U.S. Senate candidate Herschel Walker repeatedly said he worked in law enforcement. There’s no proof he ever did
Despite Walker's assertions over the years, there's no evidence that the Georgia Republican hopeful's claims are true.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution asserts that Walker gave a speech in 2019 in front of a group of soldiers at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, where he said, “I worked for law enforcement, y’all didn’t know that either? I spent time at Quantico at the FBI training school. Y’all didn’t know I was an agent?”
The newspaper reported Monday that it had reviewed dozens of speeches and motivational talks by Walker, who has said multiple times that he’s been in law enforcement. ”I work with the Cobb County Police Department, and I’ve been in criminal justice all my life,” he said in 2017. In 2000, he claimed to be “a certified peace officer.”
The unidentified spokeswoman maintained that Walker was an honorary deputy in Cobb County and three other counties in Georgia, but
The AJC said police in Cobb County had no record of it, nor could its sheriffs confirm it.
Experts note that being an honorary officer carries zero weight in law enforcement.
Despite Walker's many assertions over the years, there is no evidence that the Republican Senate hopeful's claims are true.
thegrio.com
Can someone tell Herschel to just stop lying so much.
He is like Trump, everytime he opens his mouth a lie flies out.