Hillary Clinton’s campaign Chairman John Podesta got detailed information about what Clinton’s primary rival Bernie Sanders was planning in mid-March from the former chairman of the North Carolina Democratic Party.

A March 11 email sent to Podesta from businessman Tom Hendrickson, of Raleigh-Durham, spilled the beans on major plans and polls that Clinton rival Bernie Sanders had in mind. The email was posted Friday night by WikiLeaks.

“Hopefully that will keep [Sanders] out of Charlotte, but if not, we are locked down on a great site.”

Podesta’s email was hacked in March, and WikiLeaks has been slowly releasing the emails every day since Oct. 7.

In the March 11 email from Hendrickson, the former state Democratic chairman, Podesta was warned that Sanders didn’t quite believe he was doing so well, as he was outperforming his own internal polls.

“Their internals had him -12 in Michigan,” Hendrickson wrote.

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But Sanders shocked the political world on March 8 when he won the Michigan primary by 2 points. The win likely boosted the urgency for Sanders to win North Carolina, a Southern state, on March 15.

In their rush to pull off the upset, the Sanders campaign apparently spoke to someone Hendrickson gleaned the information from. Also copied on the email were Huma Abedin, a top Clinton aide; Robby Mook, Clinton’s campaign manager; and Erskine Bowles, the former chief of staff to Bill Clinton.

Yet what really concerned Hendrickson were Sanders’ plans to link Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to Hillary Clinton. Illinois also had its Democratic primary coming up on March 15.

“I just received info indicating that: [Sanders] is going to hit Rahm hard in Chicago tonight in an effort to link his [African-American] unpopularity and trust issues to [Hillary Clinton],” wrote Hendrickson.

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It’s not clear how Hendrickson got the information. But the fact that he had detailed information on Sanders’ polls shows the information was probably not meant to be shared.

“Their internal #s show BS -4 (46-42) in NC (but modeling a 34% black turnout),” wrote Hendrickson. “The poll that I shared yesterday (HRC +33, 62-29) assumed 38% (black) vote. My instinct is that we are closer to a +10-12, with anything better than that being icing on the cake!”

Hendrickson then said where the Sanders camp was scouting to hit in North Carolina.

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“They were checking around to validate their [numbers] and are considering adding a Monday stop in Charlotte,” Hendrickson said. “They were told that their [numbers] were very inconsistent with everything else in the market and were likely wrong. Hopefully that will keep [Sanders] out of Charlotte, but if not, we are locked down on a great site and will have an overflow crowd … We really need to lock [Bill Clinton] down for Winston-Salem & Asheville on Sunday ASAP so that we can get the word out. It should help us swing the extra delegates in the 5, 6 & 10th (congressional districts) and boost turnout in the 11th, which should be performing better for us than current polling indicates.”

And Hendrickson spilled Sanders’ overall strategy, one that he would use all the way to the convention: “Strategically, they are going to stop chasing delegates and focus on chasing a win each cycle in order to drive their $ and stay in the game.”

The information perhaps aided the Clinton campaign in sweeping Ohio, Illinois, North Carolina, and Florida’s Democratic primaries on March 15.