Former US Senator Bob Menendez has been sentenced to 11 years in prison for accepting bribes, including gold bars and cash, in exchange for political favors benefiting Egypt and New Jersey businessmen.
US District Judge Sidney Stein handed down the sentence in Manhattan federal court, months after a jury convicted Menendez on 16 felony counts, including bribery, fraud, and acting as a foreign agent—an unprecedented charge for a sitting US senator.
“You were successful, powerful. You stood at the apex of our political system,” Stein told Menendez during sentencing.
“I don’t know what led you to commit these crimes.”
Menendez, 71, had served as a Democratic senator from New Jersey for nearly two decades, chairing the Senate Foreign Relations Committee before his downfall. He resigned from the Senate in August, a month after his conviction.
In a tearful address to the court, Menendez said he was “chastened” by the verdict and pleaded for leniency, citing his decades of public service.
“Other than family, I have lost everything I have cared about,” he said. “For someone who spent his entire life in public service, every day I’m awake is a punishment.”
Despite his appeal, prosecutors from the Manhattan US Attorney’s Office had pushed for a 15-year sentence, arguing that Menendez’s corruption severely undermined public trust.
“There are not many offenses involving an abuse of power on the scale of Menendez’s,” prosecutor Paul Monteleoni said in court.
Prosecutors said Menendez used his position to influence U S military aid to Egypt, assist Qatari interests, and interfere in local prosecutions of allies. In exchange, he received lavish bribes, including gold, cash, and a luxury Mercedes-Benz.
The judge ordered Menendez to report to prison on June 6, allowing him to attend his wife Nadine Menendez’s upcoming corruption trial. She had originally been scheduled to be tried alongside him, but proceedings were delayed after her lawyers said she needed treatment for breast cancer. Her trial is set for March 18, and she has pleaded not guilty.
Earlier in the day, two New Jersey businessmen convicted in the bribery scheme were also sentenced.
Real estate developer Fred Daibes received seven years in prison, while Wael Hana, accused of facilitating payments from Egyptian interests, was sentenced to just over eight years.
Menendez’s defense team had initially recommended a prison term of no more than 2 ¼ years, citing his age, public service, and financial ruin.
However, after learning of Daibes’ and Hana’s sentences, defense attorney Adam Fee revised the request, asking the judge to impose no more than eight years.
Despite the plea for a lighter sentence, Judge Stein ultimately handed down a stiffer punishment, marking the end of Menendez’s decades-long political career.
Boluwatife Enom
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