Donald Trump's lawyer has responded to a hotel room scene in the highly-anticipated Borat sequel that features him in a compromising position around a young actress.
However, Giuliani - a US attorney and who served as the 107th Mayor of New York City from 1994 to 2001 - has refuted the scene.
"The Borat video is a complete fabrication. I was tucking in my shirt after taking off the recording equipment," Rudy Giuliani tweeted out on Wednesday (October 22).
Per The Guardian, the sequel - dubbed Borat Subsequent Moviefilm - features an actress playing Borat's daughter, and she poses as a journalist to interview Giuliani.
In the scene Giuliani refers to, Trump's lawyer is interviewed in a hotel room about his administration's response to the ongoing pandemic.
Giuliani, 76, entered the room after being invited by the young actress for a drink, unaware that the room if full of concealed cameras.
Check out the hilarious trailer for the Borat sequel below:The Guardian then states that after the actress removes Giuliani's microphone, he can be seen lying back on the bed, "fiddling with his untucked shirt and reaching into his trousers."
Borat - played by Sacha Baron Cohen - then runs into the room and says: "She’s 15. She’s too old for you."
A still from the movie was posted to Twitter by Rex Chapman who wrote: "Here's Rudy Giuliani, the personal attorney to the President of the United States.
"A still picture of Rudy from the Borat movie coming out on Friday. Cant wait... [sic]"
Trump's lawyer tweeted in response to the clip: "At no time before, during, or after the interview was I ever inappropriate. If Sacha Baron Cohen implies otherwise he is a stone-cold liar."
At the time of the incident in July, Giuliani believed that he was going to do a serious interview.
"As soon as I realized it was a set up I called the police," he said in another tweet on Wednesday.
Giuliani added: "In fact, the NY Post today reports 'it looks to me like an exaggeration through editing.'"
He then tweeted again to describe the scene as an attempt to distract the American people from the "depravity" of Joe Biden and his family.
Giuliani wrote: "This is an effort to blunt my relentless exposure of the criminality and depravity of Joe Biden and his entire family."
The film is scheduled to be released this Friday on Amazon Prime and is the sequel to Sacha Baron Cohen's 2006 smash hit Borat which sees him step into the shoes of a fictional reporter from Kazakhstan.
As per the BBC, Sacha Baron Cohen and his representatives have yet to respond to Giuliani's tweets about the soon-to-be-released film.