The Maui News

Judge rejects Senator Menendez’s claims that legislativ­e immunity protects him from bribery charges

- By LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — Sen. Bob Menendez cannot escape federal prosecutio­n on grounds that he has legislativ­e immunity from four conspiracy charges alleging that he accepted bribes including cash and gold bars in exchange for delivering favors to three New Jersey businessme­n, a judge ruled Thursday.

U.S. District Judge Sidney H. Stein in Manhattan said in a written ruling that charges alleging the New Jersey Democrat accepted bribes from three businessme­n in return for legislativ­e favors cannot be dropped on grounds that members of Congress get extra protection from some laws for what they do in the legislativ­e sphere.

He said criminal intent cannot be protected by wording in the Constituti­on meant to protect informatio­n sharing by legislator­s.

“The fact that this informatio­n sharing is part of a corrupt scheme prevents a characteri­zation of those discussion­s as legislativ­e acts,” he wrote.

Stein said the 2nd U.S. Circuit of Appeals

in Manhattan has made clear in previous cases that “even activity that might otherwise sit comfortabl­y within the heartland of the Speech or Debate Clause — speech on the House floor — is denied protection from the Clause when the speech in not made ‘in the course of the legislativ­e process,’ but rather functions as a ‘whispered solicitati­on to commit a crime.’”

The judge also rejected Menendez’s claim that one charge violates the separation of powers doctrine governing branches of government.

Menendez pleaded not guilty earlier this week to the latest indictment including the four charges and other charges contained in subsequent rewrites of the charging document. He has said prosecutor­s were trying to “pile on” charges against him, but he is innocent and will prove it.

“While we are reviewing today’s ruling and considerin­g our legal options, the court’s decision makes clear that the jury will have the final say on the government’s allegation­s,” Adam Fee, an attorney for Menendez, said in a written statement. “As we have said since day one, the Indictment is a gross distortion of reality, and we continue to have full confidence that a jury will see the truth: that Senator Menendez did nothing wrong.”

A May trial has been set, although lawyers have indicated that any appeal of the new ruling might require the trial date to be postponed for months.

Menendez, 70, held a powerful post as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee until he was forced to relinquish it after he was arrested last fall. He has refused calls for him to resign from Congress.

Menendez was charged, along with his wife and the three businessme­n, though one businessma­n recently pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against his codefendan­ts at trial. The others have pleaded not guilty.

Among other allegation­s, the indictment accuses Menendez of helping one man get a lucrative meat-certificat­ion deal with Egypt while taking actions favorable to the Egyptian government and helping another associate get a deal with a Qatari investment fund.

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