Vice President Kamala Harris is under fire for seemingly plagiarizing multiple sections of her 2009 criminal justice book, Smart on Crime. A new investigation by Dr. Stefan Weber, a renowned Austrian plagiarism expert, reveals at least a dozen instances where Harris copied material without proper attribution, including from unreliable sources such as Wikipedia.
According to Dr. Weber’s findings, Harris stole extensively from various reports and articles, presenting others’ work as her own. One striking example includes a passage on high school graduation rates, where she allegedly lifted language directly from an uncited AP/NBC News report. Such blatant copying raises serious questions about her integrity and credibility.
Harris’s book also includes paragraphs taken almost word-for-word from a press release by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Instead of providing a proper citation, Harris and her co-author passed off the content as original. This kind of intellectual dishonesty mirrors other high-profile plagiarism cases, such as that of former Harvard president Claudine Gay, whose doctoral thesis was found to contain similar violations.
The investigation also uncovered that Harris plagiarized sections from Wikipedia, a source widely criticized for its lack of reliability. In a chapter discussing a New York court program, Harris allegedly copied long sections from the website, trusting its accuracy without further verification.
Additionally, when describing a nonprofit group in her book, Harris lifted promotional material from an Urban Institute report without giving credit.
READ:
EXCLUSIVE: Kamala Harris plagiarized at least a dozen sections of her criminal-justice book, Smart on Crime, according to a new investigation. The current vice president even lifted material from Wikipedia.
We have the receipts. 🧵
— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@realchrisrufo) October 14, 2024