Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Sen. Menendez pleads not guilty; judge won’t delay trial

- By David Voreacos

Sen. Robert Menendez pleaded not guilty Monday to expanded bribery charges that accuse him of accepting gold bars, cash and a Mercedes-Benz in exchange for helping three businessme­n.

The New Jersey Democrat entered his plea in New York federal court, where U.S. District Judge Sidney Stein rejected Mr. Menendez’s request to delay the May 6 trial date. Mr. Menendez, who has served in the Senate since 2006, declined to say after the hearing whether he will seek re-election.

Mr. Menendez, 70, has seen his popularity plummet since he was first indicted in September and stepped down as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Tammy Snyder Murphy, wife of Gov. Phil Murphy, is running in the Democratic primary in June for his seat against U.S. Rep. Andy Kim. The New York Post reported last week that Mr. Menendez won’t seek reelection, citing a person close to him.

“I wouldn’t be announcing it in a courtroom,” Mr. Menendez told reporters in the hallway.

The senator was charged March 5 for a fourth time in a revised indictment that added obstructio­n of justice and other charges. He was charged with his wife, Nadine, and two New Jersey businessme­n, Wael Hana and Fred Daibes, who also entered not guilty pleas on Monday.

The new charges followed the guilty plea of a businessma­n originally indicted with them, Jose Uribe, who is now helping prosecutor­s in a bid for leniency. Uribe said he bribed the senator with a Mercedes-Benz convertibl­e for help in resolving two legal matters.

Mr. Menendez and his wife are accused in the new indictment of directing their lawyers to make false statements to prosecutor­s about the payments. Prosecutor­s said Mr. Menendez knew “they were not loans, but bribe payments.” Last week, Mr. Menendez called the latest indictment a “flagrant” abuse of power by “overzealou­s prosecutor­s.”

While the judge said he won’t delay the May 6 trial date, as the defendants requested, he still must rule on the senator’s request that the Speech or Debate Clause of the U.S. Constituti­on protects members of Congress from prosecutio­n for routine legislativ­e acts.

If Judge Stein rejects Mr. Menendez’s motion, he will likely appeal, which would delay the trial. In 2015, he was indicted on corruption charges and unsuccessf­ully sought dismissal based on speech or debate grounds. Mr. Menendez lost an appeal and the Supreme Court declined to hear the case, but the process took 18 months. At trial, jurors deadlocked and the U.S. later dropped the case.

Under the new indictment, Mr. Menendez now faces 16 counts, including bribery, fraud, extortion, obstructio­n and acting as a foreign agent of Egypt. His wife is charged with 15 counts.

Prosecutor­s accused Mr. Menendez of secretly working on behalf of Egypt by giving Egyptian officials “highly sensitive” informatio­n about personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo; ghostwriti­ng a letter on Egypt’s behalf urging his Senate colleagues to release a hold on U.S. aid; and pushing the U. S. State Department to get involved in stalled talks on a Nile River dam project.

Mr. Menendez allegedly pressed a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e official to protect the exclusive right Egypt gave to Mr. Hana’s company, EG Halal Certified Inc., to certify U.S. food exports as compliant with halal standards.

 ?? Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg ?? Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., arrives at federal court Monday in New York. Mr. Menendez pleaded not guilty to new obstructio­n charges in his Manhattan bribery case.
Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., arrives at federal court Monday in New York. Mr. Menendez pleaded not guilty to new obstructio­n charges in his Manhattan bribery case.

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