It’s a Crime, by the Way’: Harmeet Dhillon Reveals How Kamala Harris Rose to Power on Tucker Carlson Tonight

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Harmeet Dhillon, a conservative civil rights lawyer who represents Kamala Harris in court, appeared on Tucker Carlson Show last Friday. She ripped into her past and brought receipts.

 

Dhillon had a long conversation with former Fox News host, Michael Avenatti, about the problems that border czars and Democrat presidential nominees face. But one part of her discussion stood out, where she talked about how the now-VP got to be so prominent.

 

Harris was the winner of the 2003 race to become San Francisco’s district attorney. She won by cheating. She and her competitors had both agreed to spend limits under penalty of perjury. But she ignored them.

 

Dhillon:

 

It turns out that Kamala Harris was the one who would be tough on crime. She was the third candidate in this race, after Terence Hallinan who had been in the lead. He was endorsed eventually by Republicans in San Francisco. She was then third. She was the underdog. She quickly realized that she wasn’t getting anywhere at all. She realized that she would have to increase her spending.

 

 

Willie Brown, her former boyfriend and longtime SF political powerbroker, helped her.

 

Brown’s ascent was a major factor in her success.

 

Willie Brown helped her raise money to cover independent expenses. So. Funny story. Her campaign theme was to be tough against drugs and marijuana. In 2003, recreational marijuana was illegal in California.

 

So, apparently, pot activists didn’t like that, you know, were poring through the campaign finance records and it was a pot activist, who realized Kamala Harris raised more than $300,000 and had spent more than $300,000. This person then went to the other campaigns and told them. They filed a complaint for ethics against her, and by the time the election was over she had spent more than $600,000.

 

She was entitled to triple her original allowance.

 

Watch:

 

 

What did Kamala do? Sure, she may have broken a few laws, but as a progressive Democrat living in a state with a single-party system, what was she doing? She hired a good lawyer:

 

Please lift the cap. Thanks to a good attorney and the excuse, “Oh, the form has changed”, I did not understand what this meant. She was able to get into the San Francisco Ethics Commission. By the way, Willie Brown is responsible for many of the people who are on the Ethics Commission.

 

She made them look the other direction on this gross offense. By the way, it’s a criminal offense.

 

The Ethics Commission lifted the cap on her punishment. This is contrary to the statute. Instead of disqualifying and prosecuting, as would be the usual punishment, she got away with it.

 

Oh, I see. It’s the way it is in the Golden State of old. It was only her first contest, yet it laid the path that now–terrifyingly–puts her on a potential course to be the next president of the United States.

 

 

In her first campaign for office, she did not follow the campaign finance limit. Instead, she relied on the corrupt patronage of her former lover to raise money to produce the glossy ads. Here are a few examples. She sent out more mailers than any of the other candidates. She was able, with independent expenditures made on her behalf to exceed these limits.

 

Dhillon then showed Carlson all the glossy mailers Kamala had been able to produce with her excessive spending. She pointed out that, while the mailers said that Kamala had the most experience for the job, she was not the best-prepared person. Other prosecutors were in the race with more experience.

 

She concluded, “It is pretty amazing that this meteoric career was born out of multiple campaign violations.”

 

Incredible is a single word. Three words that sum up the situation are “absolutely unbelievably disturbing”.

 

This interview is not over yet. I urge you to watch it. However, this one section should be enough to disqualify Kamala from running for the presidency, or any other office.

 

The full interview is here: