Sen. Bob Menendez found guilty on all counts, including acting as foreign agent, in corruption trial

Menendez is the first senator to be convicted of acting as a foreign agent.

ByAaron Katersky and Meredith Deliso ABCNews logo
Tuesday, July 16, 2024
Calls for Sen. Menendez to step down after conviction in corruption trial
Sen. Bob Menendez was found guilty on all counts Tuesday in his federal corruption trial.

NEW YORK -- Sen. Bob Menendez was found guilty on all counts Tuesday in his federal corruption trial.

Federal prosecutors in New York alleged the New Jersey Democrat accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes in the form of cash, gold bars, mortgage payments and more in exchange for the senator's political clout.

Three New Jersey businessmen who were also charged, along with the governments of Egypt and Qatar, were the alleged recipients. Two of those co-defendants, Wael Hanna and Fred Daibes, were also convicted of all counts they faced.

The jury deliberated for about 13 hours over three days.

Speaking to reporters after the verdict was read, Menendez said he was "deeply, deeply disappointed" by the jury's verdict, and predicted he would be successful upon appeal.

"I have never violated by public oath, I have never been anything but a patriot of my country, and for my country. I have never, ever been a foreign agent, and the decision rendered by the jury today would put at risk every member of the United States Senate in terms of what they think a foreign agent would be," Menendez said.

Shortly after the verdict was read, Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer called on Menendez to step down.

"In light of this guilty verdict, Senator Menendez must now do what is right for his constituents, the Senate, and our country, and resign," Schumer said.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy also called on Menendez to resign.

"If he refuses to vacate his office, I call on the U.S. Senate to vote to expel him," Murphy said.

Menendez pleaded not guilty to 16 federal charges including bribery, fraud, acting as a foreign agent and obstruction.

Menendez will be sentenced on October 29. The charges he has been convicted of carry the possibility of decades in prison.

The verdict was reached seven years after a mistrial in Menendez's first federal bribery prosecution. He is the only United States senator ever to face federal bribery charges twice and the first convicted of acting as a foreign agent.

Prosecutors claimed Menendez, 70, "put his power up for sale" in exchange for the gold, envelopes stuffed with money, checks to his wife for a no-show job and a Mercedes-Benz convertible. The FBI found gold bars and more than $400,000 in cash stashed in places including jackets and shoes throughout his home, prosecutors said.

"It wasn't enough for him to be one of the most powerful people in Washington," federal prosecutor Paul Monteleoni said during his closing argument on July 8. "Robert Menendez wanted all that power and he also wanted to use it to pile up riches for himself and his wife."

The defense, meanwhile, maintained that all of the actions in the indictment fell within the scope of Menendez's position and that prosecutors failed to prove he took any bribes.

During his closing argument, defense attorney Adam Fee mocked the government's case as "cherry-picked nonsense" and accused prosecutors of "fudging" the facts.

"The only honest verdict I submit here is to acquit him on each count," Fee told the jury on July 9. "His actions were lawful, normal and good for the country."

Menendez declined to testify in his own defense. While leaving court after the defense rested its case on July 3, he told reporters, "From my perspective, the government has failed to prove every aspect of its case."

He said he expected his lawyers to present a "convincing and powerful summation" and that the jury would find him not guilty.

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Prosecutors told the jury that Menendez promised to use his power to help Egypt. According to the indictment, the arrangement was brokered by New Jersey businessman Wael Hana, a friend of Menendez's wife, Nadine, who prosecutors said received the senator's help preserving a halal meat monopoly.

Menendez was also accused of receiving a $60,000 Mercedes-Benz convertible in exchange for help disrupting a case by the New Jersey Attorney General's Office.

Prosecutors said that in the spring of 2019, another New Jersey businessman, Jose Uribe, handed Nadine $15,000 in cash that she used as a down payment for the car. She texted Menendez, "Congratulations. We are the proud owners of a 2019 Mercedes," according to prosecutors. Uribe kept making the monthly payments, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors claimed the senator promised a third businessman, Fred Daibes, that he would interfere with Daibes' federal prosecution and help the government of Qatar by supporting a Senate resolution praising the country.

Daibes' fingerprints were found on the envelopes of cash found at Menendez's home and serial numbers on the gold bars traced them to Daibes and Hana, according to prosecutors.

During the two months of testimony, jurors heard his sister explain why Menendez was caught with wads of cash stuffed into his embroidered congressional jacket: "It's a Cuban thing," Caridad Gonzalez said.

The defense also told jurors that Menendez and his wife, who has also been charged in the case, led separate lives and she had financial concerns that she kept from her husband.

ALSO SEE: Sen. Bob Menendez says he didn't testify because prosecution failed to prove its bribery case

Daibes and Hana pleaded not guilty to their charges. Uribe pleaded guilty and testified against the three defendants during the trial.

Menendez's wife has pleaded not guilty to her charges and will be tried separately in August due to a medical condition. She is battling Grade 3 breast cancer, the senator revealed in mid-May at the beginning of the trial.

Menendez, who has served as senator for New Jersey since 2006, is the first sitting member of Congress to be charged with conspiracy by a public official to act as a foreign agent.

In June, he filed a petition to get on the U.S. Senate ballot in New Jersey as an independent candidate.

He refused to resign, though he did step down as the chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee following the initial indictment in September 2023.

This marked the second time the senator was charged with corruption. A 2015 indictment ended in a mistrial in 2018 after a jury failed to reach a verdict on all counts.

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