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Target: The Senator: A Story About Power And Abuse Of Power

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As “the Senator,” Vincent J. Fumo reigned for nearly a generation, cutting deals and red tape, and bringing in billions of dollars for Philadelphia. He personified a bare-knuckles, take-no-prisoners style of politics that’s no longer socially acceptable, or as prosecutors successfully argued, legal.

Since he was convicted in 2009 of 137 counts of corruption, he’s served his time and kept a low profile. Until now, when he finally tells his story with characteristic candor and insight.

Only now, thanks to formerly confidential grand jury transcripts and FBI files, can we see through the distortions that surrounded the frenzied pursuit – by both the prosecutors and the media -- of the “Vince of Darkness.”

Only now can we paint the full portrait of a brilliant but flawed and deeply complicated man -- how he gained power, wielded power, and lost it in spectacular fashion. It’s a tale of excess, by both the hunted and the hunters.


Ralph Cipriano uses “truth as a weapon against raw governmental abuse of power and news media gullibility. [He] deserves our thanks for peeling back the curtain on the epic destruction of Fumo . . . "

-- From the foreword by Harvey A. Silverglate, author, "Three Felonies A How the Feds Target the Innocent"

455 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 25, 2017

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3 reviews
February 20, 2019
An Excellent Portrayal of a Dynamic Leader

This is a fascinating book about an interesting person. The author is very fair to the subject and sees him through both his assets and his faults. The book is an interesting commentary on the motivations of the press and of prosecutors who wish to claim another scalp.
2 reviews
February 13, 2025
Very compelling read. Cipriano did an amazing job of bringing the story to life, making politics and corruption feel more like a drama than just another news headline. The way he describes power and how easily it can be abused is fascinating, but also kind of unsettling. It really made me think about the idea of justice and whether it was actually served or if the system itself is just as flawed as the people in it. It’s not just about one politician, it’s about how power works in general, which makes it feel really relevant. Definitely one of the best books I've read!
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