-Kamala Harris.
-Go easy on me, kid.
-How you doing?
You good?
The Vice President has still
failed to acknowledge
that it was wrong
to take the position
that he took at that time.
Listen, I mean, talk about
now running for president
and you change your position.
Do you now say that you have
evolved and you regret that?
Because you have only,
since you've been running
for president this time,
said that you had --
in some way would take that back
or you didn't agree
with the decision
that you made over many,
many years.
-I want to bring
the conversation back
to the broken criminal
justice system
that is disproportionately
negatively impacting
black and brown people
all across this country today.
Now, Senator Harris says
she's proud of her record
as a prosecutor
and that she'll be
a prosecutor president,
but I'm deeply concerned
about this record.
There are too many examples
to cite,
but she put over 1,500 people
in jail for marijuana violations
and then laughed about it
when she was asked
if she ever smoked marijuana.
She blocked evidence --
She blocked evidence
that would have freed
an innocent man from death row.
She kept people in prison
beyond their sentences
to use them as cheap labor
for the state of California.
And she fought to keep cash-bail
system in place
that impacts poor people
in the worst kind of way.
-Thank you, Congresswoman.
Senator Harris, your response?
-As the elected Attorney
General of California,
I did the work
of significantly reforming
the criminal justice system
of a state of 40 million people,
which became a national model
for the work
that needs to be done.
And I am proud of that.
-And your response?
-The bottom line is,
Senator Harris,
when you were in a position
to make a difference
and an impact in these
people's lives, you did not.
And the people who suffered
under your reign as prosecutor,
you owe them an apology.
