[113]
At least you think that the decision was
not a corrupt one. But he had condemned him; but he had not heard the entire case; but he had
been greatly and repeatedly annoyed at every assembly of the people, by Lucius Quinctius. Then
the whole of Quinctius's judicial conduct was unjust, deceitful, fraudulent, turbulent,
dictated by a wish for popularity, seditious. Be it so; Falcula may have been innocent. Well
then, some one condemned Oppianicus without being paid for it; Junius did not appoint men as judges in the place of the others, to condemn him
for a bribe. It is possible that there may have been some one who did not sit as judge from
the beginning, and who, nevertheless, condemned Oppianicus without having been bribed to do
so. But if Falcula was innocent, I wish to know who was guilty? If he condemned him without
being bribed to do so, who was bribed? I say that there has been nothing imputed to any one of
these men which was not imputed to Fidiculanius; I say that there was nothing in the case of
Fidiculanius which did not also exist in the case of the rest.
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