Current:Home > MySen. Bob Menendez and wife seek separate trials on bribery charges -Capital Dream Guides
Sen. Bob Menendez and wife seek separate trials on bribery charges
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:13:25
Sen. Bob Menendez and his wife are seeking separate trials on bribery charges they each face in a New York court.
The New Jersey Democrat and his wife, Nadine, were each charged in the fall with aiding three New Jersey businessmen in return for cash, gold bars and a luxury car.
The couple and the businessmen, who also face charges, have all pleaded not guilty.
Nadine Menendez’s lawyers asked in papers filed late Monday for the severance on the grounds that the senator may want to testify at a trial scheduled to start in May and may divulge marital communications that she plans to keep secret.
Lawyers for Bob Menendez wrote that each spouse should face separate trials so that the senator does not provide information about marital communications during cross-examination that might be damaging to his wife’s defense.
They asked the trial judge not to force “him to choose between two fundamental rights: his right to testify in his own defense and his right not to testify against his spouse.”
The requests for separate trials were made as part of several pre-trial submissions late Monday by lawyers for defendants in the case.
Several days earlier, the senator’s lawyers had asked that charges in the case be dismissed. They added to those requests Monday, calling charges against him a “distortion of the truth.”
“Senator Menendez isn’t just ‘not guilty’ — he is innocent of these charges. Senator Menendez has never sold out his office or misused his authority or influence for personal financial gain,” they wrote.
Since the senator was first charged in September, he has been forced to relinquish his powerful post leading the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Prosecutors have added to the bribery charges too, saying that he conspired with his wife and one businessman to secretly advance Egypt’s interests and that he acted favorably toward Qatar’s government to aid a businessman.
“Over and over again, the Indictment distorts or ignores evidence reflecting the Senator’s conduct in favor of American — and only American — interests and his decades of appropriate constituent services,” the lawyers said.
“Worse yet, the government knows it. The government has buried evidence proving Senator Menendez’s innocence, including evidence that directly undercuts the allegations in the Indictment. And the defense is prohibited from disclosing any of it to the public — necessitating a redacted filing under seal — even as the government has gone on its own media blitz to advance its false narrative,” the lawyers said.
The lawyers also said the trial should not be in New York since almost everything alleged to have occurred happened in New Jersey or outside New York.
“This case belongs in New Jersey,” they said.
The lawyers noted that Menendez won an earlier corruption case in New Jersey with “at least 10 jurors voting to acquit the Senator on the government’s hyped-up corruption charges.”
A spokesperson for prosecutors declined to comment. Prosecutors will reply to all the pre-trial motions with arguments of their own in several weeks.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- North Dakota GOP party leader resigns 1 week into job after posts about women, Black people
- Watch: Moose makes surprise visit outside Massachusetts elementary school
- At 83, Jack Nicklaus says he plays so poorly now that 'I run out of golf balls'
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Researchers hope tracking senior Myanmar army officers can ascertain blame for human rights abuses
- Protesters calling for cease-fire in Gaza disrupt Senate hearing over Israel aid as Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks
- 'They touched my face': Goldie Hawn recalls encounter with aliens while on Apple podcast
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- AP PHOTOS: Israeli families of hostages taken to Gaza caught between grief and hope as war rages on
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Lucy Hale Shares Her Tips on Self-LOVE: “It’s Really About Finding Self-Compassion and Being Gentle
- Robert De Niro loses temper during testimony at ex-assistant's trial: 'This is all nonsense!'
- Serbia’s president sets Dec. 17 for snap parliamentary election as he rallies for his populist party
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Trial moved to late 2024 for Indiana man charged in killings of 2 girls slain during hiking trip
- 'The Voice': Niall Horan gets teary-eyed with Team Reba singer Dylan Carter's elimination
- Senior Chinese official visits Myanmar for border security talks as fighting rages in frontier area
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
'It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown': How to watch on Halloween night
NFL power rankings Week 9: Eagles ascend to top spot after Chiefs' slide
Beijing’s crackdown fails to dim Hong Kong’s luster, as talent scheme lures mainland Chinese
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Toyota more than doubles investment and job creation at North Carolina battery plant
20-year-old Jordanian national living in Texas allegedly trained with weapons to possibly commit an attack, feds say
Serbia’s president sets Dec. 17 for snap parliamentary election as he rallies for his populist party