Friday, June 5, 2020

Fumo Rips Former Protege Kenney As A 'Liar, Hypocrite & Pussy'

By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Vince Fumo went on Facebook yesterday to rip Mayor Jim Kenney, his former protege who hasn't spoken to him in a dozen years, as a "liar, hypocrite and pussy" for taking down the Frank Rizzo statue in the dead of night.

"Jimmy, you worked for me for decades and yet every day you never cease to amaze me," Fumo wrote. As a state senator for 30 years, Fumo elevated Kenney from a chubby young intern known among staffers as "Baby Huey" to Fumo's chief of staff. Then the former senator got Kenney elected as a city councilman at large.

"You fought for this statue to be at that very location," Fumo reminded Kenney. "How hypocritical of you now to remove it saying that it 'represented bigotry, hatred and oppression for too many people, for too long . . ."

"Wow, did I miss something, did that just happen or were the feelings toward Rizzo the same back when YOU championed this very same statue?" Fumo wrote Kenney. "If they were why did you support it then and not now?"

Fumo, no fan of Rizzo's, then went on to apologize to the citizens of Philadelphia for having to put up with Jim Kenney as their incompetent mayor "because I am the ultimate cause of you being where you are today."

 Kenney holding Rizzo biography
"Jimmy, you and many others knew of my opposition to Frank Rizzo and some of his policies," Fumo wrote. "In fact, I was the only South Philadelphia Italian elected official to ever oppose him so consistently and continuously." 

"However, I find what you did, under the cover of night, I might add (because you are a pussy and could not do it during the day) to be extremely reprehensible for many reasons, not the least of which is that by doing so you violated your oath of office, either when sworn in as Mayor or as a City Councilman."

"You are no longer acceptable to your South Philadelphia neighbors," Fumo wrote. "Because they, unlike you, are real people who take giving their word seriously. People may not have always agreed with them but you always knew where you stood with them."

 "Jimmy, I thought that I had raised you politically better than to be a liar and a thief in the night," Fumo wrote. "But obviously, despite everything I did for you, you betrayed the trust that I and so many other people placed in you. I have to apologize to the Citizens of Philadelphia because I am the ultimate cause of you being where you are today," Fumo wrote.

"Also, I would not have written this response had you not so boastfully posted pride in your actions. You are a liar, hypocrite and pussy. You do not deserve to be in the seat of Mayor of Philadelphia."

A spokesman for Mayor Kenney did not respond to a request for comment.

Sources say that before the statue came down, police were ordered to stand down while vandals attacked and defaced it with spray paint.

"The statue is a deplorable monument to racism, bigotry and police brutality for members of the black community, the LGBTQ community, and many others," Kenney wrote in announcing the predawn topping of the statute. Kenney said the statue's removal was necessary for "healing our communities."

But as a city councilman, Kenney voted in favor of creating the nine-foot-high bronze monument to the former mayor that weighs 2,000 pounds. The Rizzo statue was initially ticketed for a South Philly location, but because supporters said that Rizzo was mayor of all the people, the statue finally wound up at Thomas Payne Plaza.

As a city councilman, Kenney was also co-sponsor of a bill to rename the Municipal Service Building in Rizzo's honor. But the Rizzo family didn't support the proposal, they felt the statue was enough of a tribute, and so Kenney's bill wound up being tabled.

The origin of the Kenney-Fumo feud dates back to Jan. 13, 2006. That's the day FBI, which was investigating Fumo, brought Kenney in for an interview. The feds wanted to know about a $14,661 off-the-books loan that Kenney had received from Fumo's nonprofit, the Citizens Alliance for Better Neighborhoods.

Four days later, Kenney was hauled before a federal grand jury to testify about Fumo's reaction to the loan that was made without Fumo's knowledge by Ruth Arnao, then executive director of the nonprofit.

Kenney came to Arnao for the loan after then Mayor John Street cut off his city council salary, during a political feud over a plan to redraw city council voting districts. When news of the loan to Kenney was leaked to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Fumo "went crazy," Kenney told FBI agents when they brought him in for questioning. 

Kenney, who described Fumo to the feds as "his friend and mentor" told Kenney that if he needed money, he "should have come to him," the feds wrote on an FBI 302 form that recorded the agents version of the meeting with Kenney.

At the grand jury, Kenney testified that he asked Arnao for the loan because  he thought it was "safe politically for me. And I didn't expect to be here talking to you about it," the councilman told the prosecutor.

As recounted in Target: The Senator, a 2017 book I wrote about Fumo, when he left the grand jury, Kenney was furious about getting jammed up in the Fumo investigation. He blamed his mentor for not cutting a deal with the feds, and for supposedly taking down too many people with him.

In a 2015 interview with Philadelphia magazine, Kenney, then a candidate for mayor, described Fumo's "mentorship" as "effective."

"But I haven't worked for the man in 24 years and we have not spoken in close to seven, and that's not going to change," Kenney told Philadelphia magazine. "The patching up of relationships does not include that one."

"So much for Kenney's loyalty to anybody but himself," Fumo responded at  the time. Fumo was later quoted as saying that if it wasn't for him, Jim Kenney would be selling cars.

Fumo's attack on Kenney for acting like "a thief in the night" echoes the complaints of Kenney's South Philadelphia neighbors. They went on the attack after they got a week's notice about a so-called safe injection site that was about to be opened in their neighborhood, at a medical center at Broad and McKean streets, near South Philadelphia High School.

The plan was canceled after furious reactions from Kenney's neighbors, who said they had been blindsided because there had been no community meetings held to unveil and/or discuss the plan. Kenney responded that the location of the site had been picked by Safehouse, the nonprofit that planned to operate the site before the proposal went up in smoke.

But after Kenney refused to meet with his neighbors about the safe injection site, they went to City Hall and booed him at a budget hearing. A South Philly mom was heard throughout the budget hearing loudly and repeatedly calling Kenney "a sneak."

Here's the entire text of Fumo's Facebook post:

I wrote this response on Jim Kenney's FB page last night when he bragged about taking down the Rizzo statue. I didn't know how FB worked. I thought it would appear on my page as well. So I am reposting it here. This is first time I have ever commented on him. Jimmy, you worked for me for decades and yet every day you never cease to amaze me. You fought for this statue to be at that very location. How hypocritical of you now to remove it saying that it “represented bigotry, hatred and oppression for too many people, for too long...” 

Wow, did I miss something, did that just happen or were the feelings towards Rizzo the same back when YOU championed this very same statue? If they were why did you support it then and not now? Jimmy you and many others knew of my opposition to Frank Rizzo and some of his policies. In fact, I was the only South Philadelpia Italian elected official to ever oppose him so consistently and continuously. However, I find what you did, under the cover of night, I might add (because you are a pussy and could not do it during the day) to be extremely reprehensible for many reasons, not the least of which is that by doing so you violated your oath of office, either when sworn in as Mayor or as a City Councilman.

 You are no longer acceptable to your South Philadelphia neighbors. Because they, unlike you, are real people who take giving their word seriously. People may not have always agreed with them but you always knew where you stood with them. Jimmy I thought that I had raised you politically better than to be a liar and a thief in the night. But obviously, despite everything I did for you, you betrayed the trust that I and so many other people placed in you. I have to apologize to the Citizens of Phialdelphia because I am the ultimate cause of you being where you are today. Also, I would not have written this response had you not so boastfully posted pride in your actions. You are a liar, hypocrite and pussy. You do not deserve to be in the seat of Mayor of Philadelphia.

5 comments

  1. If Vincenzo would finally be brutally honest, he would go to Federal Law Enforcement and openly reveal Kenney's Indictable Criminal History, which would include the Johnny Doc Corruption.

    Bring Him Down Vince.

    Philadelphians would erect Your Statue with a sword through the Throat of that Scumbag who you Shepherd to Power.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Who is Kenny and what has he accomplished in two terms other than to fiddle like a pussy when Philadelphia burned like Rome. Delta Force would have easily cleaned out all the looters as they report only to the President not Mayor Pussy!

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  3. I was never a big fan of Frank Rizzo, for several good reasons, but big Frank loved his city and he loved the United States of America, and did what he felt necessary to defend Philadelphia from the anarchists, criminals and urban terrorists of his time. Kenney, a profound embarrassment to this Irish-American, is every bit as weak a leader as Senator Fumo describes him. The Senator, no perfect man himself, loves his city as much as we who comment here. Point being, to be a good Mayor takes guts. You cannot lead from an enclave in city hall or a protected shelter somewhere away from the action, like a co-ed snowflake. Can any of us who were around 45 years ago imagine Frank shying away from the pestilence inflicted on our city over the past week ? What happened to the country I was raised in ? Where the fuck did it go......

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    Replies
    1. I don't think it went anywhere at all. People of color still face Police Brutality far more than whites. I think the fact that our Nation's cities - large and small - have been teeming with millions of peaceful demonstrators for over a week suggests that there are many wrongs that should be addressed. Does the need for this movement also elude you sir? John C.

      Delete

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