The Stakes in Wisconsin's Supreme Court Race Are High. Here's Why.
Sorry, Libs, the People Still Support Trump Deporting Illegals
Anti-Gunner Organization Just Made the Case for Trans-Identified People to Own Firearms
Here's What's at Stake for Republicans in Wisconsin's Supreme Court Elections
Iran Loads Up Missiles After Trump Issues Threat
Colorado Far From Finished Infringing on Gun Rights
How the Left Downplays Politically-Motivated Crime As Just Protests
More 'Extremely Dangerous Criminals' Have Been Sent to El Salvador
Dems Say Wisconsin Is Not for Sale. Walker Hits Them With the Facts.
The High Cost of Coastal Litigation: A Threat to Louisiana’s Economy and Trump’s...
DOGE Will Look Into Lawmakers Who Became 'Strangely Wealthy'
Another Poll Shows Democrats in Disarray Over How the Party Is Handling Trump
Trump's Answer to a Question About a Third-Term Is Sure to Trigger the...
Here’s Why the LA Times Is Suing Mayor Karen Bass
Scott Jennings Goes Up Against Former Pentagon Spokesperson on 'Signalgate'
Tipsheet

Bob Menendez Is Going to Jail for a Long Time

AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Well, today is the day. Former Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) got sentenced to 11 years in prison for the outrageous corruption and bribery scandal that ended his career in public life. Boss Bob, known in the Garden State, had evaded accountability for his shady schemes. Menendez faced 15 years in prison.

Advertisement

In 2015, the Obama Justice Department tried to convict him regarding his relationship with a Florida-based ophthalmologist and donor, Salomon Melgen, who bestowed lavish gifts to Mr. Menendez in return for allegedly pushing his business interests. Melgen would later be found guilty of being part of a Medicare fraud scheme. They never got him, but that didn’t dissuade the Justice Department from keeping an eye on Menendez. 

In 2023, he was indicted after almost $500,000 in cash was discovered throughout his home, including a horde of gold bars. He earned the moniker “gold bar Bob” over this discovery. 

These items, along with payments toward his home mortgage and luxury cars, were payments made to him by the Egyptian government in return for favorable policy decisions from his position as chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The number of superseding indictments that followed was quite the merry-go-round, as the New Jersey Democrat was indicted for failing to register as a foreign agent.  

Advertisement

The case got messy as Bob refused to resign and mulled, throwing his wife under the bus. Last July, a jury found him guilty on all counts.  

Menendez survived the first corruption case but not the second—the gold bars proved to be a bridge too far for his Senate Democratic colleagues, who cleaved him from the herd once the indictments were handed down. 

Menendez must report to jail on June 6. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement