Cicero’s prosecution of Verres was motivated by desire for power, ethics, and personal duty. Cicero clearly viewed prosecuting Verres as his path to political success for Cicero claimed, “If you want power, there is a time when you have to seize it. This is my time.” When Terentia asked Cicero how he intended to accomplish this goal, he coolly responded, “By prosecuting Gaius Verres for extortion.” (Harris 66). Furthermore, Cicero’s impeccable ethics played a role in his desire to prosecute Verres, for Verres was unequivocally guilty and had killed people. Similarly, there is a recurring motif of Cicero not defending those he found incredibly guilty (particularly of violence), such as when he refused to defend Catiline on the grounds, that Catiline was “so obviously …show more content…
Provincial governors often had to extort local populations to replenish the funds they spent to win elections and it was very hard for provincials to seek justice due to inherent limitations in the Roman legal system (Boatwright 66). Moreover, Cicero’s journey to Sicily exposed many of Verres’s crimes including executing a Roman citizen without a trial, making false accusations, seizing property illegally, and falsifying