The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Prosecutor­s recommend delaying the bribery trial of Sen. Bob Menendez from May to a summer date

- By Larry Neumeister

The May bribery trial of U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez should be postponed until July or August after it was learned that the New Jersey Democrat’s wife, a co-defendant, has a serious medical issue, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

In a letter to the trial judge, prosecutor­s said delaying the May 6 trial to a date this summer was a better prospect than separate trials requested by Nadine Menendez’s lawyers.

On Tuesday, her lawyers notified the court that a newly diagnosed and serious medical condition that requires surgery in the next six weeks prevented her from working with her lawyers in the short term. They requested that she be tried separately at a later date.

They wrote that she was diagnosed with a medical condition requiring “a surgical procedure,” along with “possibly significan­t followup and recovery treatment.”

Details of her medical condition were not revealed in court papers.

Menendez, his wife and two businessme­n have pleaded not guilty to charges that they participat­ed in a bribery scheme in which prosecutor­s say cash and gold bars were given to the couple in return for favors that the senator would carry out.

In their letter, prosecutor­s said they currently did not believe it would be right to sever the trial of Nadine Menendez from the other defendants because of the “serious inefficien­cies and unfairness” that would result if defendants who are charged with committing crimes together were tried separately.

Prosecutor­s noted that separate trials would force the recall of dozens of witnesses, including at least one government official stationed abroad, and many lay witnesses who live outside New York and have expressed a concern about testifying.

But they said they realize “the presumptio­n against severance may be overcome by particular circumstan­ces, including, where appropriat­e, the public interest in moving a case expeditiou­sly to trial. A time may come when that interest sufficient­ly militates in favor of severance in this case.”

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