Lawsuit Against Hopkins Sparks Heat in Cranston Mayoral Race

Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins and GOP rival Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung square off in Sept. 10 primary

File photo. Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung speaks with reporters.
File photo. Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung speaks with reporters.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
1 min read
Share
File photo. Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung speaks with reporters.
File photo. Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung speaks with reporters.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
Lawsuit Against Hopkins Sparks Heat in Cranston Mayoral Race
Copy

According to Cranston Mayor Ken Hopkins, a lawsuit alleging he took a car without paying for it is baseless, while rival Republican Barbara Ann Fenton-Fung is calling for the State Police and the Attorney General’s office to review the matter.

The Superior Court lawsuit, filed by Davide Broccoli, emerged last week. It charges that Hopkins wrongfully took an MG sports car owned by Broccoli without authorization and without any agreement to pay for it.

After Fenton-Fung held a news conference on Sept. 3 to call for a probe of the claims, Hopkins responded with a statement. He said the assertions made by Broccoli have been rejected by three different courts.

“My opponent is attempting to exploit for her own political purposes a baseless lawsuit filed by a disgruntled property owner and taxpayer Davide Broccoli,” Hopkins said. “Because I would not play the games of my predecessor and give him favorable tax treatment on his excessively overdue large tax payments, he has instituted a meritless lawsuit as a prop for my opponent’s losing campaign.”

Fenton-Fung said many people have asked about the lawsuit.

“This lawsuit alleges the worst forms of public corruption, and we as elected officials cannot stand for this, no matter our political affiliations,” Fenton-Fung said in remarks at her news conference. “The questions raised by this damning lawsuit by Mr. Broccoli deserve full answers.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Emily Halloran says she learned a lot during her internship at Rhode Island PBS
Requests to review Solicitor William Conley’s handling of work related to the Watch Hill Lighthouse come after his law firm’s failure to send legal research and analysis to the federal government
After doctors complained about management, the community hospital said it had been misrepresented
The nonprofit based out of Pawtucket finds food and furniture for people in need
‘Technology guides discovery but ideas drive technology’
SEPT. 27 - NOV. 2
Rhode Island educator Roberto Gonzalez is working to reduce the gender gap in STEM fields
World-renowned animal handler Bill Berloni lets the rescued dogs out to perform
A year after it The Public’s Radio learned that residents could not benefit from a statewide program, the city and Rhode Island Housing officials agreed to close the loophole
Weeks after a disastrous performance upended the 2024 race, voters gathered for a watch party