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Dominion CEO broke down in front of his kids during Rudy Giuliani's sweaty news conference where he spread conspiracy theories about the company

Rudy Giuliani speaking at a news conference on November 19.
Drew Angerer/Getty Image
  • John Poulos broke down during one of Giuliani's news conferences, The New York Times Magazine reports.
  • The Dominion CEO told The Times he yelled so loudly that his wife and two kids came to check on him.
  • A judge recently threw out a motion to dismiss Dominion's defamation lawsuit against Giuliani.

The head of Dominion Voting Systems broke down in hysterics during a news conference in which Rudy Giuliani spread conspiracy theories that the company manipulated election results as hair dye and sweat dripped down the side of his face, according to The New York Times Magazine.

CEO John Poulos told The Times that he yelled so loudly that his wife and two children came to check on him in his home office and found him crying uncontrollably.

"Oh, my God!" he screamed, according to the story. "I can't believe what's going on!"

He told The Times that his teenage children had never seen him emotional about his work and stared at him in shock.

Read more: How Donald Trump is defunding police, charities, and Rudy

Giuliani held the news conference on November 19, with lawyer and former federal prosecutor Sydney Powell. Both of them spouted misinformation and conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, baselessly claiming that "communist money through Venezuela, Cuba and likely China" had a "massive" influence on Dominion's operations and that the company played a role in switching votes from former President Donald Trump to Joe Biden.

During the press conference, Giuliani began to sweat, causing a line of dark liquid to run from his hairline down both sides of his face, inspiring a slew of memes mocking the former mayor of New York. 

Poulos told The Times that he felt sympathy for people watching the news conference who were upset that Trump had lost the 2020 election because they would be eager to believe misinformation that validated their frustration. But he told the newspaper he was outraged at Giuliani and Powell for willingly spreading conspiracy theories. 

Poulos said he felt watching the news conference the same way many people felt watching the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol, for which at least 615 people now face charges. 

"It was an assault on democracy," Poulos said.

Eric Coomer, the former director of product strategy and security at Dominion, told The Times he began "sweating and shaking" and thought he might throw up while watching the news conference. Powell had claimed there was a record of Coomer on an "antifa" phone call, which Coomer has adamantly denied. Giuliani also called Coomer a "vicious, vicious man" who wrote "horrible things about the President," referencing two Facebook posts Coomer made calling Trump "autocratic" and "narcissistic."

A federal judge recently rejected motions to throw out defamation lawsuits Dominion filed against Guiliani, Powell, and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell seeking $1.3 billion in damages.

Coomer has also brought a defamation suit against Joe Oltmann, a Colorado businessman who claimed to have "intercepted" an antifa phone call that included Coomer on the "Conservative Daily Podcast." That suit lists Guiliani, Powell, and the Trump campaign among 14 defendants.