for allegedly embezzling $15 million from his clients from 2010 to 2020 — emphatically denied any wrongdoing.
“The last thing I would do would be to take someone’s money,” Girardi said while on the stand at a downtown Los Angeles courthouse, per Courthouse News Service . “I wouldn’t think of it.”
He reportedly also repeated several times during his testimony that he never gave himself a salary.
When asked about the missing settlement funds in the case of Joe Ruigomez, a young man who was badly burned due to a gas line, Girardi claimed he never lied about how much his former client was owed.
“I wouldn’t have said that,” the disbarred attorney said when asked why he told Ruigomez that his settlement was for $5 million instead of $53 million. “I didn’t intentionally ever tell anyone the wrong thing.”
Girardi reportedly then explained that he was told Ruigomez allegedly had a “really bad drug problem” and claimed the judge on the young man’s case was “very strict to say, you gotta space the money out.”
According to Courthouse News Service, evidence from the Internal Revenue Service showed that money from Ruigomez was “almost immediately” spent on paying back Girardi’s old clients.
The former lawyer denied the claim, though, testifying, “I wasn’t about to go, quote, stealing money.”
Girardi also blamed his ex-client’s alleged mismanagement of funds on his former CFO Chris Kamon.
“He stole a lot of money,” the estranged husband of “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Erika Jayne reportedly testified. “Obviously we didn’t know about it.”
He later said in the hearing, per the report, “I don’t know very much. But he was very clever in stealing millions of dollars.”
Although Girardi was found competent to stand trial in January, he reportedly demonstrated some signs of memory loss on Thursday.
When asked if he recalled Ruigomez’s testimony, for which he had been present, he said, “No.”
Girardi’s lawyer, Samuel Cross, then asked him about his former longtime assistant, Shirleen Fujimoto, testifying earlier in the week, and he reportedly answered, “No, I didn’t see that.”
Then, when asked if his firm is still open, Girardi reportedly replied, “Yes,” even though it closed in 2021.
And finally, when Cross asked his client to say his name, he answered, “I don’t know. Bad? Mean? Terrible? It’s one of those.”
The “RHOBH” star, 53, exclusively told Page Six in May 2022, “I take his call and it’s never more than 10 seconds … And sometimes he thinks I’m someone else … so there’s a lot of that.”
Lawyers for both sides of Tom’s fraud case are reportedly set to make closing statements on Monday.
Tom has been charged with four counts of fraud and faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for each.
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