Category: Security

  • Five years after Wuhan lockdown, China still ‘struggling to recover’

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    Five years ago, authorities in the central Chinese city of Wuhan and surrounding areas in Hubei province imposed a travel ban on some 18 million people, just days after admitting that the newly emerging coronavirus was transmissible between people.

    The lockdown prompted a mass rush to leave the city that likely helped spread COVID-19 around the country and beyond.

    It also plunged China into three grueling years of citywide lockdowns, mass quarantine camps and compulsory daily COVID tests, with residents locked in, walled off and even welded into their own apartments, unable to earn a living or seek urgent medical care.

    China is still struggling to recover today, despite the ending of restrictions in 2022 following nationwide protests, political commentators and a city resident told RFA Mandarin in recent interviews.

    The most worrying thing about the Wuhan lockdown was that the authorities took that model and imposed it on cities across the country over the three years that followed, according to independent political commentator Qin Peng.

    “The first thing [the authorities learned] was how to control public speech, how to arrest citizen journalists, how to block the internet, how to leak information and create public opinion through paid-for international experts and media,” Qin said. “The second thing was how to tame the public and bring everyone into line with the use of official narratives.”

    “The third was how to turn an incident for which they were clearly responsible into a problem caused by somebody else … by blaming the United States, or nature,” Qin said.

    The World Health Organization last month called on China to fully release crucial data surrounding the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan in 2020, although the call was dismissed by Beijing.

    Massive controls ‘still possible’

    U.S.-based former Peking University professor Xia Yeliang said the government learned that it was still possible to impose massive and far-reaching controls on the population.

    “They weren’t sure it would work after so many years of economic reform and opening up, although such strict controls had been possible during the time of [late supreme leader] Mao Zedong,” Xia said. “They thought people wouldn’t accept it.”

    “But after the Wuhan lockdown, the authorities discovered that it was still possible.”

    Wuhan was Ground Zero in the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, the first city in the world to undergo a total lockdown in early 2020.

    Authorities claimed that only 2,531 people died in the initial wave of infections, but estimates at the time based on the number of cremations carried out by the city’s seven crematoria suggested that tens of thousands died.

    Apart from the spread of the virus, the most immediate impact for many was the clampdown on freedom of speech.

    Whistleblowing doctors like Li Wenliang and Ai Fen were threatened and silenced after they tried to warn people about the new viral “pneumonia” that bore all of the hallmarks of a SARS-like virus.

    During the 76 days of the Wuhan lockdown, the authorities deleted 229 articles and posts by citizen journalists who rushed to the city to document the pandemic from the front line, according to the documentary film “Wuhan Lockdown,” which remains banned in China.

    Police also pursued and detained several prominent live bloggers in the city, including Li Zehua, Chen Qiushi, Fang Bin and Zhang Zhan, all of whom were to serve lengthy terms behind bars for their attempts to report on the emerging pandemic.

    Outside the city, censors were busy deleting articles and comments on the pandemic and the authorities’ response.

    Wuhan residents also lost the right to freedom of movement, to earn a living and to seek medical care, and were effectively prisoners in their own homes, according to reports at the time.

    Paying the price

    There was a heavy price to pay, both psychologically and economically, however.

    “Since the Wuhan lockdown, I’ve lost interest in so many things that I used to love,” Wuhan resident Guo Siyu told RFA Mandarin. “My health, my parents and my kids are my top priority now.”

    “I barely have any thoughts of material success … and even my spiritual life has faded into the background: I just want to stay alive and be safe,” she said.

    Xia said the initial attempt to control the citywide spread of COVID-19 was understandable.

    “When you have the large-scale spread of an infectious disease, with an unknown source and outcome, it is not entirely wrong to choose to control the movements of the population,” Xia said. “But what really needs reflecting on is what they did afterwards.”

    For example, Chinese President Xi Jinping never visited Wuhan in person, Xia said.

    “He claimed to be overseeing operations in person, but he wasn’t there in person,” Xia said, adding that the emergency relief services had also failed to deliver reliable supplies of food, transportation and medical attention to everyone to needed them.

    “Maybe they were taken by surprise initially, but what about a few months later?” he said. “It was a dereliction of government duty that they were still unable to achieve this several months down the line.”

    Xia said the Chinese government seems incapable of reflecting on its errors and learning from them, and controls on public speech mean that nobody is allowed to do that for them.

    “I think this is a government that doesn’t reflect, and a society that cannot reflect,” he said. “And a government that can’t reflect can’t run the country effectively.”

    CCP’s damaged standing

    Qin said the government’s insistence on the zero-COVID policy, using lockdowns and tracking people’s movements and infection status via the Health Code app, had ultimately damaged the economy and the Chinese Communist Party’s standing in the eyes of its own people.

    “People used to have this irrational belief in the Chinese Communist Party’s ability to govern,” Qin said. “But from the extreme prevention and control measures right through to the way they relaxed restrictions with no preparation, we can see how inflexible their policies are.”

    “And they failed to deliver the economic recovery that everyone predicted after the restrictions were dropped,” he said. “This has had a profound impact on all aspects of China’s political and economic development, and damaged the authority of the national government and Xi Jinping personally.”

    “That’s why they dare not talk anymore about their victory over the pandemic,” Qin said.

    Guo, who once made a living coaching Chinese students to apply to study overseas, said neither she nor her city has ever really recovered.

    “Relations between China and other countries have broken down, and I have no income,” she said.

    “It’s been five years, and yet the pandemic has never ended,” Guo said. “The impact of that lockdown on us, the native people of Wuhan, has never gone away.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Non-citizens have voted in Maine since 2016: Report

    A recent report claims that as many as 40 percent of the non-citizens in Maine, including illegal immigrants and individuals with “legal alien status,” may have voted or had ballots cast in their name in U.S. elections since 2016.

    The Maine Wire reported that the recent report is based on MaineCare records and voter information obtained by the outlet from the Central Voter Registration system. The outlet noted that the two voting record databases provide public evidence that non-citizens have potentially been illegally registered to vote and have illegally voted in the state in large numbers.

    According to The Maine Wire, a population sample of 25 non-citizens enrolled in MaineCare showed that 10 non-citizens were registered to vote. Based on the information obtained by the outlet, 40% of the non-citizens enrolled in MaineCare have been registered to vote illegally.

    READ MORE: Supreme Court allows Virginia to remove 1,600 non-citizens from voter rolls

    The Maine Wire noted that based on information from Maine’s secretary of state, of the 10 non-citizens registered to vote in the population sample, eight of the non-citizens have had votes cast in their names since the 2016 election.

    According to The Maine Wire, the full number of non-citizens who have voted or registered to vote in the state’s elections is not currently known due to limited data. However, the outlet noted that based on American Community Survey data, 20,137 non-citizens over the age of 18 resided in Maine in 2022.

    The Maine Wire reported that if the voter registration rate demonstrated in the MaineCare records of non-citizens is reflected across the state’s entire population of non-citizens, over 8,000 non-citizens could have illegally registered to vote and may have voted illegally in U.S. elections.

    While The Maine Wire reported that the Central Voter Registration data pertaining to the 2024 election has not yet been updated in the system, at least one of the non-citizens included in the population sample was recorded both registering to vote and voting in the 2024 Democratic primary election.

    Additionally, The Maine Wire reported that many non-citizens who have registered to vote or had votes cast in their names are described in the MaineCare database as having “severe intellectual disabilities.” The outlet noted that state and federal laws could have been broken if individuals assisted the non-citizens with the voter registration and voting process.


    Source: American Military News

  • Manhunt underway for suspect in murder of Border Patrol agent

    A new report claims that police officials are conducting a manhunt for a 32-year-old suspected of purchasing the firearms used to kill a U.S. Border Patrol agent during a traffic stop in Vermont on January 20.

    The Times Union reported that law enforcement agencies are searching for 32-year-old Michelle J. Zajko in connection with the murder of U.S. Border Patrol Agent David “Chris” Maland near the northern border between Vermont and Canada. The outlet noted that Zajko is considered to be “armed and dangerous” and that Zajko is influenced by “anti-law enforcement ideology,” according to police records.

    Court documents obtained by The Times Union revealed that law enforcement officials recovered a .40-caliber semiautomatic handgun and a .380-caliber handgun from the scene of the fatal shooting in Vermont last week. The documents also showed that both of the firearms were purchased by Zajko in February of 2024.

    READ MORE: Illegal immigrant kills Border Patrol agent near U.S.-Canada border: Report

    According to The Times Union, a bulletin was issued last week to licensed gun dealers by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, asking gun dealers to notify the agency’s Vermont office if they had any information regarding the firearms that were purchased by Zajko.

    Additionally, The Times Union reported that a police bulletin distributed last week indicated that Zajko is considered a “person of interest in a double homicide that occurred in Pennsylvania in 2023.”

    The Post Millennial reported that Zajko is the third transgender suspect involved in the murder of the Border Patrol agent in Vermont. The outlet claimed that one of the firearms allegedly supplied by Zajko was used in last week’s shootout by 21-year-old Teresa Youngblut, who was arrested and has been accused of killing the Border Patrol agent. Law enforcement officials also discovered the other firearm linked to Zajko in the possession of German national Felix Bauckholt, who was killed during the incident.

    Post Millennial editor Andy Ngo previously reported that both Youngblut and Bauckholt identified as transgender and were connected to the “Ziz” transgender “terror cell.”

    In a Thursday post on X, formerly Twitter, Ngo shared pictures of the suspects involved in the murder of the Border Patrol agent, tweeting, “Police are on a manhunt for far-left trans terror cell member Michelle Jacqueline Zajko, who is considered armed and dangerous. Zajko, who is trans nonbinary, allegedly provided the guns the trans duo used in the shootout in Vermont that killed the Border Patrol agent.” 


    Source: American Military News

  • Illegal immigrant allegedly murdered woman, set her on fire

    An illegal immigrant was recently indicted by a grand jury over allegations that the suspect killed a West Virginia woman and set her body on fire.

    According to The Spirit of Jefferson, 46-year-old David Antonio Calderon, an illegal immigrant from El Salvador, was indicted for allegedly murdering 32-year-old Samantha Dailey in May of 2024. The outlet reported that Dailey’s body was found on a burning sofa in Berkley County, West Virginia, on May 6.

    An investigation by law enforcement officials suggested that Dailey was originally killed in Jefferson County before her body was burned on a sofa in a Berkley County field, according to The Spirit of Jefferson.

    According to Newsweek, an anonymous official confirmed that Dailey had been tracked with GPS surveillance at the time of her death as she was under home confinement for driving with a suspended license. The outlet reported that on the day she was killed, Dailey told her case officer that she was going to clean the Los Amigos Car Lot in Ranson, West Virginia. The outlet also noted that police officials believe Calderon had been staying in Ranson.

    Newsweek reported that law enforcement officials were later dispatched to Golf Course Road in Martinsburg, West Virginia, where the officials discovered a burning sofa with a “severely burnt” body. A criminal complaint obtained by the outlet said, “The body was severely burnt but was able to [be] identified as a female.” Law enforcement officials later determined that the victim was Dailey after using her GPS tracking information.

    READ MORE: Viral Video: Illegal immigrant thanks Biden, Obama, insults Trump during ICE arrest

    According to The Post Millennial, the Berkeley County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that Calderon had multiple prior arrests and convictions in El Salvador. The outlet noted that the convictions include murder, sexual assault, aggravated robbery, narcotics-related crimes, and driving under the influence.

    Newsweek reported that Calderon illegally entered the United States sometime after his release in 2021 from a prison in El Salvador. According to the outlet, Calderon attempted to gain asylum in Canada but was handed over to U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials, who released the illegal immigrant into the United States with a notice to appear before an immigration judge.

    According to Newsweek, Calderon was originally expected to appear before an immigration judge on May 8, 2024, two days following the murder of Dailey.

    In addition to the recent indictment, The Panhandle News Network reported that Jefferson County Prosecutor Matt Harvey told the outlet that Calderon was convicted on January 17 of unlawful wounding and malicious assault for a pair of separate incidents that took place in April of 2024.


    Source: American Military News

  • Army Black Hawk helicopter involved in DC plane crash was made by CT-based Sikorsky

    U.S. military and aviation officials are investigating the mid-air collision of a Sikorsky helicopter with a passenger airplane in Washington, D.C.

    A U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter collided with American Eagle Flight 5342 on final approach to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport over the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. The American Airlines flight was coming from Wichita, Kansas.

    Todd Inman, a National Transportation Safety Board member, told reporters during a Thursday afternoon press conference that helicopters have defined tracks in the airspace of Washington, D.C.

    Inman and other NTSB officials did not provide any early theories on what caused the aerial collision, stating NTSB working groups would focus on flight crews and any factors that could have impacted flight decisions; the helicopter engines and other onboard systems, such as hydraulics and communications between air-traffic controllers and the two aircraft.

    “We do not know enough facts to be able to rule in or out human factor [or] mechanical factors in this part of the NTSB investigative process,” Inman said Thursday. “If we find something that is a significant issue that warrants immediate action, we will not hesitate to make those recommendations and make them public.”

    By Thursday afternoon, NTSB had yet to recover aircraft flight recorders, Inman said. Sikorsky will be part of the investigation, Inman said, adding that NTSB rules prohibit official parties in investigations from speaking publicly or providing documents related to active investigations.

    Thursday morning outside Sikorsky headquarters in Stratford, Connecticut, a security staff member directed CT Insider queries to corporate representatives.

    “We are deeply saddened and send our condolences to those that lost loved ones,” a Sikorsky spokesperson said Thursday morning. “We have offered our support to the investigation and our customer. Safety is our top priority.”

    There have been no reported survivors during search operations Thursday morning, with 60 passengers and four crew members reportedly aboard the PSA Airlines jet, and three soldiers on the U.S. Army helicopter. PSA Airlines is an affiliate of American Airlines.

    The helicopter and crew were with the Army’s 12th Aviation Battalion out of Davison Army Airfield in Fort Belvoir, Virginia, according to news reports citing a spokesperson with the Joint Task Force-National Capital Region/Military District of Washington.

    Sikorsky builds Black Hawk fuselages in Bridgeport, Connecticut, then ships them to Stratford for full assembly. More onboard systems are installed at a Lockheed Martin facility in Owego, New York, including systems allowing for night-time operation.

    Sikorsky is also making a new fleet of CH-53K King Stallion helicopters for the U.S. Marine Corps in Stratford.

    Dating back to 1982 the UH-60 model of the Black Hawk has been involved in 418 incidents that resulted in 1,006 deaths, including Wednesday’s collision, according to the Flight Safety Foundation’s Aviation Safety Network database. Many of the deaths involving the UH-60 Black Hawk over its history happened in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks of 2001.

    Other deaths have occurred as a result of crashes during military training exercises, including the loss of nine 101st Airborne Division soldiers in a collision between two Black Hawks during a 2023 training mission near Fort Campbell in Kentucky.

    In 2024, eight people died in a collision between two helicopters flown by Japan’s Maritime Self-Defense Force during nighttime anti-submarine training over water. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries makes the SH-60J helicopters involved in that collision for Japan’s military. It’s design is based on the Black Hawk, with onboard avionics systems from Japan suppliers.

    The Army envisions the Black Hawk in its fleet for the rest of this century but plans to introduce the Bell V-280 Valor as its next long-range assault aircraft. The Army rejected Sikorsky’s proposed replacement for the Black Hawk called Defiant-X, which features two sets of stacked rotors spinning in opposite directions to produce better maneuverability and speed.

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    © 2025 The Hour

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


    Source: American Military News

  • Democrat mayor caught in chaotic brawl at town meeting

    A video shows Tiffany Henyard, the Democrat mayor of Dolton, Illinois, jumping into a chaotic brawl between her boyfriend and an activist who described her as a “b-tch” during a town board meeting on Tuesday.

    According to Fox News, the brawl occurred on Tuesday during a Thornton Township Board of Trustees meeting after activist Jedidiah Brown criticized the mayor’s leadership. Speaking out against the mayor, who has been involved in multiple scandals, Brown pointed to the recent investigation by former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot.

    Lightfoot found that the Village of Dolton had hundreds of thousands of dollars missing from American Rescue Plan funds and that the city’s credit card spending increased to $779,638 in 2023 with limited tracking, according to Fox News.

    “You’ve been a half-a-s mayor. But if you wanted to get up here and earn some respect, then you should have been able to respond to Lori Lightfoot’s report about credit cards,” Brown said. “You want to talk about them not coming to work, but we’ve been hearing what you’ve been doing while you’ve been at work.”

    READ MORE: Videos: Woman’s head smashed with bowling ball in major brawl

    Brown later concluded his comments, saying, “You gone, b-tch.”

    Shortly after Brown’s comments, a fight broke out between Brown and Henyard’s boyfriend, Kamal Woods. The video shows multiple other people joining the brawl, including Henyard, who had been seated on the other side of the room, according to Fox News.

    In a statement to WMAQ-TV, Meghan Dudek, a witness of Tuesday’s brawl, said, “I have never seen a politician jump in and fight like that – it was scary and horrible – it is an embarrassment.”

    Gerald Williams, who also witnessed the fight, said, “It should have never come to blows, and Tiffany should have never got involved. “She jumped in. She hit her head on the table, so I don’t know. She might be injured.” 

    According to CBS News, witnesses claimed that while it was not clear whether Henyard was attempting to join the fight or break up the fight, she was thrown to the floor and lost a shoe during the brawl. Additionally, some social media users reported that Henyard’s wig “was seen flying across the room” during the fight.

    Following the major brawl at Tuesday’s board meeting, Beau B. Brindley, Henyard’s attorney, released a statement, saying, “In the face of endless false accusations and outright lies about Mayor Henyard that are being trafficked on social media by her political enemies, it is unsurprising that violence erupted. In the social media age, unchecked falsehoods lead to misplaced tension and aggression. This episode shows that the campaign of false information about the mayor puts her and others in danger.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Music star’s face ‘nearly disfigured’ by sparks

    A shocking video shows popular singer-songwriter Katy Perry being hit in the face with sparks from an electric transformer while signing autographs for her fans outside the set of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Wednesday night.

    The video, which was shared by TMZ on X, formerly Twitter, shows Perry making her way toward a crowd of fans and signing autographs while surrounded by security guards. The video shows multiple fans reaching across a fence to have various items signed by the music star.

    Partway through the video, sparks can be seen flying toward Perry and her security team, prompting the music star to quickly duck and turn away from the sparks. An electrical noise can also be heard in the video at the same time the sparks were seen shooting toward Perry.

    READ MORE: Video: Famous singer hit in the face by firework mid-concert

    In a caption to the video, TMZ wrote, “KatyPerry could really hear her fans #Roar last night … probably screaming out in horrible pain — ’cause one of them touched a transformer and ended up on fire, and nearly disfigured the pop star’s face with sparks.”

    According to TMZ, one of Perry’s fans outside the set of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” accidentally touched an electric transformer, which caused a surge of electricity, resulting in the sparks captured in the video. TMZ reported that while no serious injuries were caused by the electrical surge, the sparks ignited the coat of the fan who touched the transformer.

    Pictures of the incident shared on TMZ’s website showed the fan’s coat on fire near her elbow as she attempted to put out the flames.

    TMZ reported that Perry later reappeared outside the television set to sign additional autographs; however, she remained in her car to sign the autographs following the incident with the sparks.

    According to TMZ, Perry made an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel’s television show on Wednesday to promote her upcoming “The Lifetimes” tour, which is scheduled to launch in Mexico City on April 23. The outlet also noted that Perry is expected to perform at the L.A. FireAid relief concert to benefit those impacted by the California wildfires.


    Source: American Military News

  • Amazon lays off dozens of corporate workers in latest round of job cuts

    Amazon has started the year with a series of layoffs across different parts of the company as it continues to trim its workforce and streamline operations.

    On Wednesday, Amazon said it was laying off dozens of employees in its communications and corporate responsibility department, which includes its sustainability team.

    The announcement comes shortly after Amazon cut 200 people from its stores division, the part of the business responsible for Amazon’s online marketplace.

    Separately, Amazon said earlier this month it would close all seven of its warehouses in the Canadian province of Quebec, resulting in 1,700 employees losing their jobs.

    Wednesday’s cuts are part of Amazon’s efforts to streamline its operations.

    “We regularly review our organization’s structures to ensure we’re best set up to innovate and deliver results efficiently,” Amazon spokesperson Brad Glasser said. “Following a recent review, we’re making some changes to the Communications and Corporate Responsibility organization to help us move faster, increase ownership, strengthen our culture and bring teams closer to customers.”

    Amazon did not specify how many employees were laid off and did not provide a breakdown of how the cuts impacted the teams under the communications and corporate responsibility umbrella.

    Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has worked to trim head count and streamline operations throughout his nearly four years at the helm. The deepest cuts came in 2022 and 2023, when Amazon laid off at least 27,000 employees across its divisions. Since then, it has made smaller cuts across pockets of the company.

    In September, Jassy said the company was working to be less bureaucratic and issued a directive that all teams should reduce the number of managers compared to individual contributors. Doing so, he said, would reduce unnecessary layers that were slowing down innovation and keeping employees further away from the work they were doing.

    “As we have grown our teams as quickly and substantially as we have the last many years, we have understandably added a lot of managers,” Jassy wrote. “In that process, we have also added more layers than before. It’s created artifacts that we’d like to change.”

    In that September announcement, Jassy told employees they would be expected to work from the office five days a week, a change from the three-day mandate that had been in place since May 2023.

    Some employees speculated that the new mandate that took effect earlier this month was another way to trim head count by encouraging some employees to quit rather than forcing layoffs. Amazon has denied that allegation.

    As part of its efforts to streamline operations, the communications and corporate responsibility team is also asking some employees to relocate, Glasser said. Those employees will receive relocation support. Employees who are laid off will receive pay and benefits for 60 days, as well as severance.

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    © 2025 The Seattle Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Meta to pay $25 million to end Trump lawsuit over Jan. 6 ban

    Meta Platforms Inc. agreed to pay $25 million to resolve Donald Trump’s claims that his ban from the company’s social media networks after the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the US Capitol was illegal censorship, a lawyer for the president said.

    Meta will contribute $22 million to the presidential library and the remainder to other users of Meta’s Facebook who also sued over being banned, lawyer John Coale said in a phone interview. Meta spokesperson Andy Stone confirmed details of the agreement and declined further comment.

    The settlement comes as the once-chilly relationship between Trump and Meta Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg has warmed up. Zuckerberg recently loosened content restrictions on the company’s platforms that conservatives have complained about for years, and he attended the president’s inauguration.

    When Trump first sued Facebook over the ban — and separately sued Twitter Inc. and Google’s YouTube over the bans they imposed following the Jan. 6 attack — he sought monetary damages to punish the companies and ensure other users can’t be banned or flagged by the tech giants.

    All three companies eventually dropped the bans, but by then Trump had largely shifted his social media commentary to his own network, Truth Social.

    “I’m glad it’s over with,” Coale said. “Meta should have paid this kind of money because they did some pretty bad things back in 2021.”

    Coale said Zuckerberg personally reached the settlement with Trump while recently visiting the president’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

    There’s no admission of wrongdoing by Meta in the accord, Coale said.

    “They’ve taken responsibility and hopefully everybody’s happy now,” he said.

    The settlement was reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.

    ___

    © 2025 Bloomberg L.P

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Tearful former New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez sentenced to 11 years for brazen bribery scheme

    After tearfully pleading with a judge for mercy, former Democratic New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez was sentenced to 11 years in prison Wednesday for a brazen bribery scheme that saw him act as a foreign agent for Egypt and peddle his immense political influence for stockpiles of cash, gold bullion bars and other lavish gifts.

    Manhattan Federal Judge Sidney Stein imposed the sentence at a packed hearing, where the longtime lawmaker and his lawyer implored the court not to send him to prison for the rest of his life, saying that although Menendez was now known as “Gold Bar Bob,” he deserved leniency for his “tireless” work as a public servant for half a century.

    “You were successful, powerful, you stood at the apex of our political system. … Somewhere along the way, and I don’t know when it was, you lost your way, and working for the public good became working for your good,” the judge said, telling Menendez his corruption had fed cynicism in voters.

    “Somewhere along the way, you became, I’m sorry to say, a corrupt politician.”

    Before the term was handed down, a trembling Menendez addressed the court in tears, telling Stein of the work he was most proud of and of his illustrious rise to power from humble beginnings. His two children, U.S. Rep. Rob Menendez, D-N.J., and MSNBC anchor Alicia Menendez, were present in court.

    “Judge, other than family, I have lost everything I ever cared about. For someone who spent his entire life in public service, every day I’m awake is a punishment,” Menendez said, going on to cite instances of his public service.

    “I ask you, Your Honor, to judge me in that context and to temper your sword of justice with the mercy of a lifetime of duty.”

    The ex-lawmaker, however, struck a markedly different tone outside, aligning himself with the Republican commander-in-chief by crying “witch hunt” and his tears turning to anger.

    “Welcome to the Southern District of New York, the Wild West of political prosecutions. President Trump was right. This process is political, and it’s corrupted to the core. I hope President Trump cleans up the cesspool and restores the integrity to the system,” Menendez said.

    A jury found Menendez guilty in July of taking almost half a million dollars in cash, $150,000 worth of gold bars, a luxury convertible for his wife, flashy watches and Formula 1 tickets in exchange for abusing his position as chairman of the powerful Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    Menendez’s co-defendants, Wael Hana, 41, who ran a Halal certification business, and real estate developer Fred Daibes, 67, were found guilty of showering him with bribes at the trial.

    They were sentenced Wednesday to eight years and a month and seven years, respectively. Menendez’s wife, Nadine Menendez, accused of facilitating and benefiting from the bribery scheme, is set to go on trial in March. She has pleaded not guilty. New Jersey businessman Jose Uribe, who was also charged in the case, took a plea deal in exchange for his cooperation and is expected to be sentenced in April.

    In addition to the prison terms, Stein ordered Menendez to forfeit more than $922,000, Hana to pay a $1.2 million fine and forfeit $125,000, and Daibes to pay a $1.7 million fine.

    Menendez resigned from office following his conviction and relinquished his position on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee soon after his September 2023 indictment.

    The bombshell case brought under former Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams was spurred after FBI agents searched Menendez and his wife’s Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, home in June 2022 and found over $100,000 worth of gold bars and over $480,000 in cash stuffed in closets, jackets emblazoned with Menendez’s name, and envelopes, some bearing Menendez and Daibes’ fingerprints.

    Evidence at the nine-week trial showed that from 2018, around the time Menendez started dating his now-wife, through 2022, the senator took hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes.

    They came in the form of cash and a luxury convertible from Uribe, 57, in exchange for coercing the highest levels of New Jersey state law enforcement to kill a criminal investigation into Uribe and an associate, bribes from Daibes to influence a pending federal prosecution against him in New Jersey, and bribes from Hana to pressure the U.S. Department of Agriculture to let Hana maintain a monopoly over U.S. exports of Halal products to Egypt.

    Jurors heard Menendez additionally threw around his weight to enrich himself at the cost of the U.S. by ghost-writing a letter on behalf of Egyptian officials to U.S. senators urging the release of $300 million in aid and providing Egypt with highly sensitive information about people serving at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. The jury also heard he sought to help Daibes by pulling strings to benefit the government of Qatar.

    Prosecutors had requested Menendez serve a minimum of 15 years prison time for his conviction, the first of a senator for abusing their leadership on a Senate committee and the first of anyone for serving as a foreign agent while being a public official. They said a steep sentence was warranted to deter other lawmakers from engaging in similar conduct.

    Ahead of sentencing, the feds called Menendez’s scheme one “of stunning brazenness, breadth and duration, resulting in exceptionally grave abuses of power at the highest levels of the legislative branch of the United States government.”

    “Even leaving aside their historical rarity, the defendants’ crimes amount to an extraordinary attempt, at the highest levels of the legislative branch, to corrupt the nation’s core sovereign powers over foreign relations and law enforcement,” Assistant Manhattan U.S. Attorney Eli Mark wrote to Stein in the government’s sentencing submission.

    “Menendez corruptly promised to influence national security, including this country’s provision of large quantities of lethal military aid. He corruptly divulged, to a foreign government, sensitive nonpublic information that could put at risk U.S. and foreign nationals serving at an embassy abroad.”

    In court Wednesday, Adam Fee, Menendez’s lawyer, had asked the judge to weigh “the good and the bad” of Menendez’s history and impose no more than eight years in prison, citing his decades of public service before the bribery scheme.

    Stein received 130 letters from people advocating that the former senator serve a lenient term, including clergy members, foreign dignitaries and community groups.

    “The good outweighs the bad in the arc of Bob’s life,” Fee said. “People are complicated. If our worst moments defined us and overshadowed whatever other light we had put out into the world, many of us, including me, would not be here today.”

    Fee said Menendez had “fallen down” and made decisions that cost him “dearly,” but that the term sought by prosecutors was overly harsh. He spoke about a “scrappy” young Menendez supporting his parents, Cuban immigrants, as a teen and his testimony in a bulletproof vest as a young adult at the corruption trial of Union City Mayor William Must.

    He said a sentence above a decade meant the federal Bureau of Prisons would not send him to a minimum security prison, exposing him “to a dramatically higher risk of danger” as a high-profile inmate.

    “He is a good and honorable man that has made mistakes that he will regret and pay for for the rest of his life.”

    Stein ordered Menendez to report to the Bureau of Prisons by June 6, saying he would allow him to attend his wife’s trial and support her in the coming months as she undergoes treatment for breast cancer.

    Before imposing sentence, the judge said he was at a loss to explain why the veteran lawmaker chose to forfeit his good name and reputation.

    “Again, I don’t know what led you to this. Greed was certainly part of it,” Stein said. “Hubris was part of it. I don’t know. You’ll have to try to figure that out yourself over time.”

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    Source: American Military News