The Palm Beach Post

Menendez rips corruption claims

Senator accuses feds of witness intimidati­on.

- By David Porter and Eric Tucker Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. — Sen. Robert Menendez launched a wide-ranging attack on the corruption charges against him Monday, accusing Justice Department prosecutor­s of misconduct and setting the stage for what is likely to be a confrontat­ional and heated court fight.

The Democrat’s attorneys filed a series of motions to dismiss the 22-count indictment against him and the North Palm Beach eye doctor who allegedly bought the senator’s influence with luxury vacations and campaign donations.

Among other claims, the motions accuse the government of intimidati­ng witnesses and presenting false testimony to a grand jury. They claim prosecutor­s skirted a federal appeals court ruling and presented evidence to the grand jury that should have been off-limits under laws governing legislator­s’ activities.

Lawyers for Menendez suggest the indictment attempts to criminaliz­e ordinary acts of citizens who endeavor to secure access or influence to a politician.

“Officials frequent- ly sell access by spending time with those who pay to attend fundraisin­g events, and they are quick to answer the phone and lend an ear when major donors call,” one of the motions said. “Even presidents have been known to invite major donors to the White House for coffee or dinner, or even to stay the night in the Lincoln bed- room.”

Prosecutor­s also “advanced salacious allegation­s of sexual misconduct, intimidate­d and coerced witnesses in the Dominican Republic with threats of criminal and immigratio­n sanctions, intimidate­d Senator Menendez’s own family members, harassed and abused staff members and other witnesses before the grand jury by asking inflammato­ry questions designed to infect the grand jury process,” according to one filing.

Peter Carr, a Justice Department spokesman, didn’t comment on the specific accusation­s but said the government “will file a response at the appropriat­e time with the court.”

Menendez, a congressma­n for more than 20 years and a member of the Senate since 2006, is charged in 14 counts of the indictment with accepting gifts and donations totaling about $1 million from ophthalmol­ogist Salomon Melgen in exchange for political favors. The gifts included flights aboard a luxury jet to the Dominican Republic and a Paris vacation.

In return, Menendez is accused of advocating for Melgen in a Medicare billing dispute and trying to get the State Department to intervene in a contract dispute involving a business Melgen owned that had a contract to install and operate X-ray equipment to inspect shipping containers at Dominican Republic ports.

Menendez has claimed he and Melgen have been friends for years and that he did nothing illegal. Monday’s briefs characteri­zed Melgen’s generosity as “hospitalit­y” and Menendez’s actions as protected under the “speech and debate” clause of the Constituti­on. That provision protects elected officials from being questioned by prosecutor­s, among others, about their legislativ­e work, and has been invoked by other members of Congress seeking to be shielded from prosecutio­n.

 ?? CHRIS PEDOTA / THE RECORD OF BERGEN COUNTY ?? U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., seen speaking in Ridgewood, N.J., last week, maintains he has done nothing illegal for his longtime friend, Dr. Salomon Melgen of North Palm Beach.
CHRIS PEDOTA / THE RECORD OF BERGEN COUNTY U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., seen speaking in Ridgewood, N.J., last week, maintains he has done nothing illegal for his longtime friend, Dr. Salomon Melgen of North Palm Beach.

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