Democrat Congressional Candidate and Georgia darling, Jon Ossoff paid human smugglers operating across Europe approximately $2,000.

Via Got News:

A film company managed by Georgia Democratic congressional candidate Jon Ossoff paid human smugglers operating across Europe nearly $2,000. Ossoff came on as CEO of documentary production company Insight TWI in 2013. Insight TWI made 2006’s “Living With Illegals,” in which a documentary presenter repeatedly hands off company cash to sets of smugglers to make his way from Morocco to England along with waves of immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa.

The film purported to help its audience understand the hardships endured by illegal immigrants flooding Europe, and, though it in no way glamorizes the journey, the 48-minute documentary is effectively a how-to guide for unlawful border-crossings.

Ossoff, a former Democratic congressional staffer, is slated to face ex-Georgia state secretary Karen Handel in a June 20 special election. That seat opened up after Republican Tom Price vacated it to become health and human services secretary. Ossoff has raised an astonishing $8.3 million, with 95 percent of his donors coming from outside of the Peach State.

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The documentary “Living With Illegals,” a title conspicuously absent from the select filmography on Insight TWI’s website, was executive-produced by Ron McCullagh. McCullagh shares that same production credit with Ossoff on recent projects like 2016’s “Stacey on the Frontline: Girls, Guns and ISIS” and 2015’s “Justice!”

In an interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution earlier this month, Ossoff, 30, discussed meeting McCullagh, a former BBC reporter, through mutual friends while Ossoff was still a teenager, saying, “I was just fascinated at that young age by [McCullagh’s] work—because journalism has always been an interest of mine.” Years later, McCullagh would successfully convince Ossoff to take helm of the company.

Ossoff further told the Journal-Constitution that, when he joined the film company, its record was one he could get behind. “I thought [my grandfather] would be proud for me to use some of those resources to invest in growing a company whose work I believed in,” said Ossoff.