A county sheriff in California has expressed strong displeasure after Vice President Kamala Harris’s campaign ad featured him
without his consent. Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux, a veteran with 37 years of service who now leads the California
State Sheriffs’ Association, said he was “really upset” that his image was used in the advertisement without any prior
consultation or permission. Sheriff Boudreaux stated that the footage used in the ad was filmed in 2013 in California’s Central
Valley, during the time when Kamala Harris served as California’s Attorney General. In his official remarks, Boudreaux made it
clear that he does not endorse Harris for president—or any other political office—and condemned the ad for misrepresenting
his stance. “In light of a recent political ad put out by Kamala Harris featuring Sheriff [Mike] Boudreaux, as well as other local
law enforcement, my image is being used without my permission,” he said. “I do NOT endorse her candidacy for any politica
office.” The controversy deepens with additional allegations regarding the handling of data by the Select Committee on January
6. The committee, established by former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is accused of deleting or password-protecting nearly two
terabytes of data just days before the Republicans took over the House last year. According to a report by the New York Post,
the House Administration Committee’s Oversight Subcommittee discovered that during the transition to GOP control in
January 2023, over 100 files were either encrypted or deleted from hard drives. These files were expected to be part of the
archived records that the committee was required to deliver to Republican Chairman Barry Loudermilk of Georgia. Instead of
the promised four terabytes, only two terabytes of data were provided.