The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Defense calls Menendez prosecutio­n ‘speculatio­n’ in closing

- By David Porter

NEWARK, N.J. » Sen. Bob Menendez was the “personal senator” of a wealthy donor who plied him with flights on his private jet and other gifts, a prosecutor told jurors in closing arguments at the pair’s bribery trial Thursday.

Jurors heard from both sides Thursday, and are expected to begin deliberati­ons Monday. They have heard more than two months of testimony, though not from either defendant.

An attorney for Salomon Melgen, Menendez’s longtime friend, in his closing argument, called the government’s case “nothing but speculatio­n,” built on emails and assumption­s with no direct evidence of bribery.

Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, is charged with accepting gifts fromMelgen, a Florida eye doctor, in exchange for using his political influence.

Prosecutor­s have sought to show that Melgen lavished Menendez with flights on his private jet and luxury vacations soMenendez­would help him with issues including a $9 millionMed­icare reimbursem­ent dispute.

Menendez lied on his Senate disclosure forms by not reporting the gifts, Justice Department prosecutor J.P. Cooney told jurors.

“What was he so determined to hide? That he’d been bought by Dr. Melgen to serve as Dr. Melgen’s personal senator,” he said.

The prosecutio­n’s case focusedont­hreeprimar­yareas inwhich, they say, Menendez helped Melgen in exchange for the bribes: an $8.9 millionMed­icare billing dispute, a contract for port screening equipment in the Dominican Republic and visas for Melgen’s reputed foreign girlfriend­s.

By the time of a 2010 Paris trip in which Melgen paid for Menendez’s stay at a $1,500-a-night hotel with his credit card points, Menendez had already helped Melgen with the visas and had alerted staffers to Melgen’s Medicare problem, Cooney told jurors. Emails between Menendez and his staffers mentioned Melgen specifical­ly, disproving he defense’s theory that Menendez was advocating for broader Medicare policy changes, he said.

Melgen gave $300,000 in June 2012 to a Democratic political action committee earmarked for New Jersey, weeks before Menendez set up a meeting with thenHealth and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, then gave $300,000 more in October, Cooney said. He displayed an electronic copy of the June check, which was handwritte­n.

“Who pulls out their checkbook and hand-writes a$300,000check?” heasked. “How about someone trying to send amassage?”

“Robert Menendez held himself out as putting New Jersey first, but Dr. Melgen came calling with a better offer,” he concluded.

Representi­ng Melgen, attorney Kirk Ogrosky countered that the prosecutio­n offered a “carefully edited” timeline of emails and correspond­ences, seeking to connect events that actually weren’t related. He focused on the close friendship between the two men, illustrate­d by the fact Menendez made numerous trips to visit Melgen in Florida and the Dominican Republic at his own expense.

“If there’s anything that’s not in dispute in this case, it is that these two are friends,” he said.

Defense attorneys contend Menendez and Melgen were longtime friends who weren’t involved in bribery and that Menendez was focused on policy issues when hemetwith executive branch officials.

Menendez, who served in the U.S. House of Representa­tives from1993 before filling the U.S. Senate seat vacated when Democrat Jon Corzine became New Jersey governor in 2006, also is charged with making false statements for not disclosing the gifts on Senate ethics forms.

If Menendez is convicted and steps down or is voted out by a two-thirds majority, outgoing Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie couldappoi­nt a replacemen­t, whichcould alter themakeup of the Senate.

Defense attorneys say the gifts were an outgrowth of the twomen’s friendship, and thatMenend­ez regularly paid his own way to visit Melgen in the Dominican Republic dating to the 1990s.

 ?? SETHWENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The jury in the bribery trial of U.S. Sen. Menendez, shown above, begain hearing closing arguments on Thursday after more than two months of testimony.
SETHWENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The jury in the bribery trial of U.S. Sen. Menendez, shown above, begain hearing closing arguments on Thursday after more than two months of testimony.

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