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Kirkus Reviews, June 15, 2007
Examining disgraced congressman Randy “Duke” Cunningham’s fall from power, the author
unearths subtle minutiae of corruption that add up to a cautionary tale. With a keen journalist’s eye
buttressed by extensive legwork, Hettena illuminates Cunningham’s political demise in measured, focused
segments that take the reader from a nail-biting FBI raid on his multimillion-dollar mansion in San Diego
to the bleak realities of his current life as a federal inmate serving eight years for his crimes. The book
incorporates interviews with more than 200 people directly or indirectly involved in Cunningham’s life...
In this assessment, such virtues as the
congressman’s prescient rebuke of the Tailhook Association don’t balance the books against sleazy
behavior like the smear campaign he ran during his first election or the hateful outbursts on the House floor
that revealed him to be a sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot. Hettena’s damning but well-rounded
portrait suggests that Cunningham’s 1998 diagnosis with prostate cancer was a significant turning point in
his life, after which he increasingly cut corners in the name of self-interest and allowed himself to be
exploited by a series of ambitious defense contractors who padded his pockets to the tune of $2.4 million.
Not much consideration of the broader implications here, but this chronicle of Cunningham’s
deliberate duplicity certainly has the power to shock.
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