What began as a small charitable nonprofit founded by a University of Minnesota business school student has again become ammunition for attacks against the record of Kamala Harris regarding crime.
A day after Joe Biden bowed out of the presidential race, as Donald Trump’s campaign recalibrated its attacks on Harris as the Democrat frontrunner, the Minnesota Trump campaign chair, U.S. Rep. Tom Emmer, posted on X that Harris once supported “a bail fund for Minnesota criminals who should have stayed behind bars. One convict she sprung from prison killed a man after Kamala helped release him.”
Fox News followed with a headline saying the “Kamala Harris-backed” organization has “put murderers, rapists back on streets.”
On Tuesday, Trump’s official war room account posted a photo of Harris to X alongside a mugshot of Jaleel Stallings, a Minneapolis man the account describes as being “charged with the attempted murder of two police officers” in 2020.
“[Harris] raised money to bail Stallings out of jail,” read the caption. “Kamala Harris is radically liberal and dangerously incompetent.”
The post fails to mention Stallings was found not guilty by a jury — or that one of the arresting officers was convicted of assault for beating him up.
These political attacks — some misleading or false — stem from a Harris social media post four years ago. After George Floyd’s murder, the vice president encouraged her followers to help arrested protesters by donating to the Minnesota Freedom Fund, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit that pays criminal and immigration bonds for people in Twin Cities jails and detention facilities.
The Freedom Fund was started in fall 2016 by Simon Cecil, then a graduate student completing dual master’s degrees in business and public policy. In the beginning, Cecil had a meager $10,000, half from a University of Minnesota grant program and the rest from an ideas competition. Cecil paid bails capped at $1,000 in the early days — some as low as $50 — for people accused of committing low-level crimes.