Sen. Pumpkinhead Menendez Employed Registered Sex Offender & Illegal Immigrant

http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/11/05/menendez-corruption-case-could-go-to-jurors/

Menendez Corruption Case Could Go To Jurors
November 5, 2017 9:00 PM

NEWARK, NJ (CBS) — Jurors in the federal corruption trial of New Jersey US Senator Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez could begin their deliberations before the end of the day Monday.

This two month plus long trial in Newark has had its twists and turns. For example, Judge William Walls read his charge, an explanation of the law jurors must abide by, before attorneys began their closing arguments. It usually goes the other way around.

But those closings are likely to conclude Monday, with attorneys for Menendez and co-defendant Salomon Melgin reiterating their bottom line.

The two are friends, and there’s no crime in play here.

Prosecutors, in a likely rebuttal, will argue as they have from the beginning that Melgin plied Menendez with cash and gifts to help him with personal governmental issues.

One key to watch here. Judge Walls’s charge last week included an explanation of a recently redefined statue of what constitutes official bribery.

That redefinition, the result of a Supreme Court decision, could prove pivotal. :mad:

Although as any seasoned court observer knows too well, you can never predict what 12 jurors will do behind closed doors.
 
http://nypost.com/2017/11/06/menendez-lawyer-blasts-corruption-case-as-rehearsed-play/

Menendez lawyer blasts corruption case as ‘rehearsed play’
By Priscilla DeGregory
November 6, 2017 | 2:07pm

​A lawyer for Sen​. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez blasted ​the government’s corruption case against the ​New Jersey​ Democrat in closing arguments on Monday.

“This is supposed to be a search for the truth​,​​ ​not a prearranged rehearsed play by prosecutors and the FBI to get a result that is not supported by the evidence,” Menendez’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell told​ ​jurors​​ in Newark Federal court.

Menendez and West Palm Beach ophthalmologist Salomon Melgen are accused of a bribery scheme in which Melgen ​gifted Menendez with flights on his private jet, all-expense​-paid vacations and campaign donations in exchange for ​the veteran senator using his ​official position to take meetings and calls on behalf of Melgen and his business interests.

Lowell said that all of the 18 counts charged against the men can be explained away by their 20-year friendship which started long before the scheme allegedly began in 2006.

“No such [corrupt] agreement existed and therefore no such evidence was heard in court,” Lowell said asking the jury rhetorically if a friend came to them with an issue they could help with, “would you hesitate to do it for a friend? Would you need to be bribed?”

Prosecutors have argued that Menendez attempted to hide the scheme when he didn’t disclose the gifts from Melgen on Senate financial disclosure forms but Lowell said, “where is there proof that these two men were concealing their relationship?…[prosecutors] can say there is concealment and deceit but the real facts don’t support and actually prove the opposite.”

Lowell argued that the two had a public relationship and that it was an oversight that the gifts from Melgen didn’t make it onto the disclosure forms.

The 12-person jury will likely begin deliberations this afternoon in the ​10th week of trial.
 
http://nypost.com/2017/11/06/deliberations-begin-in-menendez-corruption-trial/

Deliberations begin in Menendez corruption trial
By Priscilla DeGregory
November 6, 2017 | 4:25pm | Updated

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Happy Halloween, you walking Jack O' Lantern!


After more than two months of testimony — including from fellow U.S. Sens. Cory Booker and Lindsey Graham — the bribery case against Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez has gone to the jury.

The 12-person Newark federal jury deliberated for one and a half hours on Monday before calling it a day. They will need to reach a verdict on all 18 counts, including bribery and honest services fraud, by Thursday before one of the jurors leaves for vacation. That would require an alternate juror to take her place — forcing them to start deliberations from scratch.

Judge William Walls promised the female juror she would be dismissed for the trip when the panel was chosen in August, not expecting the trial to have lasted for so long.

If convicted, Menendez faces the possibility of decades in prison and risks being voted out of the Senate.

The senior senator from New Jersey has been on trial since Sept. 6 on charges that he engaged in a years-long bribery scheme with his co-defendant Salomon Melgen, a wealthy ophthalmologist from West Palm Beach.

Department of Justice prosecutors say Menendez, a Democrat, accepted lavish bribes from Melgen, including flights on his private jet, all-expense-paid vacations and $750,000 in campaign donations, in exchange for using his official position to advocate on behalf of Melgen and his business interests, including an $8.9 million billing dispute with Medicare.

Before handing the case to the jury of five men and seven women, the defense argued one last time on Monday that the charges can be explained away by Menendez and Melgen’s 20-year friendship.

“Would you hesitate to do it for a friend? Would you need to be bribed?” the senator’s defense lawyer Abbe Lowell said in closing arguments Monday.

Lowell also claimed that prosecutors conveniently selected four of the 20 flights that Menendez took to Melgen’s home in the Dominican Republic, and also selected certain campaign contributions that Melgen made to Menendez while leaving out other contributions.

“Those [contributions] are somehow the ones that were bribed, when all around there were similar and equal contributions…that’s shifting around to make links where none exist,” Lowell said.

“This is supposed to be a search for the truth, not a prearranged rehearsed play by prosecutors and the FBI to get a result that is not supported by the evidence,” Lowell told the jurors.

The government got the last word in however, and argued that even the best friendships can be corrupted.

“Your life experience tells you these are not the ordinary features of a deep meaningful friendship,” prosecutor Peter Koski said. “Your common sense tells you this was corruption.”

“Their strategy comes down to distraction and misdirection– spend enough time talking about friendship and maybe the jury will forget about bribery,” Koski said.

The jury will return Tuesday morning to resume deliberations.
 
http://nypost.com/2017/11/07/menendez-juror-asks-judge-to-define-senator/

Menendez juror asks judge to define ‘senator’
By Priscilla DeGregory and Kaja Whitehouse
November 7, 2017 | 7:34pm

On their second day of deliberations, the jury overseeing the bribery trial of Sen. Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez asked their first question — and it was straight out of Civics 101.

The question: What is the definition of a senator? :confused: :confused: :confused:

A note passed up to the judge around 3:18 pm said one of the Newark federal jurors wanted to know just that — specifically as defined by Menedez’s lawyer in his closing arguments Monday.

The judge denied the request on the grounds that lawyers’ comments are not evidence.

“Your remarks, although they may be impressive to the jurors, were not and are not evidence,” Judge William Walls told lawyer Abbe Lowell outside the earshot of the jury.

“You should rely upon your individual and collective memories of what was said by Mr. Lowell,” the judge then told jurors.

It’s unclear what remarks the juror was seeking since Lowell never specifically defined the job of a senator in his closings.

Instead, he repeatedly asserted that the political favors Menendez provided Melgen — who is not a Garden State resident — were no different from the political favors he would have offered “a stranger.” :rolleyes:

“He can surely do for a friend he knows and trusts what he would do for a stranger who had the same issue of importance,” Lowell said of allegations Menendez asked the State Dept. to intervene on Melgen’s multimillion-dollar contract dispute with the Dominican Republic.

Lowell also blasted the feds for asserting that the political favors Menendez gave his wealthy West Palm Beach pal were “official acts” of the sort required convict a public official of bribery, like passing legislation or forcing another public official to act.

“He did not have the power to fix the issues in the agencies by himself,” Lowell said, referring to the State Dept. and the US Dept. of Health and Human Services. “At the end of the day, it was their decision to make.”

And Lowell insisted that Menendez only helped Melgen if his problems aligned with the senator’s own policy interests. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

“Every single time you heard that Sen. Menendez — before he acted — had his staff look into an issue, do research, and his staff did that,” Lowell said.

The senior senator has been on trial since Sept. 6 on charges that he engaged in a years-long bribery scheme with Melgen, who showered him with lavish gifts, including flights on his private jet, all-expense-paid vacations and $750,000 in campaign donations.

In exchange, prosecutors say Menendez used official position to advocate on behalf of Melgen and his business interests, including an $8.9 million billing dispute with Medicare.

If convicted, he faces decades in prison and stands to be voted out of the senate.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...z-Trial-as-Jury-Loses-a-Member-456455443.html

Excused Spic Menendez Juror: 'He Was Not Guilty on All Counts'
By Brian Thompson
Published at 9:10 PM EST on Nov 9, 2017

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A juror who was excused from the bribery trial of U.S. Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez on Thursday said most of the jurors favor acquittal and that she would have cast a not-guilty vote for the New Jersey Democrat on all counts.

Evelyn Arroyo-Maultsby spoke outside the courthouse after the jury was unable to reach a verdict after three full days and part of a fourth. The judge in August approved her leaving by this week because she had a trip planned for a family wedding.

Menendez and Florida eye doctor Salomon Melgen are charged with a bribery scheme in which Melgen allegedly bribed Menendez with trips on his private jet and luxury vacations so Menendez would lobby government officials on his behalf.

"What I saw in the courtroom was he was not guilty on all counts and so was Dr. Melgen," Arroyo-Maultsby said. "They are friends. If I was rich and if I had a lot of money and I want to take my friend somewhere, why can't I?"

She said one juror was pushing strongly for an acquittal :mad: and she believes the trial will end with a hung jury.

Arroyo-Maultsby was replaced by an alternate, and jurors will resume deliberations Monday, though the judge said they must start over with the new juror. Alternates sit with the rest of the jury during the trial and hear all evidence and testimony but do not participate in deliberations.

The jury began deliberating late Monday and has put in about 15 hours during three-plus days.

It's unclear what effect Arroyo-Maultsby's comments could have on deliberations. Jurors are instructed by the judge not to read anything about the case or discuss it during the trial, but their actions outside the courtroom aren't monitored.

"They shouldn't know any disclosures by the parting juror, but if they do become aware of it, that potentially taints the deliberations," said Mala Ahuja Harker, a former federal prosecutor in New Jersey.

It is possible the judge could interview each juror individually Monday to see if any had seen reports of Arroyo-Maultsby's comments. Assuming deliberations continue, the introduction of a new juror will shift the dynamic in the jury room, Ahuja Harker said.

She said each jury has a unique dynamic, and injecting a new person changes it. For instance, if there was a dominant voice in the group and others weren't voicing their opinions, adding a new voice could make some jurors more comfortable expressing their opinions, Ahuja Harker said.

Menendez, speaking outside the courthouse, said he has confidence in the replacement juror.

"I have faith that, when the new juror takes her seat on Monday, as I've had faith from the first day of this trial, that she will join with the others in finding us innocent of all the charges,"

The jury is considering a total of 18 counts — both men are charged with conspiracy, violating the Travel Act, three counts of honest services fraud and six counts of bribery. Menendez also is charged with making false statements by omitting Melgen's gifts from his Senate disclosure forms.

Prosecutors contend Melgen made Menendez his "personal senator," available during a seven-year period as needed, such as when Melgen was embroiled in an $8.9 million Medicare billing dispute.

Defense attorneys say the gifts were part of the men's longtime friendship and that Menendez's meetings with government officials were focused on broader policy issues, not specifically on Melgen's problems.

Both men say there was no bribery arrangement. Neither testified during the trial, leaving jurors to rely on emails and witness testimony to assess what their intentions were.
 
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https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/Menendez-Bribery-Trial-Jury-Deadlock-457258573.html

Jury Deadlocked in Bribery Trial of New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez
U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez is charged with accepting free flights on a private jet and other gifts from Florida eye doctor Salomon Melgen in exchange for political influence
By Brian Thompson
Published at 2:48 PM EST on Nov 13, 2017 | Updated 43 minutes ago

Jurors say they are deadlocked in the bribery trial of U.S. Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez.

The note from the jury came shortly after 2 p.m. Monday, hours into a restart of deliberations necessitated by one juror's pre-scheduled vacation. The jurors said they were unable to reach a unanimous decision any of the charges.

The defense immediately requested a mistrial. The judge denied that request and, as is customary after one deadlock, ordered the group back to deliberations. He did let them go home early, though, telling them to "have a good meal, good sleep and come back" Tuesday to continue.

Earlier Monday, the judge had paused deliberations to take time to individually question a number of jurors who had admitted to either reading or hearing something about the case over the weekend. The juror who was dismissed for her pre-scheduled vacation had made statements saying other jurors had said she couldn't send a note to the court advising the jury was deadlocked, and that she was told "her vote didn't count" because she was going to be released.

After questioning the jurors, the judge ordered the group back to deliberations and downplayed defense concern the dismissed woman's comments could have contaminated their discussions.

Menendez is charged with accepting gifts from a wealthy Florida eye doctor in exchange for using his political influence. He is also charged with making false statements for not reporting the gifts on Senate disclosure forms.

Both men deny the allegations. Defense attorneys have sought to show jurors that the two men are longtime friends who exchanged gifts out of friendship. They also contend Menendez's meetings with government officials were focused on broad policy issues.

A prosecutor accused the defense of using a strategy of "distraction and misdirection" and said the two men's friendship doesn't mean they weren't involved in bribery.

Menendez said earlier this month he was convinced he'd be exonerated. :mad:
 
http://nypost.com/2017/11/13/dismissed-juror-causes-chaos-at-menendez-trial/

Dismissed juror causes chaos at Menendez trial
By Priscilla DeGregory and Kaja Whitehouse
November 13, 2017 | 12:10pm | Updated

After just one day of ​​deliberations​ that started fresh with an alternate replacing a juror who left last week​, the jury in the bribery trial of Sen. Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez said they cannot reach a unanimous verdict on any of the charges — raising the specter of a hung jury.

The judge told the Newark federal jury to continue their deliberations and reminded them that any verdict must be unanimous before sending them home to “clear” their heads.

“I want to you cease deliberations go home and​​ have a good meal and a good sleep,” Newark federal Judge William Walls told the jury before dismissing them around 2:30 pm.

“You only began your deliberations as of 11. Go home and get a breath of fresh air and clear your heads,” the judge said.

But the jury’s note expressing frustration with the case comes just days after a dismissed juror revealed conflict within the jury room — and predicted a hung jury.

“It looks like a hung jury,” cane-cutter juror Evelyn Arroyo-Maultsby, 61, told reporters Thursday after three days of deliberations.

Arroyo-Maultsby, who had been dismissed due to a long-planned vacation, said she wanted to acquit the Garden State democrat on all counts — but not everyone agreed.

“If I would have stayed (on the jury), he would have been ‘not guilty’ on every charge,” the Hillside, NJ, resident said outside the courthouse. :mad:

Arroyo-Maultsby also complained that her attempts to send a note to the judge were thwarted by her fellow jurors — leading the defense on Monday to complain of juror “misconduct.” :confused:

The judge disagreed.

“If you are suggesting this is the genesis of a mistrial you are off target way off target,” Judge Walls warned first thing Monday morning.

No way on God’s green earth this judge is going to grant a mistrial.”

Menedez stands accused engaging in a years-long bribery scheme with his rich eye doctor pal Salomon Melgen. He faces decades in prison if convicted and could be voted out of the senate as well.

According to Arroyo-Maultsby, the jury was ready to acquit Menenedez on all counts — except one for falsifying documents — as of late Wednesday. :mad:

On Thursday, Arroyo-Maultsby of Hillside, NJ., changed her mind about the one count and decided Menendez should not even be found guilty of hiding gifts from Melgen on his Senate financial disclosure forms.

Her fellow jurors disagreed and that’s when Arroyo-Maultsby attempted to send a note to the judge about the unfairness of the process — but the other jurors blocked her from doing so, she said.

On Monday, the judge read the note, which said in part: “I find it very unfair that after nine weeks this jury refused to present a verdict that was reached on Wednesday.”

That led to cries of “misconduct” by the defense.

Making matters worse, four of the 12 members of the jury and three alternates admitted to being exposed to press coverage of the case — including the released juror’s remarks — over the weekend.

After questioning the exposed jurors, Judge Walls dismissed the defense’s concerns of misconduct and told the newly formed jury to begin deliberations anew.

“You are now a new jury,” Judge Walls told them slightly before 11 am Monday. “You are to disregard whatever was negotiated or deliberated on last week. You are starting afresh starting anew. Forget about whatever happened last week.”

Menendez made it clear on his way out of court on Monday that he is gunning for an acquittal.

“Clearly there are jurors who believe in my innocence,” he told reporters outside of the courthouse. “I would hope that at the end of the day, after they finish tomorrow, that those who continue to believe in my innocence will stand strong and that at the end of the day no juror will be coerced into a decision.”
 
http://nypost.com/2017/11/14/judge-to-menende-jury-this-is-not-reality-tv/

Judge to Menendez jury: ‘This is not reality TV’
By Priscilla DeGregory
November 14, 2017 | 12:37pm | Updated

Newark federal judge William Walls told a deadlocked jury overseeing the bribery trial of Sen. Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez to keep deliberating — and suggested he may not let them go without a verdict anytime soon. :D

“Take as much time as you need to discuss things,” the famously ornery judge said. “There is no hurry. This is not reality TV. This is real life.”

Judge Walls made the comments after a newly formed jury in the case — following the dismissal last week of a juror for a long-planned vacation — said they could not reach a unanimous verdict on any of the charges.

The jury made the comment Monday after just a few hours of deliberating. But it was latest sign of tension in the jury room following comments last week from the dismissed juror, Evelyn Arroyo-Maultsby, who predicted a hung jury on her way out of court.

“It looks like a hung jury,” juror Evelyn Arroyo-Maultsby, 61, told reporters on Thursday after three days of deliberations.

She was replaced by an alternate juror before deliberations began anew on Monday — but that didn’t appear to resolve the jury’s inability to come to a consensus.

On Tuesday, Judge Walls reminded the newly formed jury that they’re not the first to butt heads. He told them to discuss their views with one another — but also to stand by their convictions.

“I realize you’re having difficulty reaching a unanimous agreement but that’s really not unusual,” Judge Walls said before sending the jury to the jury room around 10 am.

“It’s your duty, as jurors, to consult with one another and to deliberate,” he said. “But do not surrender your honest conviction … solely because of the opinion of your fellow jurors or for the mere purpose of returning a verdict,” he added.

Menedez stands accused engaging in a years-long bribery scheme with his rich eye doctor pal Salomon Melgen.

He faces decades in prison if convicted and could be voted out of the Senate as well.
 
https://nypost.com/2017/11/15/menendez-lawyers-try-jury-poll-mistrial-gambit/

Menendez lawyers try jury-poll mistrial gambit
By Priscilla DeGregory and Kaja Whitehouse
November 15, 2017 | 12:36pm

In a bid to secure a mistrial in the bribery case of Sen. Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez, lawyers for the senior senator asked to poll jurors if the panel says it is deadlocked for a second time this week.

“If the foreman indicates that the jury is deadlocked, the court should question each juror, asking, ‘Do you agree that there is a hopeless deadlock which cannot be resolved by further deliberations?’” the defense said in their Newark federal court filing.

If the jurors’ answer ‘no,’ they might be instructed by the judge to continue deliberating, according to the filing.

The defense filed the motion Wednesday after a re-formed jury, with an alternate replacing a panelist excused last week for vacation, said they were unable to come to an agreement on any of the counts.

The newly formed jury has only been deliberating since Monday, but most of them were deliberating over three days last week as well and their concern over a deadlock followed comments from the dismissed juror, who predicted a mistrial when she was excused.

Menendez, 63, has been charged with accepting lavish bribes — including all-expense paid vacations and $750,000 in campaign donations — from his co-defendant Salomon Melgen, a wealthy ophthalmologist from West Palm Beach. In exchange, he used his Senate office to help Melgen with his business interests, including an $8.9 billing dispute with Medicare, prosecutors have said.

The Garden State Democrat faces decades in prison if convicted and could be voted out of the Senate as well.
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2017/11/16/jury-menendez-trial-deadlocked/

Judge Declares Mistrial In Sen. Menendez Bribery Trial
November 16, 2017 5:00 PM

NEWARK, N.J. (CBS/AP) — A mistrial has been declared on Thursday in the bribery trial of New Jersey Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez after the jury told the judge for a second time this week that they were still deadlocked on all 12 charges.

Walls declared the mistrial after more than six full days of deliberations that had to be re-started midway through when a juror was replaced.

Prosecutors did not immediately say whether they plan to retry the lawmaker.

Outside the courthouse, a choked-up Menendez fought back tears as he blasted federal authorities and thanked the jurors “who saw through the government’s false claims and used their Jersey common sense to reject it.”

“Certain elements of the FBI and of our state cannot stand, or even worse, accept that the Latino kid from Union City and Hudson County could grow up to be a United States senator and be honest,” said Menendez, the 63-year-old son of Cuban immigrants. :rolleyes:

Juror Edward Norris said 10 jurors wanted to acquit Menendez on all charges, while two held out for conviction. Norris said that after the prosecution rested, “in my gut I was like, ‘That’s it? That’s all they had?'” :confused:

The inconclusive end to the 2½-month trial could leave the charges hanging over Menendez as he gears up for an expected run for re-election next year to the Senate, where the Republicans hold a slim edge and the Democrats need every vote they can get.

On Capitol Hill, the top Republican in the Senate, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, called on the Ethics Committee to immediately investigate Menendez for possible violations of the public trust and the Senate code of conduct.

Menendez was accused of using his political influence to help Florida eye doctor Salomon Melgen in exchange for luxury vacations in the Caribbean and Paris, flights on Melgen’s private jet and hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions to organizations that supported the senator directly or indirectly.

Prosecutors said Menendez, in return, pressured government officials on Melgen’s behalf over an $8.9 million Medicare billing dispute and a stalled contract to provide port screening equipment in the Dominican Republic, and also helped obtain U.S. visas for the 63-year-old doctor’s girlfriends.

According to prosecutors, Melgen essentially put Menendez on the payroll and made the politician his “personal senator,” available as needed.

The defense argued that the gifts were not bribes but tokens of friendship between two men who were “like brothers.” In Menendez attorney Abbe Lowell’s closing argument, he used the words “friend,” ”friends” or “friendship” more than 80 times. :rolleyes:

Menendez’s lawyers contended also that the government failed to establish a direct connection between Melgen’s gifts and specific actions taken by the senator.

The two men faced about a dozen counts each, including bribery, conspiracy and the most serious charge, honest services fraud, punishable by up to 20 years in prison. The senator was also charged with making false statements in failing to report gifts from Melgen on his financial disclosure form.

“I want to thank the jury — 12 New Jerseyians — who saw through the government’s false claims and used their Jersey common sense to reject it,” said Menendez.

In a statement, the U.S. Justice Department said it will consider its next step.

After the mistrial, Menendez’s political adviser, Mike Soliman, said “all things indicate” the senator will run for re-election and an announcement will probably be made in the coming weeks. :mad: Menendez, who has been under indictment for 2½ years, has already raised more than $2.5 million this year.

“The way this case started was wrong, the way it was investigated was wrong, the way it was prosecuted was wrong, and the way it was tried was wrong as well,” said the New Jersey senator.

Menendez himself warned outside the courthouse: “To those who were digging my political grave so they could jump into my seat, I know who you are and I won’t forget you.” :mad:

The Republicans have a 52-48 edge in the Senate as they try to push through President Donald Trump’s agenda.

The jury deliberated most of last week, then restarted on Monday with an alternate after a member was excused because of a long-planned vacation. The jurors also said on Monday that they couldn’t agree on a verdict, but the judge asked them to keep trying.

This time, the jurors said in a note that that had reviewed all of the evidence in great detail and “tried to look at this case from different viewpoints,” but they were “not willing to move away from our strong convictions.”

Melgen is already facing the possibility of a long prison sentence after being convicted in April of bilking Medicare out of as much as $105 million by performing unneeded tests and treatments.

The last sitting senator convicted of a crime was Ted Stevens of Alaska, a Republican found guilty in 2008 of concealing more than $250,000 in home renovations and other gifts. His conviction was later overturned because of prosecutorial misconduct, and he died in a 2010 plane crash.

The Menendez case was the first major federal bribery trial since the U.S. Supreme Court in 2016 threw out the conviction of Republican former Gov. Bob McDonnell of Virginia and narrowed the definition of bribery.

In recent months, the McDonnell ruling led judges to overturn the convictions of at least three other public officials, including a former Louisiana congressman. Menendez’s lawyers had likewise hoped to get the case against the senator dismissed, but the judge refused.

Menendez served in the House from 1993 until he was appointed to fill a Senate vacancy in 2006. He has chaired the Foreign Relations Committee and was a major player in the unsuccessful bipartisan “Gang of Eight” effort to overhaul the nation’s immigration laws in 2013.

More recently, he drew the ire of some fellow Democrats when he opposed President Barack Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran and efforts to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba.
 
https://nypost.com/2017/11/16/menendez-to-political-opponents-i-know-who-you-are/

Menendez to political opponents: ‘I know who you are’
By Priscilla DeGregory and Kaja Whitehouse
November 16, 2017 | 4:25pm

Senator Robert "Pumpkinhead" Menendez wasted no time in sending a warning shot to his political adversaries after being freed — for now — from bribery charges.

“To those of you who were digging my political grave so you could jump into my seat, I know who you are and I won’t forget you,” the senior senator said outside of Newark federal court on Thursday.

“I’ve made my share of mistakes but my mistakes were never a crime,” he said. :rolleyes:

Menendez made the comments after Newark federal judge William Walls declared a mistrial because the jury said it remained hopelessly deadlocked following four days of deliberations.

“I find you are unable to reach a verdict and that further deliberations are futile,” Judge William Walls said shortly before 1 pm on Thursday. “There is no alternative but to declare a mistrial,” he said before dismissing the jurors after more than two months of service.

A mistrial means the Garden State democrat avoids both prison and the prospect of losing his senate seat — for now.

The Department of Justice could still retry the case, although a spokesman for the Washington, DC, office handling the case declined to comment on their plans.

“The Department of Justice appreciates the jury’s service in this lengthy trial,” a spokesman said in an emailed statement. “The Department will carefully consider next steps in this important matter and report to the Court at the appropriate time.”
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...etrial-Senator-Robert-Menendez-470157193.html

Feds Want to Retry Sen. Robert Menendez for Corruption, Bribery
By Jonathan Dienst
Published 37 minutes ago | Updated 22 minutes ago

Federal prosecutors are seeking to retry U.S. Sen. Robert 'Pumpkinhead" Menendez on bribery and corruption charges after an earlier trial ended in a deadlocked jury last fall.

The Department of Justice filed its notice of intent Friday to retry the Democrat senator, along with Florida doctor Salomon Melgen.

The DOJ said in a statement that the case "warrants retrial before a jury of citizens in the District of New Jersey. The decision to retry this case was made based on the facts and the law, following a careful review."

The Democrat New Jersey senator had originally been accused of accepting bribes from Florida doctor Salomon Melgen in exchange for using his political influence to help his friend with business disputes and with obtaining visas for the doctor's girlfriends.

Menendez and Melgen contended that the gifts were evidence of the pair's longtime friendship, not a corrupt agreement. :rolleyes:

The judge in Menendez's trial declared a hung jury after more than six full days of deliberations. Ten of 12 corrupt cane-cutter jurors wanted to acquit the senator, but two disagreed.

After the trial, an emotional Menendez blasted investigators for bringing the case against him in the first place. :mad: He also thanked those who helped him raise millions for his legal defense fund. :mad:

Menendez and Melgen faced about a dozen counts in each of their trials, including bribery, conspiracy and honest services fraud. The most serious charge against Menendez, honest services fraud, is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. He was also charged with failing to report the gifts from Melgen on his financial disclosure form.
 
https://nypost.com/2018/01/24/judge-tosses-some-charges-against-menendez/

Judge tosses some charges against Menendez
By Associated Press
January 24, 2018 | 4:23pm

NEWARK, N.J. — A judge on Wednesday dismissed seven counts in the corruption case against Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez and a longtime friend, leaving 11 counts remaining for a retrial this year after the first trial ended in a hung jury.

The seven counts all dealt with alleged bribery involving political donations to the New Jersey Democrat by Florida eye doctor (((Salomon Melgen))).

Defense lawyers had argued those donations had to be tied to specific acts by Menendez to be considered bribes. That’s a higher standard than the one applied to gifts Melgen gave to Menendez over the years.

In his ruling, U.S. District Judge William Walls wrote that the government failed to demonstrate in the seven counts that there was an explicit quid pro quo, or “this for that” agreement. :mad:

The indictment alleged Menendez had conversations and meetings with executive branch officials to help Melgen in a $9 million Medicare billing dispute and a port security contract in the Dominican Republic involving one of his companies.

The defendants argued that Menendez’s actions were aimed at pursuing broader policy objectives and not to benefit Melgen specifically. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Referring to two of the counts, Walls wrote, “The failure of the Government to produce evidence of facts either direct or circumstantial as predicates for proffered inferences evokes Gertrude Stein’s celebrated critique of her hometown, Oakland: ‘There is no there there.'”

Walls’ ruling also rejected Menendez’s and Melgen’s argument to dismiss the rest of the case because, in their view, a 2016 Supreme Court ruling invalidated the so-called “stream of benefits” theory of bribery — referring to gifts given over a period of time.

Combined, 11 counts remain against the two men including bribery and fraud. Menendez faces one count of making false statements for allegedly lying on Senate disclosure forms.
 
https://nypost.com/2018/02/05/state-senate-candidate-wipes-references-to-menendez-from-bio/

State senate candidate wipes references to Menendez from bio
By Carl Campanile
February 5, 2018 | 7:07pm | Updated

andrew-gounardes1.jpg

Andrew Gounardes
Getty Images


Another candidate for a New York state legislative seat air-brushed his past.

Andrew Gounardes, a Democrat running for a state Senate in south Brooklyn, used to boast about being a legislative aide to Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead Menendez of New Jersey.

In 2015 Menendez was charged in a pay-to-play scam — though he recently beat the rap — and Gounardes removed references to a stint with Menendez from his bio on his campaign website.

An archived version for his prior 2012 campaign for state Senate proudly cited his association with the veteran senator.

“While earning his law degree, he [Gournardes] served as a legislative aide to United States Senator Robert Menendez, tackling important issues like veterans’ benefits and child support enforcement. He also co-led an international terrorism investigation into the release of the infamous Lockerbie Bomber,” his archived bio said.

The Post on Monday reported how another candidate for state Senate in Westchester, Assemblywoman Shelley Mayer, omitted a key portion of her work history from her official government site.

Mayer had been chief legal counsel to the state Senate when it was run by Democratic leaders Malcolm Smith and John Sampson, both of whom were later convicted of serious crimes. But that history does not appear in her Assembly bio.

An archived version did mention that she was “chief counsel to the to the New York State Senate Conference in Albany.” And a Mayer campaign spokesman said her prior work for the Senate is now mentioned in her campaign literature.

State Republican Party Jessica Proud chuckled at the latest report of a Democratic candidate running away from the past.

“Is there some sort of Democratic playbook or manual that tells candidates how to hide their past experiences?” Proud asked.

“I guess working for corrupt Bob Menendez is not a talking point for a Democrat running in Bay Ridge.”

The Republicans will remind voters of the Menendez link should Gounardes end up the Democratic Party nominee against GOP incumbent Martin Golden in the 22nd senatorial district, Proud said.

Gounardes replied, “Rather than spending my time talking about my first job out of college, I’m running for State Senate based on my record of community and public service, including co-founding Bay Ridge Cares, serving the neighborhood as a top aide to former Councilman Vincent Gentile, and working on behalf of all of Brooklyn as Counsel to Borough President Eric Adams.”

After five years of investigations and an 11-week federal bribery trial in Newark that ended in a hung jury last November, prosecutors said they would not retry Menendez.

They recently announced they were dropping all charges that Menendez improperly used his office to help a wealthy Florida doctor in his dealings with federal agencies in exchange for trips, campaign contributions and other gifts.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news...471968943.htm

Feds Won't Retry NJ Sen. Bob Menendez on Corruption Charges
January 31, 2018

Federal prosecutors have decided not to retry New Jersey Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez on corruption charges, after a judge threw out some of the counts last week.

Prosecutors filed the motion with the court on Wednesday.

The judge's decision last week forbid the government from seeking retrial on those counts, but left the rest of the government's case intact.

In a statement Wednesday, prosecutors said: "Given the impact of the Court’s Jan. 24 Order on the charges and the evidence admissible in a retrial, the United States has determined that it will not retry the defendants on the remaining charges."

The seven counts the judge tossed all dealt with alleged bribery involving political donations to the New Jersey Democrat by Florida eye doctor Salomon Melgen. Defense lawyers had argued those donations had to be tied to specific acts by Menendez to be considered bribes. That's a higher standard than the one applied to gifts Melgen gave to Menendez.

The judge said the Supreme Court has not so weakened bribery laws as to undercut much of the government's theory of the case. Public officials can still violate the law, he said, if they provide a stream of benefits in exchange for favors, even if there isn't an explicit agreement involving each one.

Menendez's first corruption trial ended in a hung jury last fall, and the government had said last week that it would retry the senator and Melgen.

Eleven counts had remained against Menendez and Melgen, including bribery and fraud. Menendez also faced one count of making false statements for allegedly lying on Senate disclosure forms before the prosecutors' announcement Wednesday.
 
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https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...tenced-17-Years-Medicare-Fraud-474889253.html

Florida Eye Doctor Tied to Sen. Menendez Gets 17 Years for Medicare Fraud
Published 5 hours ago

Salomon+Melgen+Latino.jpg

Salomon Melgen


A prominent Florida eye doctor once accused of bribing Democratic Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez of New Jersey received a 17-year sentence Thursday for stealing $73 million from Medicare by persuading elderly patients to undergo excruciating tests and treatments they didn't need for diseases they didn't have.

Dr. (((Salomon Melgen))) was convicted of 67 crimes including health care fraud, submitting false claims and falsifying records in patients' files. Prosecutors showed that between 2008 and 2013, he became the nation's highest-paid Medicare doctor, building his practice by giving elderly patients unnecessary eye injections and laser blasts on their retinas that some compared to torture.

Melgen, 63, was ordered to pay $42.6 million in restitution to Medicare and could be ordered to pay more in the future.

The sentencing came after four days of hearings spread over December and January, with prosecutors arguing he stole $136 million but his attorneys insisting the proven total was $64,000. U.S. District Judge Kenneth A. Marra said the evidence shows the theft was at least $73 million.

Marra could have given the Harvard-trained, Dominican-born physician a life sentence. Prosecutors had been seeking 30 years. Defense attorneys sought less than 10 and argued that Melgen should be released immediately with a sentence of time served. They plan to appeal the conviction.

Melgen has been in custody since his April 28 conviction. Separately, in November a federal jury in New Jersey hung after a 2 ½-month trial where prosecutors tried to prove Melgen's gifts to Menendez were actually bribes. In return, they said, Menendez interceded with Medicare officials investigating his practice, obtained visas for Melgen's foreign mistresses, and pressured the State Department to intervene in a business dispute he had with the Dominican government.

Menendez and Melgen denied wrongdoing, saying the European and Dominican vacations and other gifts were tokens of their longtime friendship. After a judge threw out some of the charges, prosecutors decided Jan. 31 not to retry the bribery case.

During Melgen's two-month Medicare fraud trial, prosecutors argued that any doctor could make occasional billing mistakes, but Melgen's were too numerous to be honest. For example, Melgen frequently billed Medicare for tests and treatment on the fake eyes of one-eyed patients, as if they were real.

Prosecutors also pointed to tests that should take five minutes or more, yet were done in seconds, making them useless for diagnosis, but enabling Melgen to bill Medicare up to several hundred dollars each, for as many as 100 patients a day.

The doctor pocketed millions more by splitting single-use vials of an expensive eye drug into four doses - there was enough extra medicine in each - and billing the government separately for each injection, they said. Melgen's attorneys argued that this cost the government no extra money, as Medicare would have purchased four vials if he had followed the instructions.

Melgen became politically active in 1997, after treating Florida Democratic Gov. Lawton Chiles, who appointed him to a state board.

He was soon hosting Democratic fundraisers at his 6,500-square-foot North Palm Beach home, and eventually became friends with Menendez. Melgen paid for trips he and the senator took to France and to the doctor's home at a Dominican resort. Menendez reimbursed Melgen $58,500 after the trips became public knowledge.
 
https://nypost.com/2018/02/26/menendez-racked-up-more-than-4-7m-in-legal-fees/

Menendez racked up more than $4.7M in legal fees
By Lia Eustachewich
February 26, 2018 | 3:39pm | Updated

Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez’s high-powered defense team was apparently worth every penny.

The New Jersey Democrat racked up more than $4.7 million in legal fees in his federal corruption case that ended in a November mistrial, according to Politico.

Menendez — who was accused of accepting bribes and gifts from a wealthy Florida doctor in exchange for official action — was represented by a team of lawyers led by white-collar defense attorney Abbe Lowell.

Lowell’s list of clients includes (((Jared Kushner))) and former vice presidential candidate John Edwards.

The pol’s legal fund was bankrolled by a gamut of supporters. :mad:

Supermarket titan Lawrence Inserra and his wife donated $20,000, Politico reported, citing Internal Revenue Service filings. Former (((Goldman Sachs))) partner Phil Darivoff and his wife also gave $20,000.

Big pharma executives and real estate developers also chipped in. The Medicines Co. CEO Clive Meanwell and Nirmal Muyle, who founded Nostrum Pharmaceuticals, donated $2,500 each.

A subsidiary of the (((Kushner))) Real Estate Group donated $10,000 and the pro-Israel National Action Committee contributed $5,000.

The Department of Justice announced last month that it would not retry Menendez after a federal judge tossed out seven of the 18 counts against him and his co-defendant, Dr. (((Salomon Melgen))).

Last week, Melgen was sentenced to 17 years behind bars for Medicare fraud in a separate case. :D

Prosecutors failed to convince jurors that Menendez accepted lavish bribes — including all-expenses-paid trips and private flights — from Melgen.

They claimed Menendez used his power in office to do personal favors for Melgen, including helping his girlfriends secure visas and in an $8.9 million billing dispute with Medicare.

Menendez is seeking re-election this year.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...aign-with-Stop-in-South-Jersey-478056683.html

U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez to Kick Off Re-Election Campaign with Stop in South Jersey
By Associated Press
Published 2 hours ago

U.S. Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez is kicking off a campaign for a third term just two months after federal prosecutors dropped corruption charges against him.

The 64-year-old New Jersey Democrat will hold events Wednesday in his hometown of Union City, where he was once mayor, and in South Jersey.

He is holding a 2 p.m. rally inside the University Center atrium of Rowan College at Gloucester County in Sewell.

Menendez was charged in 2015 with trading his political influence for gifts and campaign donations from a friend. His trial ended in a hung jury last fall, and prosecutors decided in January not to retry him.

He still faces a Senate ethics probe.

Menendez had always said he intended to seek a third term, even when a second trial loomed. :mad:

Bob Hugin, a retired pharmaceutical executive with millions of his own money to spend, is seeking the GOP nomination in the May primary.
 
https://nypost.com/2018/04/26/senate-ethics-panel-scolds-menendez-over-gift-scandal/

Senate ethics panel scolds Menendez over gift scandal
By Bob Fredericks
April 26, 2018 | 5:14pm | Updated

The Senate Ethics Committee on Thursday formally admonished Democratic Sen. Bob 'Pumpkinhead" Menendez of New Jersey over his relationship with fat-cat pal and donor Dr. Salomon Melgen.

In a letter, the panel said Menendez “knowingly and repeatedly accepted gifts of significant value from Dr. Melgen without obtaining required Committee approval, and that you failed to publicly disclose certain gifts as required by Senate Rule and federal law,“ Politico reported.

Menendez had returned to his position as the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, a seat he surrendered after he was indicted on bribery and corruption charges in 2015.

The case against him ended in a mistrial in November after the jury deadlocked.

In January, the federal judge hearing the case threw out the most serious bribery charge against him, and a week later, the feds dropped the rest of the charges.

But Menendez fears his troubles are not over, and that Russia will target him in his bid for reelection in November. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

“I”m a great target for their next efforts,” Menendez said Thursday, NJ.com reported. :rolleyes:

“It’s well known that they are in the midst of engaging in our elections generally as we speak. :rolleyes: The whole system is under assault, as far as I’m concerned,” he said. :rolleyes:

“No one has pushed Russian sanctions harder than I have :rolleyes:,” Menendez said. “So if you can mess around with an election, why not?”

Menendez will face former Celgene Corp. executive Bob Hugin, and is a strong favorite to win a third term.
 
https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/new...tive-Before-Primary-Is-Settled-484189671.html

New Jersey Senate Race Turns Negative Before Primary Is Settled
Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez & Republican Bob Hugin trade shots ahead of next week's primary
By Mike Catalini
Published 2 hours ago

Ads with grainy images and pointed attacks? Check. Millions of dollars in campaign coffers? Check again.

This year's race for a U.S. Senate seat from corrupt New Jersey won't start officially until after Tuesday's Democratic and Republican primaries.

But already incumbent Democratic Sen. Bob "Pumpkinhead" Menendez and Republican challenger Bob Hugin are hurling insults at one another in what will be New Jersey's only statewide contest this fall and an arena in the national fight for control of the narrowly divided Senate.

Menendez is running for his third six-year term after facing little primary competition in his previous two elections. This year he faces publisher Lisa McCormick, who mounted a campaign for governor last year before backing another candidate.

Hugin, who headed biopharmaceutical company Celgene until this year, is largely self-financing his campaign and has broad GOP support against Brian Goldberg, a self-described IT professional and construction company executive.

Voters will be going to the polls just weeks after the Senate Ethics Committee rebuked Menendez for accepting valuable gifts — and failing to report them — to advance the interests of a donor and friend. That, coupled with a criminal corruption case against Menendez that got tossed out, are fueling Hugin's attacks.

In one campaign ad, Hugin shows images of Menendez that look washed out and with the word "disgrace." Hugin's central argument boils down to another frequent tagline: "New Jersey Deserves Better."

Menendez was indicted on charges that he accepted lavish gifts, including luxury trips to Paris, from his long-time friend Dr. Salomon Melgen in return for help settling a Medicaid billing dispute. The case was eventually dropped after a hung jury last year, but the Senate committee admonished Menendez over the gifts.

For his part, Menendez attacks Hugin as a "greedy CEO." Hugin's firm, Celgene, settled for $280 million last year over allegations that it promoted cancer drugs that were not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Celgene did not admit liability in the agreement.

Experts say the sharply worded attacks are a recipe for a negative fall campaign.

"I expect the fall campaign will be nasty - even by New Jersey standards," said Peter Woolley, a politics professor at Fairleigh Dickinson University. "When the candidates go negative before the primary is even held, you can look forward to lots more of the same in the general election."

Menendez has been leading in head-to-head polls against Hugin by as many as 21 points :mad:, though a recent Fairleigh Dickinson University poll showed the senator leading by just 4 points. That poll surveyed 856 registered voters this month and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Mostly, Menendez promotes himself as a check on President Donald Trump, who is unpopular in New Jersey, where Democrats have nearly 900,000 more registered voters than Republicans. His primary opponent, McCormick, promises to be a change candidate.

Hugin says he'll be independent from Trump if elected. His primary opponent, Goldberg, pledges to support the president.

Both McCormick and Goldberg seem to have raised little campaign cash compared to their opponents. McCormick has not filed with the Federal Elections Commission, according to a search of the database. Goldberg has about $4,500 on hand.

That contrasts with Menendez, who raised about $600,000 from April to May, according to the FEC, and has $5.6 million on hand. Hugin raised under $300,000 in the same period and has $4.5 million on hand. He's also loaned his campaign about $7.5 million.

The race is sure to garner attention from outside the state because control of the Senate is up for grabs. Republicans hold 51 seats in the Senate, and Democrats control 49, including two independents.
 
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