-snip- "You may also not have known that while both independent reports, the other one by the Congressional Research Service [PDF], found no criminal wrong doing by ACORN, they did find that O'Keefe likely the broke the law in at least two states by secretly recording the videos which had voice-overs deceptively edited into them later, "in some cases substantially," according to Harshbarger's report, so that it was "difficult to determine the questions to which ACORN employees are responding."'
Until I read this article, I didn't know that O'Keefe had gone in to the ACORN offices dressed like a student in slacks and a button down shirt, not in that "pimp" outfit that you always see in the news videos on tv. He pretended to be the friend of a girl who was trying to get away from an abusive pimp when he went into the ACORN offices. The hooker and pimp costumes were filmed separately, but gave the impression that they went into the offices dressed that way.