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.”
___
© 2025 New York Daily News
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Source: American Military News