US Senator Robert Menendez goes on trial for corruption, no jurors
chosen
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[May 14, 2024]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Jury selection began in the corruption trial of U.S.
Senator Robert Menendez on Monday, with a judge excusing dozens of
prospective jurors in a case that could affect the Democrat's political
future and the makeup of the U.S. Senate.
Menendez, who is New Jersey's senior senator, faces 16 criminal charges
including bribery, fraud, obstruction and acting as a foreign agent.
He is being tried alongside New Jersey businessmen Wael Hana and Fred
Daibes in Manhattan federal court. The senator's wife, Nadine Menendez,
has also been charged but will be tried separately. All four defendants
have pleaded not guilty.
U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein said the trial could last through June.
He and lawyers for both sides spent close to five hours on Monday behind
closed doors, speaking privately with prospective jurors who did not
want to serve.
Menendez, 70, sat quietly in the courtroom during this process, only
occasionally reading or speaking with one of his lawyers. Jury selection
will resume on Tuesday.
Prosecutors have accused the Menendezes of accepting hundreds of
thousands of dollars in cash, gold bars and a Mercedes-Benz convertible,
in exchange for the senator offering political favors and helping the
governments of Egypt and Qatar.
The senator allegedly promised to help Egypt obtain arms sales and other
military aid, and helped Hana, an Egyptian American, obtain a lucrative
monopoly on the certification of halal meat exports to Egypt.
Prosecutors also said Menendez tried to help defendant Daibes, a
prominent New Jersey developer, obtain millions of dollars from a Qatari
investment fund, and disrupt a federal criminal case against Daibes in
New Jersey.
FBI agents who searched the Menendezes' home in June 2022 found much of
the cash hidden inside clothing, closets and a safe, prosecutors said.
A fifth defendant, Jose Uribe, pleaded guilty to bribery and fraud
charges in March and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors. The alleged
scheme ran from 2018 to 2023, prosecutors said.
DEFENSE MOTION
Menendez, a senator since 2006, is up for reelection in November and if
acquitted may seek a fourth full term as an independent.
He has resisted calls, including from many Democratic senators, to
resign, though he gave up leadership of the powerful Senate Foreign
Relations Committee following his September indictment.
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U.S. Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) arrives at Federal Court, for
the start of his bribery trial in connection with an alleged corrupt
relationship with three New Jersey businessmen, in New York City,
U.S., May 13, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Democrats and independents who caucus with them hold a 51-49 Senate
majority. Several seats in that majority may be closely contested in
November, and a Democratic seat in West Virginia is expected to turn
Republican.
Nadine Menendez's trial is scheduled for July 8. Her case was
separated after her lawyers said she developed a serious medical
condition that required a long recovery.
Lawyers for Robert Menendez have suggested in court papers that if
he testified he may try to blame his wife.
His lawyers said Menendez could explain what they discussed during
dinners with Egyptian officials and offer his wife's explanation for
why Hana and Uribe "provided her certain monetary items."
The defense team also wants a psychiatrist to testify that the
senator routinely stored cash in his home because of a "fear of
scarcity."
Defense lawyers said this was a "coping mechanism" after the Cuban
government seized his family's assets before he was born, and his
father died by suicide after Menendez stopped paying his gambling
debts.
Menendez also went on trial in 2017, on charges he helped wealthy
Florida ophthalmologist Salomon Melgen in exchange for lavish gifts
and political contributions.
That case ended in a mistrial when jurors deadlocked, and
prosecutors did not retry the senator. He was reelected the
following year.
Several other current and former members of Congress also face
federal criminal charges, including Representative Henry Cuellar, a
Texas Democrat, and former representative George Santos, a New York
Republican.
While New Jersey voters lean Democratic, fewer than one in six
polled in March by Monmouth University and Emerson College
Polling/PIX11/The Hill approved of Menendez's job performance. Even
fewer said they would vote for him as an independent.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Noeleen
Walder, Alistair Bell and Bill Berkrot)
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