US Senator Menendez convicted at corruption trial, cementing political downfall

By Luc Cohen

NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. Senator Bob Menendez was convicted on Tuesday at his corruption trial by a jury in Manhattan federal court, completing the once-powerful New Jersey Democrat’s dramatic downfall.

The jury deliberated for more than 12 hours over three days before reaching a verdict in a trial that had taken nine weeks. Menendez, 70, had pleaded not guilty to 16 criminal charges including bribery, acting as a foreign agent and obstructing justice.

The trial centered on what federal prosecutors called several overlapping bribery schemes in which the senator and his wife Nadine Menendez accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, gold bars and car and mortgage payments from three businessmen who wanted his help.

In exchange for bribes, Menendez helped steer billions of dollars in American aid to Egypt, where one of the businessman, Wael Hana, had ties to government officials, according to prosecutors. Menendez also was accused of seeking to influence criminal probes involving two other businessmen, Fred Daibes and Jose Uribe.

Hana and Daibes were co-defendants in the senator’s trial. Uribe pleaded guilty and testified as a prosecution witness against Menendez.

Menendez previously faced corruption charges but that case ended in a 2017 mistrial in New Jersey on a narrower set of allegations.

Menendez stepped down as chair of the influential U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee upon being charged last September, but has resisted calls from fellow Democrats to resign. He is running as an independent for re-election to his seat in November, but is considered a long shot to win.

During the trial, jurors were handed some of the gold bars that federal agents seized from the New Jersey home the senator shared with his wife. Agents also found more than $480,000 of cash, including some stuffed in envelopes inside a jacket bearing the senator’s name.

Defense attorneys argued that Menendez’s advocacy for businessmen in his state was normal activity for a senator, and sought to blame his wife, who prosecutors described as a go-between for bribes. Defense lawyers noted that the gold bars were found in her closet. They contended that the two lived largely separate lives and she kept her husband in the dark about her finances.

The defense also said that the senator for decades regularly withdrew cash from banks and stored it at his home. His older sister testified that he picked up the habit from their parents, who fled from Cuba with cash that their father had stored in a clock.

Nadine Menendez is set to be tried separately at a later date. She has not attended her husband’s trial after being diagnosed with breast cancer.

A FIXTURE IN WASHINGTON

Menendez has been a fixture in Washington for more than three decades. He has represented New Jersey in the Senate since 2006 after previously serving 13 years in the U.S. House of Representatives. Prior to that, he served in the New Jersey legislature and as a mayor.

The conviction handed a victory to the U.S. Justice Department as well as to Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams in Manhattan, who has made weeding out public corruption a priority.

Before being charged, Menendez was not only a powerful Senate committee chair but an important ally in President Joe Biden’s efforts to reassert U.S. influence abroad, rally support and money to help Ukraine, and stall advances by China.

Prosecutors said that after Hana gave Nadine Menendez a “sham job” paying $10,000 a month, the senator pressured a U.S. Agriculture Department official to stop scrutinizing a monopoly that Egypt had awarded Hana’s company to certify halal meat for export.

Menendez was also accused of trying to pressure law enforcement to lay off Daibes, a real estate developer, and Uribe, an insurance broker who testified that he bought Nadine Menendez a $60,000 Mercedes-Benz in exchange for her husband’s help.

Defense lawyers had said prosecutors failed to prove that the gold and cash found in the senator’s home were bribe proceeds.

(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Will Dunham and David Gregorio)