Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani talking to reporters as he leaves the federal courthouse in Washington, DC.AP Photo/Jose Luis MaganaRudy Giuliani interrupted his bankruptcy hearing after an attorney said he would commit fraud.He is $152 million in debt, almost all of which is owed to election workers he defamed.Giuliani scored a legal win as the bankruptcy judge said he'd likely dismiss the case, allowing appeals.Rudy Giuliani erupted during a bankruptcy hearing Wednesday morning, interrupting the proceedings to complain it was "defamatory" to suggest he would commit bankruptcy crimes by hiding his assets.His interruption came as Rachel Strickland, an attorney representing two Georgia election workers whom Giuliani defamed and owes $148 million, urged the judge to dismiss the bankruptcy case and allow the claims against Giuliani to play out in different courts.Keeping the case in bankruptcy court would inevitably lead to Giuliani hiding his assets and being charged with bankruptcy crimes, Strickland said."We will all be stayed while the trustee in this court wades through the morass of sexual assault and other allegations while Mr.