Sen. Bob Menendez is indicted in New York
By Benjamin Weiser, Tracey Tully and William K. Rashbaum
NEW YORK – Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey has been charged in a federal corruption indictment, authorities said Friday (22)
The indictment against Menendez, 69, a Democrat who leads the Senate’s Foreign Relations Committee, follows a lengthy investigation by federal prosecutors in New York City and comes nearly six years after his trial on unrelated claims of corruption ended with a hung jury.
The indictment, unsealed in Manhattan federal court, also names the senator’s wife of three years, Nadine Menendez, 56, and a prominent New Jersey real estate developer, Fred Daibes, accusing them of participating in the corrupt scheme. Wael Hana, a long-time friend of Nadine Menendez’s who founded a halal meat certification business in New Jersey, was also charged, as was a fifth person, Jose Uribe, a New Jersey businessperson.
It has been known for some time that Bob Menendez was under federal scrutiny, and he has said he was willing to assist investigators and was confident the matter would be “successfully closed”.
Representatives for Menendez and the others could not immediately be reached for comment on the charges.
The indictment is almost certain to resound in Washington and in New Jersey.
Menendez is already facing at least one Democratic challenger in his planned run for re-election to a fourth term in the Senate, and the Republican mayor of Mendham Borough, New Jersey, has also announced that she will compete for the seat.
If Menendez were to step down before the end of his term, New Jersey’s Democratic governor, Phil Murphy, would be responsible for appointing a successor.
Daibes, who pleaded guilty last year to a financial crime and is awaiting sentencing, is among a small group of builders responsible for converting parts of the polluted Hudson River waterfront into a bustling hive of residential and commercial activity.
Damian Williams, the US attorney for the Southern District of New York, and James Smith, the assistant director in charge of the FBI’s New York office, are to announce the charges at a news conference Friday.
The charges are not the senator’s first encounter with the law. In 2015, Menendez was indicted in New Jersey on bribery charges in what federal prosecutors called a scheme between the senator and a wealthy eye doctor to trade political favours for gifts worth close to $1 million, including luxury vacations in the Caribbean and campaign contributions. Menendez’s corruption trial ended in a mistrial in November 2017, after the jury said it was unable to reach a verdict.
The judge later acquitted Menendez of several charges and the Justice Department dismissed the others.
As chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, Menendez is one of Washington’s most influential Democrats.
He climbed there rung by rung, quickly, a consummate survivor.
The son of Cuban immigrants, he rose to power in Hudson County, a famously rough political proving ground in northern New Jersey, where he began serving on the school board in Union City as a 20-year-old college student. By 32, he was mayor. Menendez won the post after wearing a bulletproof vest to testify against Mafia members and a mentor, William V. Musto, the city’s mayor who was convicted of taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in kickbacks from a contractor hired to build schools.
Menendez served in the state Assembly and Senate before being elected to the US House of Representatives. He was appointed to the US Senate in 2005 to fill the vacancy created when Jon Corzine left the body to become governor.
Soon after being sworn in to the Senate, Menendez faced a federal inquiry led by Chris Christie, then the US attorney for New Jersey, over payments by a nonprofit group that rented a house he owned. It went nowhere, but shadowed him for nearly six years.
-New York Times
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