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Gold Bars and a Luxury Car: Sen. Bob Menendez Charged With Taking Bribes
rfenst Online
#1 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Prosecutors allege New Jersey Democrat accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and gifts from three businessmen



WSJ
Sen Bob Menendez (D., N.J.) and his wife were charged with bribery and related offenses on Friday. Federal prosecutors allege the couple received bribes in exchange for using Menendez’s office to benefit three businessmen. Photo: Mark Schiefelbein/Associated Press
Sen. Bob Menendez and his wife were indicted Friday in a sweeping bribery scheme, with federal prosecutors alleging the New Jersey Democrat accepted cash, gold and other benefits in exchange for using his office to enrich three businessmen and aid the Egyptian government.

The charges, brought by the Manhattan U.S. attorney’s office, mark the second time New Jersey’s senior senator has faced public corruption allegations. An earlier criminal case eight years ago fell apart.

In a 39-page indictment, prosecutors alleged that Menendez, who serves as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and his wife, Nadine Menendez, received bribes starting in 2018 from the businessmen in exchange for favors, including helping influence the outcome of criminal cases and aiding Cairo in efforts to obtain hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. aid.

In the indictment, prosecutors said federal agents found gold bars in Sen. Bob Menendez’s home during a search.
During a search of Menendez’s home in June 2022, investigators discovered over $480,000 in cash—much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in a safe, closets and clothing, including a jacket emblazoned with the Senate logo, according to the indictment. Over $70,000 was found in his wife’s safe-deposit box, prosecutors said. Some of the envelopes contained the fingerprints or DNA of one of Menendez’s co-defendants, New Jersey developer Fred Daibes, or the businessman’s driver.

Federal agents also found gold bars, home furnishings and a Mercedes-Benz convertible worth more than $60,000 that the senator and his wife received as part of the scheme, prosecutors said. Some of the gold bars had serial numbers that indicated Daibes previously possessed them, and the senator at one point performed a Google search to find out how much one kilo of gold was worth, according to the indictment.

Menendez and his wife were charged with three criminal counts: conspiracy to commit bribery, honest-services fraud and extortion. Daibes and two other businessmen, Wael Hana and Jose Uribe, were charged with two counts. The five defendants are expected to make their initial appearance in court on Wednesday.

The senator in a written statement said he was the victim of “an active smear campaign of anonymous sources and innuendos to create an air of impropriety where none exists.”

“The excesses of these prosecutors is apparent,” Menendez said. “They have misrepresented the normal work of a congressional office. On top of that, not content with making false claims against me, they have attacked my wife for the longstanding friendships she had before she and I even met.”

A lawyer for the senator’s wife said, “Mrs. Menendez denies any criminal conduct and will vigorously contest these charges in court.”

Investigators at Sen. Bob Menendez’s home discovered cash hidden in a safe, closets and clothing, including a jacket emblazoned with the Senate logo, according to the indictment.
A spokeswoman for Hana said, “We are still reviewing the charges but based upon our initial review, they have absolutely no merit.” A lawyer for Daibes said, “Based upon our review, we are confident that Mr. Daibes will be completely exonerated of all charges.”

A lawyer for Uribe and a representative of the Egyptian Embassy in Washington didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Menendez previously faced public corruption charges in 2015, when federal prosecutors alleged he accepted about $1 million in bribes in exchange for helping an ophthalmologist with Medicare-billing disputes and visa applications for his girlfriends. The Justice Department ultimately dropped the prosecution after a trial ended in a hung jury and a judge narrowed the scope of the case.

In the wake of the indictment, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.) said Menendez will step aside as chairman of the powerful Foreign Relations Committee. In a statement, Schumer said Menendez “has been a dedicated public servant and is always fighting hard for the people of New Jersey. He has a right to due process and a fair trial.” Sen. Ben Cardin (D., Md.) is expected to step into the role, just as he did back in 2015 when Menendez temporarily stepped aside as the top Democrat on the panel after his previous indictment.

New Jersey isn’t considered a competitive Senate race next year, and it is still seen as leaning strongly Democratic if Menendez were to resign. If the seat were to become vacant, Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy would appoint a senator to serve until an election is held.

In the latest indictment, Menendez is accused of passing along sensitive U.S. information and taking other steps to aid the Egyptian government, including its efforts to secure military sales and financing. He also allegedly pressured an Agriculture Department official to stop opposing a lucrative monopoly that Cairo had awarded Hana’s business to handle the certification of all halal meat exported from the U.S. to Egypt.

The contract had upset other U.S. halal certifiers and disrupted the market. But the monopoly also provided Hana with money to bribe Menendez and fund a no-show job to his wife, prosecutors alleged.

“It might be a fantastic 2019 all the way around,” Nadine Menendez wrote in a text to the senator after learning Hana had won the contract, according to the indictment.

Nadine, who had been friends with Hana for many years, began dating Menendez in early 2018. They married in October 2020.

As the bribes continued, she and Hana worked as go-betweens, relaying requests from Cairo to the senator and arranging a meeting in his Washington, D.C., office with Egyptian military officials, prosecutors said. Menendez also secretly helped craft a letter that Egypt intended to send to members of the Senate that lobbied for the release of $300 million in U.S. aid, prosecutors said.

Closer to home, prosecutors said Menendez, who has served in the Senate since 2006, used his position to try to pressure a senior prosecutor in the New Jersey attorney general’s office to obtain a favorable outcome in criminal matters involving an associate and a relative of Uribe. In return, during a meetup in a parking lot, Uribe gave Nadine Menendez $15,000 in cash, some of which she used to buy the convertible, prosecutors said.

“Congratulations mon amour de la vie, we are the proud owners of a 2019 Mercedes,” she later texted the senator after the purchase, according to the indictment.

Menendez also attempted to aid Daibes as he faced federal bank fraud charges by calling a high-ranking official in the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey who supervised the case, prosecutors alleged. The indictment said Daibes didn’t receive better treatment as a result of Menendez’s attempts to intervene. Daibes ultimately pleaded guilty in 2022 to one count of making false entries to deceive a bank, in exchange for prosecutors not seeking a prison term.

Much of the alleged scheming took place over dinners at restaurants in New York, New Jersey and Washington, D.C., and, on at least one occasion, included a celebratory champagne toast, prosecutors said.

The defendants also exchanged thousands of text messages, prosecutors said, including some in 2019 in which Nadine Menendez showed impatience over not receiving payments in a timely manner from the businessmen as she tried to stay current on her mortgage payments.

“I am soooooo upset,” she texted the senator after Hana failed to give her an envelope with money, according to the indictment.

At a press conference Friday, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams noted that Menendez’s official public website states that as a senator he cannot compel an agency to act in favor of a constituent, influence private business matters or intervene in criminal matters.

“We allege that behind the scenes Sen. Menendez was doing those things for certain people—the people who were bribing him and his wife,” said Williams, adding that the investigation was ongoing.

ZRX1200 Online
#2 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,627
You had me at New Jersey.
Ram27 Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 04-30-2005
Posts: 49,042
Governor Murphy has asked him to resign.

NO chance of that happening.
rfenst Online
#4 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Robert Menendez and the Gold Bars

New Jersey’s senior Senator is indicted again for bribery and fraud.



WSJ Editorial Board

New Jersey Sen. Robert Menendez narrowly escaped a bribery conviction six years ago, so it’s hard to believe he’d tempt fate again. But there he was in the 39 pages of a federal indictment that prosecutors unveiled on Friday, with details that include gold bars and envelopes of cash.

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York charged Mr. Menendez and his wife Nadine with conspiracy to commit bribery, honest-services fraud and extortion. These charges appear stronger than those prosecutors brought against the Senator in 2015, but proving public corruption cases has become harder.

The Supreme Court in its landmark 2016 McDonnell decision narrowed the definition of honest-services fraud and bribery. The federal statute says a public official cannot “receive or accept anything of value” in exchange for “performance of any official act.” The Justices clarified that “an official act” must “involve a formal exercise of government power.” A typical meeting or phone call doesn’t count.

The first indictment accused the Senator of interceding for a physician friend in a Medicare dispute in return for campaign donations and luxury trips. But campaign contributions and lobbying for constituents are intrinsic to representative government, and prosecutors didn’t prove Mr. Menendez took an “official act.” The trial resulted in a hung jury.

In the new indictment, the payments that Mr. Menendez and his wife received appear to have been intended as bribes. But it’s less clear whether the Senator’s actions meet the legal definition of official acts.

The indictment says Mr. Menendez in his position as the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee urged his colleagues to support military aid to Egypt. In return, Egyptian officials allegedly granted his wife’s friend, Wael Hana, an exclusive monopoly on certification of halal-compliant U.S. food exports to Egypt.

Mr. Hana then allegedly funneled money to Mr. Menendez and his wife. Two days after Mr. Menendez held a private meeting with an Egyptian official, Mr. Hana purchased 22 one-ounce gold bars, two of which were found at the Senator’s residence, the indictment says.

Prosecutors also allege that Mr. Menendez pressed U.S. and New Jersey prosecutors to go easy on business associates of Mr. Hana in return for gold, cash and a Mercedes-Benz vehicle. “Over $480,000 in cash—much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing, closets, and a safe—was discovered in the home,” the indictment says. In January 2022, Mr. Menendez “performed a Google search for ‘kilo of gold price.’”

Yet the indictment also acknowledges that Mr. Menendez’s “advice and pressure” on prosecutors didn’t change the outcome of the Hana associates’ cases. Writing letters and meeting with foreign dignitaries is also a normal part of Mr. Menendez’s job, and nothing in the indictment shows his intercessions resulted in Egypt receiving more military aid.

Prosecutors have struck out in recent public corruption cases, and every defendant is innocent until proven guilty. Voters can render their own judgment next November when Mr. Menendez faces re-election. The Senator’s indictment history may be too much even for New Jersey.
ZRX1200 Online
#5 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,627
Yeah I find it humorous…..many fields are way more subject to this that deal with the government than work for them. I have to go through yearly training, and I’m subject to random drug tests. You’d think anyone serving state or federally elected offices would be under tighter scrutiny.
Mr. Jones Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,434
Ur about "AS TIGHT W/$$$ AS THEY COME" dude...

You still have your first $100 bill MOUNTED in a picture frame In your library/ study... along with
"fresh pee 1-800 - numbers" on SPEED DIAL
rfenst Online
#7 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Opinion Democrats need to shove Menendez off the stage fog
WAPO

Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) is only two indictments short of four-time indicted former president Donald Trump. Previously indicted in 2015 on federal corruption charges, Menendez was spared by a hung jury in 2017. His new indictment, even in 2023, still manages to shock.

The Post reports, “Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and his wife Nadine have been indicted on bribery charges, Justice Department officials announced Friday, detailing what officials said was a corrupt scheme involving gold bars, stacks of cash and using the senator’s powerful position to secretly benefit the Egyptian government.”

Some choice details from the indictment: “Over $480,000 in cash — much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing, closets, and a safe — was found in the home,” in addition to more than $70,000 in the safe-deposit box of Menendez’s wife. And in the sort of tidbit one usually gets only on TV shows, prosecutors say some of the envelopes had the fingerprints or DNA of co-defendant and real estate developer Fred Daibes “or his driver.”

Although Menendez’s indictment compelled him under Senate rules to step down as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he remains on the committee despite the indictment’s alleging he “provided sensitive U.S. Government information and took other steps that secretly aided the Government of Egypt.” Staying on the committee is untenable.

In a statement that, frankly, sounded Trumpian in its grievance and grandiosity, Menendez lashed out at prosecutors and shamefully played the discrimination card. (“Those behind this campaign simply cannot accept that a first-generation Latino American from humble beginnings could rise to be a U.S. Senator and serve with honor and distinction.”) His outrageous accusation ignores five other Latino Americans in the Senate.

The Democratic senator’s indictment refutes the GOP’s enraged allegations — on full display Wednesday in House Republicans’ interrogation of Attorney General Merrick Garland over the indictment of Hunter Biden — that the Justice Department has been “weaponized” against Republicans.

Yet this is a moment of choosing for Democrats. Unlike their GOP counterparts, they should not feel compelled to cover their eyes and ears when one of their own appears to be caught red-handed.

Democrats, the only party still adhering to minimal standards expected in a democracy, should not stand by Menendez silently. Sure, Republicans have refused to force out Rep. George Santos (R-N.Y.), the epic fabulist who is facing a 13-count indictment, including for fraud and money laundering, to which he has pleaded not guilty. Yes, Republicans are rallying around Trump (despite the 91 charges he faces in four indictments, all of which he is contesting). But that is precisely why Democrats need to shove Menendez off the political stage. If they want to be the guardians of democracy, the rule of law and truth-telling, they cannot mimic Republicans’ partisan hackery.

Let him fight the charges, as he clearly intends to, but not from a perch on Capitol Hill.

Democrats have risen above partisanship before. During the early stages of the #MeToo movement, Senate Democrats pushed out Sen. Al Franken (Minn.), who resigned in 2017 over conduct that was much less egregious and certainly noncriminal, than that alleged against Menendez. They felt obliged to uphold a standard that Republicans would not. One could argue that they acted too hastily with regard to Franken, but at least they understood that partisanship can be too high a price to pay. If Franken was considered unfit for the Senate, surely they cannot countenance keeping Menendez in their midst.

Even if Menendez does not follow Franken’s example and resign under pressure, Democrats should publicly urge him to get out. Fortunately, New Jersey Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy wasted little time calling for Menendez to step down since the allegations are “so serious they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state.”

And to be politically crass, there is zero downside for Democrats to insist Menendez go. Murphy would appoint a successor, and the deep blue state would surely elect a Democrat to fill the seat in 2024, when Menendez’s term is up anyway. Why not do the right thing now, and gain some credibility with voters?

By late Friday afternoon, a batch of Democrats had called on Menendez to resign, In addition to Murphy, at least two House Democrats, Andy Kim (N.J.) and Dean Phillips (Minn.), have called on Menendez to resign. Phillips told CNN: “I’m appalled. Anybody who pays attention, I don’t care your politics, Democrat or Republican, you should be appalled. A member of Congress who appears to have broken the law is someone who I believe should resign.” A group of New Jersey Democratic congressmen and state politicians soon followed.


This is one of those times when doing the right thing is good politics. Other Democrats should follow the lead of Murphy, Kim and Phillips.
Brewha Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 01-25-2010
Posts: 12,201
WITCH HUNT!!
Weaponized prosecutors!!!

Just kidding, I’m a Democrat.
He should resign and we should throw his criminal azz in jail.
ZRX1200 Online
#9 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,627
I agree with Brew.

He didn’t give 10% to the Big Guy.

Hang him
RayR Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 07-20-2020
Posts: 8,918
Every duhmacracy gets the kind of criminal it deserves.
rfenst Online
#11 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Resign and give him due process and trial.
If guilty, lock him up for the rest of his life.
Whistlebritches Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 04-23-2006
Posts: 22,128
rfenst wrote:
Resign and give him due process and trial.
If guilty, lock him up for the rest of his life.



Yep..........just like Joe and Hunter
HockeyDad Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,160
Dump Kamala and add this guy to the ticket for VP.
RayR Offline
#14 Posted:
Joined: 07-20-2020
Posts: 8,918
I've heard being chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee can be a ticket to illicit riches.
Ask Joe Biden.
rfenst Online
#15 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Whistlebritches wrote:
Yep..........just like Joe and Hunter

Yup... if given due process and found guilty at trial.
rfenst Online
#16 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Senate Leaders Need to Break With Menendez Now



NYT

Hopefully, Democratic leaders in the Senate will do the right thing, and this column will be obsolete by the time you read it. I would have written it earlier, but I thought that at any moment, the dam would break and Robert Menendez, the recently indicted senator from New Jersey accused of spectacular acts of treachery and corruption, would be pushed out. Yet here we are, four days after the Department of Justice gave us all a look at Menendez’s cash-stuffed jacket and one-kilo gold bars, and a united front of condemnation has yet to materialize. As I write this, more than a dozen Democratic senators have called on him to step down. Every other Democratic senator — especially the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer — should join them.

It’s true, of course, that an indictment is not a conviction. (Menendez knows this as well as anyone, having been charged with corruption once before but spared by a hung jury.) While he is entitled to another fair trial, he is not entitled to a seat in the United States Senate. As chairman, until recently, of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, he is accused not just of accepting lavish bribes but also, more seriously, of passing sensitive information to an Egyptian businessman with ties to Egypt’s government. This is wrongdoing on a whole other level from what he was previously accused of.

At a defiant news conference on Monday, Menendez insisted he’s staying in the Senate and offered a preposterous excuse for the hundreds of thousands of dollars that F.B.I. agents found at his house. He said he kept it for emergencies, “because of the history of my family facing confiscation in Cuba.” Apparently, Menendez, who was born in New York, wants us to believe that, because of intergenerational trauma, he feels the need to hedge against Communist revolution in America. (Ironically, his family now, indeed, faces government confiscation.) He also claimed to be the victim of racist persecution by those who “simply cannot accept that a first-generation Latino American from humble beginnings could rise to be a U.S. senator” — a deployment of identity politics so audaciously cynical, it belongs in a caustic TV farce, some deranged mash-up of “Veep” and “The Sopranos.”

His refusal to resign is a problem for Democrats both substantively and politically. At the most basic level, it’s hard to see how, given what Menendez has been accused of, he can be trusted to do his job. His continued tenure in the Senate is an embarrassment to the institution and to the Democratic Party, an embarrassment that will only grow more acute as his prosecution proceeds. Republicans, of course, understand that his presence in the Senate works to their advantage, which is why the right-wing senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas declared that Menendez should stay put.

And while Menendez’s indictment demonstrates the absurdity of Donald Trump’s ranting that the Justice Department is rigged against Republicans, it also makes it harder for Democrats to keep the spotlight on Trump’s baroque corruption. Finally, if Menendez somehow fends off a primary challenger next year, he could offer Republicans the chance to pick up New Jersey’s ordinarily safely Democratic Senate seat.

“It’s astonishing, given that kind of evidence, to say you’re not going anywhere,” Senator John Fetterman, Democrat of Pennsylvania, said on Monday evening, a few hours after Menendez’s news conference.

Fetterman was the first Democratic senator to call for Menendez’s resignation. He’s since been joined by several others, including Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin and, most significantly, Menendez’s fellow New Jersey senator, Cory Booker. Outside the Senate, influential Democrats — including New Jersey’s governor, Phil Murphy, and the former House speaker Nancy Pelosi — have also said Menendez should step down.

But the Senate’s top Democratic leaders are so far standing behind him, with Schumer calling him a “dedicated public servant” who “is always fighting hard for the people of New Jersey.” Perhaps Schumer and others are holding their fire so they can try to ease Menendez out behind the scenes, but given Menendez’s news conference, he seems unlikely to go anywhere without a shove. And until Senate leaders denounce him — and, if necessary, make plans to expel him — Menendez’s shame will taint them as well.

When I spoke to Fetterman, he expressed bemused astonishment that some senators have seemed more exercised about his challenge to the Senate’s sartorial traditions than about the allegations of influence peddling by Menendez. “There were people running into the burning building to save the virtue of the Senate over a dress code,” said Fetterman, but when it comes to a stash of gold bars and “wads of cash all over the house,” they’re silent. “It’s confusing,” he said.

Then again, perhaps the reason Fetterman was so quick to speak about Menendez is that he hasn’t yet been acculturated into the Senate’s clubby and insular folkways. Talking to Democrats about why senators haven’t yet lined up against Menendez, I got the sense that turning on him was seen as a grave step rather than a screamingly obvious one.

Whereas for Fetterman, it was an easy call. “It’s just so clear,” he said. “Black and white.” One of his favorite movies, he said, is “Goodfellas,” and he recalled the scene in which Henry, undressing before a closet packed with clothes, pulls stacks of bills from his pants. “It’s literally just like that!” Fetterman said of Menendez. He’s right. So how could there be any doubt that Menendez has to go?

The Senate, said Fetterman, “is a strange place sometimes.”
RayR Offline
#17 Posted:
Joined: 07-20-2020
Posts: 8,918
It's interesting that Fetterman, the Democrats best dressed and most eloquent speaker is leading the charge to kick Menendez to the curb while at the same time is defending Biden against impeachment for even more serious criminal allegations of influence peddling and bribery that "would just be like a big circle jerk on the fringe right”

Fetterman is probably vying for the chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee because his wife told him that's where the money is at.
rfenst Online
#18 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
RayR wrote:
It's interesting that Fetterman, the Democrats best dressed and most eloquent speaker is leading the charge to kick Menendez to the curb while at the same time is defending Biden against impeachment for even more serious criminal allegations of influence peddling and bribery that "https://www.cigarbid.com/Forum/c/members/would just be like a big circle jerk on the fringe right”

Fetterman is probably vying for the chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee because his wife told him that's where the money is at.

Eloquent or not (he sure was last night)- he is dead-on right on this.

Show the Biden evidence in court or at a trial and convict Biden, just like Trump was found "guilty." Then we would impeach Biden, file a similar civil suit against him, and/or put him in jail.

"What is good for the goose is good for the gander."
Stogie1020 Offline
#19 Posted:
Joined: 12-19-2019
Posts: 5,364
rfenst wrote:
Eloquent or not (he sure was last night)- he is dead-on right on this.

Show the Biden evidence in court or at a trial and convict Biden, just like Trump was found "guilty." Then we would impeach Biden, file a similar civil suit against him, and/or put him in jail.

"What is good for the goose is good for the gander."

You know the fallacy in that argument, though. The very people tasked with "finding the evidence" have been, according to multiple on-the-record whistleblowers, failing to actually look for the evidence or ask the very questions that would ever lead to JRB. We are well past the time of "you don't have proof the whistleblowers are right" because the questions weren't asked, otherwise we have heard the answers. And there are numerous documented examples of federal agencies stonewalling requests for records related to Joe Biden's involvement.

So, if "what is good for the goose is good for the gander," i wonder what line of questions the NY DA prohibited their investigators from asking, or what records they were not "allowed" to request/see? None. And we all know it.

Investigation of DJT? - Scorched earth, leave no stone unturned, maximum pressure on everyone possibly involved.

Investigation of JRB? - Let statute of limitations expire on potential co-conspirators, offer co-conspriators light plea deals instead of turning the thumbscrews, make all attempts at preventing evidence from being disclosed.


Yup, perfectly equal...
rfenst Online
#20 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
It's not a fallacy unless all your future hypothetical projections become true.
And, you have nothing to worry about- Jim Jordan and many others are on it just like the Dems were on Trump.
Thus far, I'll wait until a trial before passing judgement.
Mr. Jones Offline
#21 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,434
I'm surprised he ( or his wife) didn't get all liquored up at some social events or tell close friends about all the money...and were not robbed by an insider....

Sounds the an awesome MARK...JUST WAIT till he took a two week vacation and pull in there with a big extermination
Truck...one hour tops...it wasn't hidden very well...
Mr. Jones Offline
#22 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,434
BUG extermination truck.
rfenst Online
#23 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Menendez Co-Defendant’s Curious Path From Bad Deals to a Meat Monopoly

After emigrating to New Jersey from Egypt, Wael Hana faced a string of business and legal problems. Then his friend started dating a powerful U.S. senator.


NYT

Just five years ago, Wael Hana was reeling from a string of bad business deals in New Jersey, having tried to launch a truck stop, an Italian restaurant, a limousine service and other companies without ever hitting it big.

Then, his friend started dating Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey, one of the most powerful Democrats in the United States Senate. Soon, Mr. Hana introduced Mr. Menendez, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, to a growing circle of Egyptian officials, and Mr. Hana’s fortunes took a remarkable turn: He won sole control over certifying all halal food being imported into Egypt, earning enough money to bribe Mr. Menendez with gold bars and wads of cash, prosecutors said.

Mr. Hana, Mr. Menendez and others are now facing charges in what prosecutors have described as a wide-ranging corruption scheme — one that threatens to put an end to the senator’s five decades in politics. But the allegations, if true, also raise a pressing question about Mr. Hana: Was he an agent of the Egyptian government all along, or just a lucky opportunist who stumbled into a position of international influence?

The F.B.I. is investigating this very question.
But a New York Times examination of hundreds of pages of court filings, business records and interviews with nearly a dozen people who knew or dealt with Mr. Hana offered insights into the path he traveled during his bumpy start — and meteoric rise.

Within the span of a few years, he would transform from a debt-laden businessman who could not afford even a $2,000 emergency room bill to an international power broker who boasted about his Rolex watch collection to a diplomat in Cairo.

Mr. Hana was indicted alongside Senator Robert Menendez and his wife, Nadine, in what prosecutors described as a sprawling corruption scheme.Credit...Spencer Platt/Getty Images

In addition to the corruption investigation into Mr. Menendez, the F.B.I. has been conducting a parallel counterintelligence inquiry, according to four people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an active investigation. The review, first reported by NBC News, is seeking to determine whether Egypt’s intelligence service sought to obtain information from Mr. Menendez through Mr. Hana’s friend Nadine Menendez, who married Mr. Menendez in 2020.

Federal agents are also seeking to determine Mr. Hana’s relationship with Egyptian intelligence agencies and when that relationship may have started, two people with knowledge of the matter said.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Hana said in a statement that he was innocent of all charges and that he has cooperated with federal prosecutors by providing them “unfettered access to documents and to his employees.” She added that he voluntarily booked a flight to New York from Egypt “within minutes of learning about this indictment,” leaving his wife and three young daughters behind.

“Wael Hana’s background is a classic immigrant story,” the spokeswoman said. “He has been an entrepreneur who has built several businesses, and he has always acted ethically and legally.”

Mr. Hana, an American citizen, has been on law enforcement’s radar for at least four years. In November 2019, the F.B.I. raided his home and office in New Jersey with a search warrant indicating prosecutors were gathering evidence of potential crimes, including illegally acting as an agent of a foreign government, according to a court filing.

However, Mr. Hana, 40, was not charged with that offense. In the indictment unsealed this September, prosecutors said he was the broker who helped to orchestrate an agreement for Mr. Menendez to steer more American aid and weapons to Egypt. Mr. Menendez is also accused of sending sensitive information about U.S. Embassy employees in Cairo to his wife, who forwarded it to Mr. Hana, who sent it on to an Egyptian government official.

In return, prosecutors said, Mr. Hana and his circle of business associates showered the Menendezes with hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and gold bars, and bribes that included a mortgage payment for Ms. Menendez, a “low-or-no-show” job for her at Mr. Hana’s halal company and a new Mercedes-Benz convertible.

A Key Ally to Egypt: Prosecutors have accused Menendez, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, of taking bribes in exchange for helping protect Egypt’s access to billions in U.S. aid.

Response Among Democrats: In a defiant speech to Senate Democrats, Menendez repeated that he had no intention of stepping down despite calls from many of his colleagues to do so, prompting one senator to float the idea of forcing him to leave office.

Mr. Hana, the Menendezes and the others charged in the case have pleaded not guilty. Last week, Mr. Menendez rebuffed calls for his resignation and predicted he would be exonerated.

In August, a month before their arrest, Mr. Menendez and his wife traveled to Egypt, where the senator met with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

The Egyptian government has not commented publicly. On YouTube, some pro-government influencers praised the facts of the investigation, saying that it showed how Egypt was doing a good job of protecting its own interests.

A humble beginning
Mr. Hana was 22 when he arrived in the United States through the visa lottery system in 2006, a few years after the death of his father, according to a person familiar with Mr. Hana’s background. He started working for a cleaning company and enrolled in English language classes at a community college, the person said.

Right away, he showed an entrepreneurial hustle, creating a trucking business called Elmanhry LLC — the first in a long list of businesses that would appear under his name.

He bought a home in Bayonne, N.J., for $450,000 from a seller who attended the same Egyptian church as he did, the seller said. He appeared to buy the home without a down payment, securing a mortgage for the full purchase price, property records show.

By 2011, Mr. Hana had moved on to the luxury car business, and he approached a Chinese businessman with a proposal. Mr. Hana would negotiate with Porsche and Mercedes-Benz dealerships in New Jersey to purchase new cars on behalf of the businessman, who would then sell them to customers in China. They hashed out the details over dinner at a seafood restaurant in Flushing, Queens, according to court records.

But after the businessman’s company, Bosto New York, wired $3.6 million to Mr. Hana and his partners, they provided only $2.9 million worth of cars, the businessman said in a lawsuit filed in 2012.

Bosto New York won a judgment against Mr. Hana and his partners for the missing $705,000, but Mr. Hana never appeared in court or paid off what he owed, records show.

Soon, Mr. Hana’s legal troubles began to snowball. He was accused in lawsuits of writing bad checks, among other things, eventually racking up a total of at least $890,000 in judgments, court records show.

In 2014, Mr. Hana was charged with driving while intoxicated after police officers said they found him passed out in the driver’s seat of a parked car in Oradell, N.J. When Mr. Hana was taken to the hospital, the police said he threatened them several times, according to a local police blotter.

The lawyer who represented him in court, Andy Aslanian, would eventually introduce Mr. Hana to the tangled web of friends and business associates that would give rise to the indictment against Mr. Menendez.

In interviews, Mr. Aslanian said he took Mr. Hana under his wing after learning that Mr. Hana was alone in the country. At one point, Mr. Aslanian shared his office space with him, and they spent some holiday dinners together.

“I considered him my No. 1 son,” Mr. Aslanian said of Mr. Hana.

At that time, Mr. Aslanian had cause for concern. A hospital had sued Mr. Hana in 2017 for thousands of dollars in unpaid medical bills. And he had missed years of mortgage payments and taxes, according to court records, ultimately resulting in the loss of his Bayonne home to foreclosure in 2018.

Although he struggled financially in the United States, Mr. Hana appeared to have a close tie with the government in Egypt.

He recommended Mr. Aslanian for a job representing Egypt in a 2016 zoning dispute over a building — intended as a residence for Egyptian military representatives and their families — in East Rutherford, N.J., Mr. Aslanian told The Record, a newspaper in Bergen County.

Mr. Aslanian, who met Mr. Hana around 2009 and introduced him to the future Ms. Menendez, Nadine Arslanian, soon after, also made other connections for Mr. Hana. Mr. Aslanian said the three of them would often hang out after work at a French restaurant owned by the developer Fred Daibes — who would also be charged in the corruption case alongside Mr. Hana and the Menendezes.

In November 2017, Mr. Aslanian and Mr. Hana created a company called IS EG Halal, whose purpose was to certify meat as halal, or prepared in adherence with Islamic law. Mr. Daibes would lend financial backing to the project.

Three months later, according to the indictment, their friend Nadine began dating Mr. Menendez.

A sudden rise
Douglas Anton first met Mr. Hana in 2017 through Ms. Menendez, who was dating Mr. Anton at the time. She introduced Mr. Hana as someone who was a relative of “somebody high up in the Egyptian government,” Mr. Anton recalled.

Mr. Anton was never quite sure what Mr. Hana did for work, other than that “he was some kind of liaison with Egypt,” Mr. Anton said.

Behind the scenes, according to prosecutors, Mr. Hana was texting directly with Egyptian military and government officials. Throughout 2018, Mr. Hana was busy setting up meetings to introduce them to Mr. Menendez. The senator began to use his position to benefit Egypt’s interests, the indictment said, including by ghostwriting a letter for an Egyptian official who was trying to persuade other U.S. senators to release a hold on $300 million in military aid to Egypt.

Mr. Hana’s efforts came as Egyptian officials were aggressively lobbying members of Congress to lift restrictions on the aid, which lawmakers imposed in response to the government’s poor human rights record. Officials in Cairo viewed the restrictions as an affront to a nation that has been a partner to the United States on counterterrorism, trade and regional security for years.

Mr. Hana’s connections paid off handsomely in the spring of 2019.

The Egyptian government abruptly awarded his company, IS EG Halal, the exclusive right to certify all American food imported into Egypt as halal, prosecutors said.

The decision caused concern throughout the industry. Mr. Hana, a Christian, had no experience in halal certification. By his own admission, the company was not even operating until it was awarded the monopoly.

In a court filing in 2020, Mr. Hana explained that he won the approval because the Egyptian government wanted to take any halal certification power away from the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist movement that Egypt has vilified as a terrorist group, to deprive it of financial resources.

Because he had no expertise in Islamic law, Mr. Hana wrote, the Egyptian government provided him with imams and veterinarians to train him.

Before securing the monopoly, Mr. Hana wrote, he had another company that was already shipping goods into Egypt on the government’s behalf, taking bid requests from the Egyptian Ministry of Defense’s office in Washington. Mr. Hana said he was also in the process of starting another company that would handle the shipping of everything sold by the U.S. Army to Egypt.

Mr. Menendez would later be accused by prosecutors of calling a high-level official in the U.S. Department of Agriculture to stop the U.S.D.A. from interfering with Mr. Hana’s import business, which had raised prices for meat suppliers worldwide. Previously, the certification in the United States had been performed by a handful of companies.

Prosecutors allege that the senator was motivated to help Mr. Hana because Mr. Hana was using his halal company to wire bribe money to Ms. Menendez.

After the monopoly, Mr. Hana was living large. The company was headquartered in Edgewater, N.J., down the street from Mr. Hana’s new luxury apartment overlooking the Hudson River, in a building owned by the family of Mr. Daibes.

The man who had just lost his home to foreclosure now had enough money to help his friends with their mortgages. In July 2019, prosecutors said, Mr. Hana used his halal company to pay about $23,000 to bring Ms. Menendez current on her mortgage during her own foreclosure proceedings.

But soon, an F.B.I. raid threatened to torpedo it all. In November 2019, federal agents searched Mr. Hana’s home and office, seizing electronic devices, papers, notepads, a photo album and even a gold cigarette.

During the search, federal agents questioned Mr. Hana about contacts he had in Egypt, including with an embassy employee, Mr. Hana said in a court filing. He said his entire family lived in Egypt.

Federal agents also discovered that Mr. Hana’s cellphone contained thousands of text messages with Ms. Menendez, prosecutors later said.

After a few months, with no criminal charges in sight, Mr. Hana asked the prosecutors to return his belongings. Among the seized items were a chain he bought in Italy, two Rolex watches that he said were gifts and a pair of earrings he said he designed for his mother that were worth about $15,000.

“I do not understand why the government would take my jewelry, which I would like to wear,” he wrote in a court filing. It was unclear whether he got his jewelry back.

Under indictment

By 2020, federal officials said Mr. Hana’s halal company had essentially become an Egyptian state entity, winning an expanded monopoly to control the certification process for all food and beverages shipped to Egypt from anywhere in the world.

As his business prospered, prosecutors said, Mr. Hana made time to ensure that Ms. Menendez was placated. In June 2021, he bought 22 gold bars with unique serial numbers, valued at a total of about $40,000, according to prosecutors. Two of the gold bars were later found in the Menendez home by federal agents, prosecutors said.

The rapid expansion of his business led Mr. Hana to travel frequently, opening offices in Uruguay, India, Brazil, Egypt and New Zealand. Photos posted on the internet show him meeting with ambassadors and dignitaries around the world to discuss trade with Egypt.

Last year, Mr. Hana made a memorable impression on one former Western diplomat in Cairo. The diplomat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said Mr. Hana was an hour late to their lunch with no explanation or apology. They discussed the halal certification process, and Mr. Hana mentioned countries that were complaining about the prices he was charging.

The diplomat thought Mr. Hana was such a character that he wrote about it in his diary: He was “wearing an absurdly expensive suit, gold Rolex, gold rings. Spoke confidently, but softly, so you had to really listen.”

“In our second lunch,” he added, “he spent about twenty minutes telling me about his Rolex collection.”

After he was indicted, it was a decidedly less flashy Mr. Hana who appeared before a judge in Federal District Court in Manhattan this past week, dressed in a baggy blue shirt and slacks.

He was released the same day after securing a $5 million bond — and agreeing to wear a GPS monitoring device.
Brewha Offline
#24 Posted:
Joined: 01-25-2010
Posts: 12,201
He needs to switch parties - so the MAGA Right will proclaim his innocence.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#25 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,498
Brewha wrote:
He needs to switch parties - so the MAGA Right will proclaim his innocence.


But if he switched parties the DNC would drag him behind their wagons.
rfenst Online
#26 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Guilty or not, he has zero business serving while this is pending. Too much distraction.

Why are the Republicans REALLY encouraging him not to resign?

News reports put his friend's and his friend's driver's fingerprints on some of the envelopes the cash was in. He better come up with proof of legitimate sources for that money and gold fast, or he'll lose it and the case against him.
Gene363 Offline
#27 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,836
rfenst wrote:
Guilty or not, he has zero business serving while this is pending. Too much distraction.

Why are the Republicans REALLY encouraging him not to resign?

News reports put his friend's and his friend's driver's fingerprints on some of the envelopes the cash was in. He better come up with proof of legitimate sources for that money and gold fast, or he'll lose it and the case against him.


Two heads of the same snake. He probbly owes them support for somthing the republicans want to pass.
Mr. Jones Offline
#28 Posted:
Joined: 06-12-2005
Posts: 19,434
There is so much dirt in those articles above...
The MOFO BURIED Eeeeeeeeeeemmmmm' self
And those two Egyptian spies ERRRRR ESSSS PRONTO !!

THAT FAT FUUUC WITH A BASKET BALL NOGGIN WEARING 1970'S SPECS IS DONE FOR...
Brewha Offline
#29 Posted:
Joined: 01-25-2010
Posts: 12,201
I think he is taking too much air time away from Trump....
HockeyDad Offline
#30 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,160
Brewha wrote:
I think he is taking too much air time away from Trump....


That’s reminds me…. Did you hear that thing Trump said? Outrageous!
Brewha Offline
#31 Posted:
Joined: 01-25-2010
Posts: 12,201
HockeyDad wrote:
That’s reminds me…. Did you hear that thing Trump said? Outrageous!

Which one?
It's kinda late in the day, he's prolly hit 2 or 3 by now....



Bet he says he saw Drafters' boobs.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#32 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,498
What favor was called in to sweep this under the rug???


Bob Menendez’s Wife Struck, Killed Pedestrian in 2018



Nadine Arslanian Menendez, the wife of indicted Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), reportedly struck and killed a pedestrian in 2018. She would have been his girlfriend at the time.

Police records of the incident were revealed on Wednesday by the New York Times. Federal prosecutors have claimed that the couple was “given a new Mercedes as a gift” as part of a “bribery conspiracy to cash in on Menendez’s power and influence. Police records indicate the fatal collision badly damaged Arslanian’s Mercedes,” according to NBC News.

The crash happened in the New Jersey town of Bogota. Arslanian was not charged. She told police that she had been driving on Main Street when a man jumped on her windshield. The man was later identified as Richard Koop. Per NBC News:

Koop was found lying in the road with “severe head trauma, bleeding from the back of his head, bleeding from the face, and possible fractured legs and arms” when police arrived shortly after 7:30 p.m., according to police records obtained by NBC News that also said the responding officer described Koop as unconscious and not breathing.

Arslanian was “bleeding from her hands” and had hit a parked car after she struck Koop, police records showed.

“Why was the guy in the middle of the street? I didn’t do anything wrong, you know?” she told police, according to the dashcam video.

In the report, police officers said that Arslanian rescinded her consent to have them search her cellphone.

“Ms. Arslanian originally reported I may search her phone, handed me her phone, then shortly after reported she no longer gives consent for a cellular phone search. I immediately returned Ms. Arslanian’s phone back to her,” one of the officers said.

Police determined that Koop was “jaywalking and did not cross the street at an intersection or in a marked crosswalk.” No record shows if she was tested for drugs or alcohol.

Sheri Breen, a lawyer for the Koop family, has alleged that Menendez’s wife waited to call 911 and “let him lie on the ground and she took some time to sit there watching before she backed up, moved her car again and then drove around him.”

“He just had to cross the street to get to his home when the defendant came barreling down the street and struck him,” Breen said.

The Koop family received a settlement from Arslanian’s insurance company.

As Breitbart News reported, several Democrats have called on Bob Menendez to resign after being indicted, along with his wife, in New York in “connection with their alleged ‘corrupt relationship’ with a trio of businessmen and to ‘benefit’ the Egyptian government.” The indictment also alleges that the senator accepted “hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of bribes in exchange for favors from the businessmen.”

“Under our legal system, Senator Menendez and the other defendants have not been found guilty and will have the ability to present evidence disputing these charges, and we must respect the process,” said Democrat New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. “However, the alleged facts are so serious that they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state. Therefore, I am calling for his immediate resignation.”

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine Menendez arrive for the State Dinner with President Joe Biden at the White House, June 22, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Menendez has said he will not resign and has denied any wrongdoing.

“Since this investigation was leaked nearly a year ago, there has been an active smear campaign of anonymous sources and innuendos to create an air of impropriety where none exists,” he said in a statement.

“The excesses of these prosecutors is apparent. They have misrepresented the normal work of a Congressional office. On top of that, not content with making false claims against me, they have attacked my wife for the longstanding friendships she had before she and I even met,” he added.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2023/10/04/bob-menendez-wife-struck-killed-pedestrian-2018/
rfenst Online
#33 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
DrMaddVibe wrote:
What favor was called in to sweep this under the rug???


Bob Menendez’s Wife Struck, Killed Pedestrian in 2018



Nadine Arslanian Menendez, the wife of indicted Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), reportedly struck and killed a pedestrian in 2018. She would have been his girlfriend at the time.

Police records of the incident were revealed on Wednesday by the New York Times. Federal prosecutors have claimed that the couple was “given a new Mercedes as a gift” as part of a “bribery conspiracy to cash in on Menendez’s power and influence. Police records indicate the fatal collision badly damaged Arslanian’s Mercedes,” according to NBC News.

The crash happened in the New Jersey town of Bogota. Arslanian was not charged. She told police that she had been driving on Main Street when a man jumped on her windshield. The man was later identified as Richard Koop. Per NBC News:

Koop was found lying in the road with “severe head trauma, bleeding from the back of his head, bleeding from the face, and possible fractured legs and arms” when police arrived shortly after 7:30 p.m., according to police records obtained by NBC News that also said the responding officer described Koop as unconscious and not breathing.

Arslanian was “bleeding from her hands” and had hit a parked car after she struck Koop, police records showed.

“Why was the guy in the middle of the street? I didn’t do anything wrong, you know?” she told police, according to the dashcam video.

In the report, police officers said that Arslanian rescinded her consent to have them search her cellphone.

“Ms. Arslanian originally reported I may search her phone, handed me her phone, then shortly after reported she no longer gives consent for a cellular phone search. I immediately returned Ms. Arslanian’s phone back to her,” one of the officers said.

Police determined that Koop was “jaywalking and did not cross the street at an intersection or in a marked crosswalk.” No record shows if she was tested for drugs or alcohol.

Sheri Breen, a lawyer for the Koop family, has alleged that Menendez’s wife waited to call 911 and “let him lie on the ground and she took some time to sit there watching before she backed up, moved her car again and then drove around him.”

“He just had to cross the street to get to his home when the defendant came barreling down the street and struck him,” Breen said.

The Koop family received a settlement from Arslanian’s insurance company.

As Breitbart News reported, several Democrats have called on Bob Menendez to resign after being indicted, along with his wife, in New York in “connection with their alleged ‘corrupt relationship’ with a trio of businessmen and to ‘benefit’ the Egyptian government.” The indictment also alleges that the senator accepted “hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of bribes in exchange for favors from the businessmen.”

“Under our legal system, Senator Menendez and the other defendants have not been found guilty and will have the ability to present evidence disputing these charges, and we must respect the process,” said Democrat New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. “However, the alleged facts are so serious that they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state. Therefore, I am calling for his immediate resignation.”

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine Menendez arrive for the State Dinner with President Joe Biden at the White House, June 22, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Menendez has said he will not resign and has denied any wrongdoing.

“Since this investigation was leaked nearly a year ago, there has been an active smear campaign of anonymous sources and innuendos to create an air of impropriety where none exists,” he said in a statement.

“The excesses of these prosecutors is apparent. They have misrepresented the normal work of a Congressional office. On top of that, not content with making false claims against me, they have attacked my wife for the longstanding friendships she had before she and I even met,” he added.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2023/10/04/bob-menendez-wife-struck-killed-pedestrian-2018/

rfenst Online
#34 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
I have had about five mv v. pedestrian/bicyclist death and a good number more of mv x pedestrian/pedestrian injury cases over the last 30+ years.

So, I would love to read the crash report and homicide report to see what the accident reconstruction indicates and whether it makes sense to me. Also, there was probably a wrongful death claim no matter who was really at fault- and the potential civil court file (if it didn't settle amicably without litigation) may provide additional info. There could have also been a criminal case filed, but dismissed for some reason.

I'll try to find it all and provide links if it is online...
8trackdisco Offline
#35 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,087
DrMaddVibe wrote:
What favor was called in to sweep this under the rug???


Bob Menendez’s Wife Struck, Killed Pedestrian in 2018



Nadine Arslanian Menendez, the wife of indicted Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), reportedly struck and killed a pedestrian in 2018. She would have been his girlfriend at the time.

Police records of the incident were revealed on Wednesday by the New York Times. Federal prosecutors have claimed that the couple was “given a new Mercedes as a gift” as part of a “bribery conspiracy to cash in on Menendez’s power and influence. Police records indicate the fatal collision badly damaged Arslanian’s Mercedes,” according to NBC News.

The crash happened in the New Jersey town of Bogota. Arslanian was not charged. She told police that she had been driving on Main Street when a man jumped on her windshield. The man was later identified as Richard Koop. Per NBC News:

Koop was found lying in the road with “severe head trauma, bleeding from the back of his head, bleeding from the face, and possible fractured legs and arms” when police arrived shortly after 7:30 p.m., according to police records obtained by NBC News that also said the responding officer described Koop as unconscious and not breathing.

Arslanian was “bleeding from her hands” and had hit a parked car after she struck Koop, police records showed.

“Why was the guy in the middle of the street? I didn’t do anything wrong, you know?” she told police, according to the dashcam video.

In the report, police officers said that Arslanian rescinded her consent to have them search her cellphone.

“Ms. Arslanian originally reported I may search her phone, handed me her phone, then shortly after reported she no longer gives consent for a cellular phone search. I immediately returned Ms. Arslanian’s phone back to her,” one of the officers said.

Police determined that Koop was “jaywalking and did not cross the street at an intersection or in a marked crosswalk.” No record shows if she was tested for drugs or alcohol.

Sheri Breen, a lawyer for the Koop family, has alleged that Menendez’s wife waited to call 911 and “let him lie on the ground and she took some time to sit there watching before she backed up, moved her car again and then drove around him.”

“He just had to cross the street to get to his home when the defendant came barreling down the street and struck him,” Breen said.

The Koop family received a settlement from Arslanian’s insurance company.

As Breitbart News reported, several Democrats have called on Bob Menendez to resign after being indicted, along with his wife, in New York in “connection with their alleged ‘corrupt relationship’ with a trio of businessmen and to ‘benefit’ the Egyptian government.” The indictment also alleges that the senator accepted “hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of bribes in exchange for favors from the businessmen.”

“Under our legal system, Senator Menendez and the other defendants have not been found guilty and will have the ability to present evidence disputing these charges, and we must respect the process,” said Democrat New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy. “However, the alleged facts are so serious that they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state. Therefore, I am calling for his immediate resignation.”

Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and his wife Nadine Menendez arrive for the State Dinner with President Joe Biden at the White House, June 22, 2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Menendez has said he will not resign and has denied any wrongdoing.

“Since this investigation was leaked nearly a year ago, there has been an active smear campaign of anonymous sources and innuendos to create an air of impropriety where none exists,” he said in a statement.

“The excesses of these prosecutors is apparent. They have misrepresented the normal work of a Congressional office. On top of that, not content with making false claims against me, they have attacked my wife for the longstanding friendships she had before she and I even met,” he added.

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2023/10/04/bob-menendez-wife-struck-killed-pedestrian-2018/


A couple of things come to mind. Especially the sources.
Breitbart is a polarizing (by design) right wing news source.
Have even a bigger problem with NBC listed as a source three times.

Am looking to see the attached story that Menedez actually shot at a reporter several time. Guess the escape was a close one for Brian Williams.
8trackdisco Offline
#36 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,087
Taking bribes and dirty deals under the table in New Jersey?

He’s just representing his constituents.

Sincerely,
Tony Soprano.
rfenst Online
#37 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
8trackdisco wrote:
A couple of things come to mind. Especially the sources.
Breitbart is a polarizing (by design) right wing news source.
Have even a bigger problem with NBC as a source three times.

You left out the NYT investigation that lead to the article?
8trackdisco Offline
#38 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,087
rfenst wrote:
I have had about five mv v. pedestrian/bicyclist death and a good number more of mv x pedestrian/pedestrian injury cases over the last 30+ years.

So, I would love to read the crash report and homicide report to see what the accident reconstruction indicates and whether it makes sense to me. Also, there was probably a wrongful death claim no matter who was really at fault- and the potential civil court file (if it didn't settle amicably without litigation) may provide additional info. There could have also been a criminal case filed, but dismissed for some reason.

I'll try to find it all and provide links if it is online...


Very cool, Robert.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#39 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,498
rfenst wrote:
You left out the NYT investigation that lead to the article?



Last week. NYT. All the news that's fit to suppress, but Trump.
rfenst Online
#40 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
For starters, this jumped out at me, from the very detailed, sworn by officers at the scene, completed crash report:

Dark jacket, 7:30pm in December; and jay-walking walking in front of a parked car into the street, directly in front of her oncoming car. Her car was black.

Independent witness testimony mentioned in the crash report that the victim had been in a couple nearby bars that day and night, but no blood alcohol test on him in the crash report (but maybe in the homicide report). He had a history of multiple DUIs.

Reviewed video of questioning of her by cops at the scene and surveillance video from a nearby business. Nothing out of the ordinary. She did not appear to be under the influence in the video and the cops saw no need to test her for ETOH or drug impairment.

They subpoenaed her phone and found nothing incriminating.

If there is anything else to the story, I'll dig deeper... but for now I have seen enough and am done....
rfenst Online
#41 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
There indeed may be more into this all. I am looking deeper...
8trackdisco Offline
#42 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,087
rfenst wrote:
For starters, this jumped out at me, from the very detailed, sworn by officers at the scene, completed crash report:

Dark jacket, 7:30pm in December; and jay-walking walking in front of a parked car into the street, directly in front of her oncoming car. Her car was black.

Independent witness testimony mentioned in the crash report that the victim had been in a couple nearby bars that day and night, but no blood alcohol test on him in the crash report (but maybe in the homicide report). He had a history of multiple DUIs.

Reviewed video of questioning of her by cops at the scene and surveillance video from a nearby business. Nothing out of the ordinary. She did not appear to be under the influence in the video and the cops saw no need to test her for ETOH or drug impairment.

They subpoenaed her phone and found nothing incriminating.

If there is anything else to the story, I'll dig deeper... but for now I have seen enough and am done....


Appreciate the leg work and transparency. Good work, councilor.
HockeyDad Offline
#43 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,160
Sounds like a clean kill. 20 points awarded.
DrMaddVibe Offline
#44 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,498
HockeyDad wrote:
Sounds like a clean kill. 20 points awarded.


Men = 10 points.

Women = 20 points.
rfenst Online
#45 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
Menendez and a New Jersey Tragedy

The ghastly reason the senator’s wife was looking for a new car.


WSJ

... But there is nothing funny about a tragic incident that did not result in any charges at all.

Katie Sobko reports this week for NorthJersey.com:

Nadine Arslanian Menendez, federally indicted in a bribery scheme with her husband, Sen. Bob Menendez, struck and killed a man while driving her Mercedes-Benz on Main Street in Bogota, N.J.in Dece mber 2018.

Details about the crash, which unfolded on the evening of Dec. 12, 2018, are outlined in a Bogota Police Department report obtained by NorthJersey.com and The Record.

Arslanian — who began dating Menendez in February 2018 and married the senator in October 2020 — was not charged in the incident.

...

As for that horrible accident involving the future Mrs. Menendez that resulted in the death of 49-year-old Richard Koop, Ms. Sobko reports:

Bogota Patrolman Michael LaFerrera, writing in a police report, said he arrived at the scene and saw Koop “laying in the westbound lane of travel.” LaFerrera wrote that Koop was “unconscious and did not appear to be breathing”; he couldn’t find a pulse and was “unable to attempt CPR as there was no way to properly control Mr. Koop’s bleeding from his face and head, rendering CPR useless.”

Koop was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital. A New York Times report following up on Ms. Sobko’s report notes:

Surveillance video shows that Ms. Menendez stayed in her car after striking Mr. Koop, eventually moving the vehicle a few car lengths in front of where his body came to rest. She does not appear to have approached him before authorities arrived and found no pulse.

In that time, Ms. Menendez appears to have clearly contacted someone. Within roughly 30 minutes of the collision, a man who identified himself to the police as a retired officer from nearby Hackensack arrived to help her.

“I don’t even know her,” the man can be heard saying. “That’s my buddy’s wife who’s friends with her. He said could you do me a favor and take her up there, because her friend just got in a car accident.”

The former officer is not identified by name, but he later asks the Bogota police if prosecutors will need to be involved. They indicate they are preparing to release her. “Why was the guy in the middle of the street?,” Ms. Menendez can be heard asking an officer in the same video, before repeating “he jumped on my windshield.”

“It is determined that at this time Ms. Arslanian was not at fault for the motor vehicle crash and that Mr. Koop was jaywalking,” the Bogota sergeant wrote in his report the next day.

There are bound to be more questions about the death of Richard Koop if Mr. Menendez insists on running for re-election next year....





That makes the report even more credible to me.
RayR Offline
#46 Posted:
Joined: 07-20-2020
Posts: 8,918
BREAKING
Menendez Charged With Acting As Foreign Agent


Ana ****uy
Forbes Staff

Oct 12, 2023,12:32pm EDT

Quote:
Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) has been accused of acting as a foreign agent in a new superseding indictment, according to multiple reports, as the embattled three-term senator faces more allegations of wrongdoing.

Menendez is accused of accepting bribes on behalf of a foreign government and allegedly providing sensitive U.S. government information to help the government of Egypt, the indictment says, according to NBC News.

The superseding indictment was filed by a federal grand jury in Manhattan on Thursday.

This is a breaking story and will be updated.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/anafaguy/2023/10/12/menendez-charged-with-acting-as-foreign-agent/
rfenst Online
#47 Posted:
Joined: 06-23-2007
Posts: 39,349
rfenst wrote:
There indeed may be more into this all. I am looking deeper...



Prosecutors Issued Error-Riddled Report in Menendez Car Crash
New Jersey prosecutors concluded that Nadine Menendez, Senator Bob Menendez’s wife, should not be charged after she killed a pedestrian with her Mercedes-Benz.


NYT

A week after a fatal car crash involving the soon-to-be wife of Senator Robert Menendez, a prosecutor’s office in New Jersey filed an official account of the incident that contained apparent factual errors quickly noted by relatives of the pedestrian who was killed.

But the seven-page report, which concluded that the driver, Nadine Arslanian Menendez, should not be charged, was never corrected — raising new questions about whether the incident was handled properly by the authorities.

Investigators from the Bergen County Prosecutor’s office incorrectly described key elements of how the December 2018 crash in Bogota, N.J., took place. They bolstered the conclusion that she was not at fault, writing that the pedestrian, Richard Koop, stepped into a busy thoroughfare going south from behind a parked car, “which may have obstructed his view, as well as that of the driver of the Mercedes-Benz.”

“It is my opinion that the driver of the Mercedes-Benz could not avoid the collision with the pedestrian attempting to cross the roadway,” the lead investigator, Dennis DeAngelis, wrote on Dec. 20, according to a copy of the report obtained by The New York Times through a public records request.

But other records — including video of the collision, photos of the damage to Ms. Menendez’s Mercedes-Benz and an Uber receipt showing where Mr. Koop, 49, had been dropped off moments before he was struck — indicate that he was crossing the street northbound directly to his home and did not step out from behind a parked car.

In fact, the conclusion reached by Officer DeAngelis, a member of the Woodcliff Lake Police Department who at the time also worked for the prosecutor’s fatal accident task force, contradicts Bogota police officers who interviewed Ms. Menendez soon after the crash.

A Key Ally to Egypt: Prosecutors have accused Menendez, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, of taking bribes in exchange for helping protect Egypt’s access to billions in U.S. aid.

Ms. Menendez, who was dating the senator at the time of the crash, told officers that Mr. Koop had “jumped” onto her windshield. In their report, Bogota officers noted that Mr. Koop had been traveling northbound toward his home when he was struck.

Sheri A. Breen, a lawyer for Mr. Koop’s family, documented the discrepancies in a letter to the prosecutor’s office in March 2019. “It appears to the family of Richard Koop that the Bogota PD is protecting the driver, a woman who has many high-profile friends,” she wrote at the time.

In an interview on Thursday, Ms. Breen said that the prosecutor’s office acknowledged her letter but did not reopen the investigation.

The documents prepared by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s office are among a trove of records seized in recent days by the New Jersey attorney general’s office as it scrutinizes the actions of the local police in suburban Bogota, N.J., and the county investigators. The prosecutor’s investigative report was reported by The Record of New Jersey.

Officer DeAngelis, who is now a Woodcliff Lake sergeant, has not returned calls seeking comment. A spokeswoman for the prosecutor’s office, Elizabeth Rebein, said on Thursday she was unable to comment because of the attorney general’s inquiry.

The attorney general’s public integrity unit opened its review last week after The Times and The Record first revealed Ms. Menendez’s involvement in the fatal crash, nearly five years after it happened. The articles filled in key details in a federal indictment charging the Menendezes with accepting bribes in exchange for official acts by the senator, a Democrat. Prosecutors said one of the first bribes was a new Mercedes-Benz convertible to replace the car that was damaged in the Bogota crash.

The Times initially cited Bogota police records that showed that Ms. Menendez was never tested for alcohol or other substances before the department absolved her of wrongdoing. The Times also found other apparent departures from protocol at the crash site, including the presence of a former top Hackensack police official, Michael Mordaga, who showed up at the behest of a friend of Ms. Menendez’s.

An autopsy report showed that Mr. Koop had alcohol and marijuana in his system.

The newly released documents from the Bergen County Prosecutor’s office add some insight into how law enforcement officials initially handled the case, but they also leave other questions unanswered.

Officer DeAngelis, a member of the office’s Fatal Accident Investigation Unit, wrote that he arrived at the scene within an hour of the collision.

He estimated that Ms. Menendez was driving between 22 and 27 miles per hour — below the 30 m.p.h. speed limit — when she struck Mr. Koop just after 7:30 p.m. His calculations relied on the distance that he believed Mr. Koop’s body traveled after being hit: 37 feet.

The report does not address whether Ms. Menendez had been using her phone at the time of the crash. Bogota police reports indicated that authorities sought a subpoena to review the records, but neither the police nor the prosecutor’s office disclosed what they found.

“That leaves a huge hole in this,” said Brian Higgins, a former director of public safety in Bergen County who is now a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “What was she doing at the time she was traveling?”

Mr. Higgins, who reviewed the Bergen County records at the request of The Times, said it was also unclear to him what evidence Officer DeAngelis used to infer that Mr. Koop had entered the street from the sidewalk near his house.

He said the method Officer DeAngelis used to determine Ms. Menendez’s speed was valid in the absence of other evidence like skid marks, a computerized car component that recorded velocity, or paint transfer between cars.

And it is likely, he added, that Mr. Koop’s intoxication could have contributed to the collision.

Mr. Mordaga was not the only previously unidentified person to show up at the scene. Christopher Kelemen, Bogota’s Republican mayor, acknowledged on Thursday that he had been on hand that night and was visible in dashcam footage released by the police.

Mr. Kelemen said he was home watching television the night of the collision when his children informed him there had been a bad car crash in the borough. He said he did not interfere with the police response and only learned the identity of the driver involved when contacted by a Times reporter in recent weeks. He did not disclose then that he had been at the scene of the crash.

“I didn’t speak to anybody, and I just stayed behind the yellow lines like everybody else did,” Mr. Kelemen said in an interview. “I don’t get involved in any type of police work; that’s not what this mayor does.”
DrMaddVibe Offline
#48 Posted:
Joined: 10-21-2000
Posts: 55,498
Ever time it rains it pours....gold bricks from Heaven...Thank Heaven for massive bribes!



How About Hunter? Justice Department Adds FARA Charge To Menendez Prosecution



The Justice Department this week hit Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) with a superseding indictment including a new but all-too-familiar charge: being an unregistered foreign agent under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA).

I cannot recall another sitting member of Congress being criminally charged as a foreign agent.

Yet even if this is the first such case, the charge has been freely used by the Justice Department in all but one case: Hunter Biden.

The indictment accuses Menendez of being a foreign agent on behalf of Egypt.

Also charged under the law is Menendez’s wife, Nadine, and Egyptian American businessman Wael Hana.

After they discussed various foreign policy priorities at one dinner, Nadine is quoted as asking her Egyptian counterparts, “What else can the love of my life do for you?”

The government alleges that the couple agreed to have Menendez “use his power and authority to facilitate such sales and financing to Egypt.” In addition to other benefits, the government alleges that Hana promised to put Nadine on the payroll of his company in a “low-or-no-show job.”

The indictment further alleges that the senator disclosed “nonpublic information about the United States’s provision of military aid to Egypt” during a dinner with Hana in 2018.

It also claims that the senator “secretly edited and ghost-wrote” a letter “on behalf of Egypt” trying to convince other senators to release a hold on $300 million in aid to the country.

The inclusion of the FARA charge against Menendez, his wife and his associate only highlights the absence of any such charge against President Biden’s son Hunter.

For years, some of us have raised the glaring contradiction in how the Justice Department has approached the Hunter Biden case with its treatment of past defendants like Donald Trump associate Paul Manafort.

The Justice Department has been quick to indictment Manafort and others on FARA charges, but continues to prevaricate over such a charge for the president’s son.

Indeed, when Menendez was charged, I wrote about the striking similarities in the cases, including the gifts and benefits showered on both men.

They remain similar in every way except the charges.


FARA covers anyone acting as “agent of a foreign principal,” including but not limited to (1) attempting to influence federal officials or the public on domestic or foreign policy or the political or public interests in favor of a foreign country; (2) collecting or disbursing money and or other things of value within the United States; or (3) representing the interests of the foreign principal before U.S. Government officials or agencies.

It is sweeping.

So is the definition of what a “foreign principal” encompasses, including “a foreign government, a foreign political party, any person outside the United States (except U.S. citizens who are domiciled within the United States), and any entity organized under the laws of a foreign country or having its principal place of business in a foreign country.”

It is easy to see why FARA charges have been quickly brought in cases ranging from Manafort to Menendez. It is less clear why such charges remains strikingly absent from the Hunter case.

In Hunter’s case, he was selling what associate Devon Archer called the “Biden brand” and asking, to paraphrase Nadine Menendez, “What else can [my dad] do for you?”

The House committees have confirmed not only millions transferred to Hunter and other Biden family members, but direct contacts made by Hunter with federal officials and agencies in relation to his foreign clients.

Archer described how Burisma executives told Hunter that they were worried about the anti-corruption investigation of Ukrainian Prosecutor-General Viktor Shokin.

Archer testified that Hunter immediately “called D.C.” in response to the plea.

Shokin was later fired at Vice President Joe Biden’s demand.

In shaking down a Chinese source for more money, Hunter reportedly sent a WhatsApp message that reminded him that “The Bidens are the best at doing exactly what Chairman wants.”


The message was to Gongwen (“Kevin”) Dong, a CEFC China Energy executive with close ties to the Chinese government, and included a threat that “I am sitting here with my father and we would like to understand why the commitment made has not been fulfilled … I will make certain that between the man sitting next to me and every person he knows and my ability to forever hold a grudge that you will regret not following my direction. I am sitting here waiting for the call with my father.”

Throughout his open influence-peddling, emails show Hunter was fully aware of the risk of being charged under FARA.

The problem with FARA is that it would require the Bidens to publicly acknowledge their work as foreign agents and, by extension, their massive influence-peddling operation.

In one message, Hunter addressed his work for the Chinese CEFC energy company and warned:

“No matter what it will need to be a US company at some level in order for us to make bids on federal and state funded projects. Also We [sic] don’t want to have to register as foreign agents under the FCPA which is much more expansive than people who should know choose not to know. James has very particular opinions about this so I would ask him about the foreign entity.”

“James” is his uncle Jim Biden, who has also been regularly accused of corrupt influence-peddling tied to Joe Biden.

In the message, Hunter gets it.

The law is indeed “expansive.”

His uncle clearly gets it.

The question is why the Justice Department gets it in every case except those with targets named Biden.

For many, the question is not whether Hunter has acted as an agent of foreign principals but whether the Justice Department is acting as an agent of the principal Biden.


https://www.zerohedge.com/political/how-about-hunter-justice-department-adds-fara-charge-menendez-prosecution



See the pattern yet?

You should!
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