Harmeet Dhillon
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
have you know kind of i'm sure are seeking jobs in those industries outside and that's where they belong in the private sector um or preferably you know we would hope to change their minds at some point but uh the government should not be accelerating and funding radicalization our job is very simple it is at the civil rights division we have statutes that we administer and it's to administer those statutes equally for all americans and not just for the woke few
have you know kind of i'm sure are seeking jobs in those industries outside and that's where they belong in the private sector um or preferably you know we would hope to change their minds at some point but uh the government should not be accelerating and funding radicalization our job is very simple it is at the civil rights division we have statutes that we administer and it's to administer those statutes equally for all americans and not just for the woke few
Well, Vince, this week we took action in court on Wednesday to file dismissals of two pending consent decree cases that were put before the judges by the Biden DOJ in the last weeks after the election, which they lost, and tried to sneak this in under the wire.
Well, Vince, this week we took action in court on Wednesday to file dismissals of two pending consent decree cases that were put before the judges by the Biden DOJ in the last weeks after the election, which they lost, and tried to sneak this in under the wire.
Well, Vince, this week we took action in court on Wednesday to file dismissals of two pending consent decree cases that were put before the judges by the Biden DOJ in the last weeks after the election, which they lost, and tried to sneak this in under the wire.
Those are in Minneapolis, where the George Floyd incident occurred five years ago, and in Louisville, Kentucky, where the Breonna Taylor incident incident occurred. DOJ also has the authority and does prosecute cops who violate the civil rights of American citizens. And police brutality is wrong. And shooting people who have not committed a crime, I mean, that is also problematic.
Those are in Minneapolis, where the George Floyd incident occurred five years ago, and in Louisville, Kentucky, where the Breonna Taylor incident incident occurred. DOJ also has the authority and does prosecute cops who violate the civil rights of American citizens. And police brutality is wrong. And shooting people who have not committed a crime, I mean, that is also problematic.
Those are in Minneapolis, where the George Floyd incident occurred five years ago, and in Louisville, Kentucky, where the Breonna Taylor incident incident occurred. DOJ also has the authority and does prosecute cops who violate the civil rights of American citizens. And police brutality is wrong. And shooting people who have not committed a crime, I mean, that is also problematic.
And we do prosecute cops who act inappropriately. But what consent decrees typically do is for over a decade on average,
And we do prosecute cops who act inappropriately. But what consent decrees typically do is for over a decade on average,
And we do prosecute cops who act inappropriately. But what consent decrees typically do is for over a decade on average,
Once a judge issues a consent decree, cities pay upwards of $10 million a year to comply with a bunch of lawyers who, as I've kind of joked but only semi-joked, I'm not sure some of these lawyers have ever met cops because they impose these radical requirements that make police departments ineffective and miserable, tie their hands, and make communities unsafe. I mean, not me, but Axios has said,
Once a judge issues a consent decree, cities pay upwards of $10 million a year to comply with a bunch of lawyers who, as I've kind of joked but only semi-joked, I'm not sure some of these lawyers have ever met cops because they impose these radical requirements that make police departments ineffective and miserable, tie their hands, and make communities unsafe. I mean, not me, but Axios has said,
Once a judge issues a consent decree, cities pay upwards of $10 million a year to comply with a bunch of lawyers who, as I've kind of joked but only semi-joked, I'm not sure some of these lawyers have ever met cops because they impose these radical requirements that make police departments ineffective and miserable, tie their hands, and make communities unsafe. I mean, not me, but Axios has said,
written an article that compares the skyrocketing crime rates in cities that are under consent decrees and they're typically ranging from 30 to over 60 percent of an increase in crime i mean we just ended one in albuquerque which went on for over a decade a police monitor was paid a single man was paid over a million dollars a year the city spent tens of millions of dollars to comply it had had a 30-year low in its crime rates prior to the consent decree
written an article that compares the skyrocketing crime rates in cities that are under consent decrees and they're typically ranging from 30 to over 60 percent of an increase in crime i mean we just ended one in albuquerque which went on for over a decade a police monitor was paid a single man was paid over a million dollars a year the city spent tens of millions of dollars to comply it had had a 30-year low in its crime rates prior to the consent decree
written an article that compares the skyrocketing crime rates in cities that are under consent decrees and they're typically ranging from 30 to over 60 percent of an increase in crime i mean we just ended one in albuquerque which went on for over a decade a police monitor was paid a single man was paid over a million dollars a year the city spent tens of millions of dollars to comply it had had a 30-year low in its crime rates prior to the consent decree
being issued and crime skyrocketed in that city.
being issued and crime skyrocketed in that city.
being issued and crime skyrocketed in that city.