
SEN. BOB MENENDEZ PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO BRIBERY CHARGES
Clip: 9/28/2023 | 13m 19sVideo has Closed Captions
SEN. BOB MENENDEZ PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO BRIBERY CHARGES
Tonight, Briana Vannozzi of “NJ Spotlight News” on NJPBS joins us for an in-depth look at the indictment of Senator Robert Menendez and his wife Nadine.
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MetroFocus is a local public television program presented by THIRTEEN PBS

SEN. BOB MENENDEZ PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO BRIBERY CHARGES
Clip: 9/28/2023 | 13m 19sVideo has Closed Captions
Tonight, Briana Vannozzi of “NJ Spotlight News” on NJPBS joins us for an in-depth look at the indictment of Senator Robert Menendez and his wife Nadine.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipRafael: good evening and welcome to MetroFocus.
Last Friday, for the second time in his career, New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez was indicted on federal corruption charges, federal prosecutors accused Senator Menendez, his wife, and three others of conspiracy to commit bribery.
Thus a cuter say Menendez used his influential position in Washington to obtain hundreds of thousands of dollars in lavish gifts, gold and cash in exchange for aiding the government of Egypt, and for his efforts to disrupt federal and state prosecutions on behalf of to New Jersey Associates.
In light of the charges, a growing number of Democrats in New Jersey and Washington have been calling on the editor to resign.
Monday, Menendez described the charges against him and his wife as baseless and denied any wrongdoing.
>> I recognize this will be the biggest fight yet, but as I have stated throughout this whole process, I firmly believe that when all the facts are presented, not only will I be exonerated, but I still will be New Jersey senior senator.
Rafael: on Wednesday, Senator Menendez and his wife were arraigned at a federal courthouse in Manhattan where they both pleaded not guilty.
Joining us with more on the charges on the potential political far house both in New Jersey and on Capitol Hill, is the danger of an Chai's but -- NJ Spotlight News on PBS.
First of all, I wonder if you could elaborate on the charges against Senator Menendez, what exactly are they alleging that he did?
>> this was an astonishing indictment, 39 pages written for the public to read and digest.
The allegations are pretty brazen.
They range from Senator Menendez and his wife Nadine working with three businessmen in New Jersey.
One of those, his name is well Hannah, he has ties to the Egyptian government.
The indictment lays out how Menendez, through his wife, and we'll Hannah, set up meetings in which they discussed a number of interests in the injection government ranging from U.S. a to weapons and military aid to be signed off by this senator, using his very high-ranking position as the head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to help in those interests.
In exchange, according to prosecutors, he and other associates patted the pockets of Senator Menendez and his wife.
In the indictment we saw photos of envelopes stuffed with cash, hundred dollar bills, $20 bills, adding up to half a million dollars inside the jacket gets of Senator Menendez coats bearing his name, bearing the symbol of the Hispanic caucus in the Senate.
A safety deposit box of Nadine, his wife, carrying about $70,000 of cash.
What's notable there is that the envelopes and cash had fingerprints of these associates.
Go bouillon bars with serial numbers also link to these associates.
There was a level of concealment , prosecutors allege, because these items were hidden throughout their home and discovered in June 2022 when they executed a search warrant.
In addition, there were ties to a luxury car, a 2019 convertible Mercedes-Benz in which it's alleged that the associates set up means, handed off cash to help for that car.
It goes on to exercise equipment and an air purifier during the height of the pandemic.
So it's extensive, and it was a real bombshell here, the ties that they were able to make with text messages deleted emails, a number of communication methods.
Rafael: regarding that cash that was found in his home, the envelopes inside the gets of his jackets.
On Monday, Senator Menendez said that there was a very innocent explanation for that.
We have a clip of that.
Let's take a look at what he said.
Senator Menendez: For 30 years I have withdrawn thousands of dollars in cash from my personal savings account, which I have kept for emergencies and because of the history of my family facing confiscation in Cuba.
This may seem old-fashioned, but these were drawn from my personal savings account based on the income I have lawfully derived over those 30 years.
Rafael: what do you make of that explanation?
Do you think most New Jerseyans will find it convincing?
Briana: that's not for me to decide.
Menendez has sharp elbows.
This is a man who has spent his entire life since he was 20 years old holding elected office.
He came up through the ranks in Hudson County, which we all know here in New Jersey is as rough and tumble as you can get going up against party bosses and the Democratic machine.
This is also not his first rodeo.
He has to trial before, which ended in early 2018 after a nine week jury trial in a hung jury.
So, he's been here before, he is shrewd, he is known to be extremely intelligent, politically savvy.
So, he humbly asked, if you will remember from that press conference, he humbly asked the lick to let the facts play out, to allow the justice system to be able to do what they do.
Rafael: has he tried to explain -- you mentioned it, he says, as we just saw, that the money -- that he brought that money from the bank to his house, has he tried to explain how the fingerprints of the alleged drivers got on those envelopes that he brought from the bank?
Briana: that was noticeably missing from his pretty lengthy statement that he made.
It wasn't really a press event.
He didn't take any questions, he laid out what he sees as the case from his perspective, but no, he did not address the fingerprints.
He also did not address the gold bars.
As we heard there, he asserted -- he sort of tied this to his Cuban roots to government overreach, keeping that amount of money on hand for emergencies.
As prosecutors have duly noted, he makes $174,000 a year with his position in the Senate.
So, to withdraw that money over 30 years, he and his defense is going to have to show the receipts for those transactions.
Rafael: I have to say, I'm a Cuban, as you know, and I don't remember ever hearing that that was a tradition, that you put money in your house, hundreds of thousands, new to me.
But, as you mentioned, Senator Menendez has been through this before, in 2015 he was indicted for corruption as well.
I won't go into the details.
But, a doctor friend of his, the allegations were that he got very lucrative gifts and favors in exchange for a number of things, including getting visas for foreign girlfriends into the United States.
As you said, the jury was hung on that trial.
After which the judge acquitted him of some of the charges and then the prosecutors dropped all the wet -- all the rest.
There are no connections between any of that in the current charges, correct?
Briana: in the indictment it alleges that all of these acts started up really one month after that mistrial.
So, the indictment came down in 2015, the trial didn't happen until two years later in 2017 and prosecutors allege that Senator Menendez and his wife conspired to commit these schemes really a month after that jury was hung.
So, to that effect, it seems as though the investigations never really stopped.
And, we heard from the U.S. attorney the Southern District, the investigation is very much ongoing.
So, what we are looking to see as how much Menendez new about the dealings with the Egyptian officials, how much exactly of a role his wife played.
But, a lot of the accusations do rain similar.
Taking lavish gifts from a rich friend.
The difference here is there are a lot more direct lines being drawn.
As one prosecutor told me this week, the effort to conceal it is really damming.
Rafael: another big difference is that, after Senator Menendez 2015 indictment, most of his fellow Democrats, both in Washington and in New Jersey, stood by him.
They strongly supported him.
This time, most of those Democrats have called for him to resign.
Why the difference?
Briana: pretty Lee.
Friday at 5:00 Governor Phil Murphy put out a statement.
After that it was a day lose of statements from top ranking Democratic officials.
There's two big differences.
One, the charges in 2015 were a lot harder to prove.
They were much less salacious.
The second period difference is the fact that we had a Republican governor.
Governor Chris Christie, who if Menendez resigned, would have been able to appoint a Republican to replace him in the Senate.
We now have a Democratic governor who could appoint a Democrat to replace him and, you know as well as I do, Senate Democrats are trying like hell -- trying to hold onto their razor thin majority.
This is a seat that should be safe.
Democrats don't want up or millions of dollars into a race, should Menendez hold onto his seat.
And survive -- hold onto his seat and sofa -- survive a primary.
Rafael: one of the biggest supporters he had in 2015 after the indictment was Senator Booker.
Editor Booker on Tuesday came out himself and called for his resignation.
What specific reason did Senator Booker give for his change of attitude?
Briana: I don't know that it was a change of attitude, he was silent.
I think for those of us that have covered both of them for years, they have a very close relationship.
Menendez was a mentor -- a mentor to Booker.
They were friends, they appear at just about every event together, they are tight.
You can really feel the anguish that Booker had in writing this statement.
He couched it with the integrity of the office, that he was having a tough time reconcile these allegations with the Bob Menendez he's known over the years, with a guy who's out there for the middle class.
He couched it in for the good of the office.
But that was notable.
He's highly influential.
Once Booker said this, that's when we saw all these other high-ranking -- the flight gates opened.
-- floodgates open.
Rafael: not only the Washington Democrats called for his resignation, almost every high-level New Jersey Democratic politician has done that as well.
In a speech on Monday, he almost implied -- he said he would not quit and almost implied that he's going to run again next year.
With the charges over his head in the full power of the Democratic Party in Washington and in New Jersey against him, do you think that he can run and win?
Briana: that's the million-dollar question.
He's got a lot of support from the Latino base in New Jersey.
Again, these allegations are so different this time around, but he is confident that he will be exonerated and Rafael: remain the senior U.S.
Senator.
Rafael:-- and remained the senior U.S.
Senator.
Rafael: I have to end it there.
Thank you so much.
We will follow the story with you.
Briana: good to talk to you.
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Clip: 9/28/2023 | 11m 59s | “TEEN RACE OF HOPE”: SPOTLIGHTING THE STIGMA AROUND YOUTH DEPRESSION (11m 59s)
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