For more repulsive than her photos or her lifestyle is the simple revelation, typical of Dems, of how Rep. Katie Hill used to get by with a little help from the homeless, the poor, and all the other people whom lefties claim to help, but really exploit.
“Prior to marriage, [Hill was] attending college but she was very ambitious and had career goals where she saw herself being financially successful and busy in the work force,” Heslep wrote, adding that he and Hill were each working as restaurant servers before getting married.
Clearly they had some awesome skills. Or, more accurately, connections.
Hill was hired by a non-profit company, People Assisting the Homeless, as a grant writer, in 2009, and quickly began moving up the ranks in that organization.
“We had further talks about what I would do,” Heslep wrote in his complaint. Hill “advised me that she wanted me to be a house husband.”
“Our agreement was that I would stay at home and take care of all of the domestic duties and responsibilities while Hill worked,” he wrote.
It’s okay. The homeless will pay for it.
At some point around 2011, Heslep said in his complaint, Hill was in charge of multiple programs at her company.
One program needed a case manager, and Hill “convinced her employer to hire me,” Heslep said in his complaint.
He worked in that role for about one year, earning around $32,000, court records state.
When that role ended, “I became a case manager for a homeless shelter located in Hollywood,” he wrote. “This second job lasted for only several months when I was moved to another program because the Respondent’s [Hill’s] employer was concerned about nepotism and how it looked that she was my boss.”
“My third position with People Assisting the Homeless was as a Section 8 coordinator,” he wrote. “The third position lasted only several months.”
Heslep was laid off in 2014, “and I have not been employed since that time,” he wrote in his court filing.
“I did not have any special qualifications for these jobs that I was able to get with People Assisting the Homeless,” Heslep wrote.
“It was the Repondent’s [Hill’s] influence that allowed me to work for this non-profit company,” he wrote. “I estimate that [Hill] was earning approximately $180,000.00 annually at the time she quit her job to run for Congress.”
It’s for the poor. It’s all for the poor.
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