By Rebeka Zeljko
Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey was convicted of federal corruption and bribery charges on Tuesday, Fox News reported.
Menendez, who was indicted on Mar. 5, was convicted by a jury over his involvement in a bribery and corruption scheme with three New Jersey businessmen and the Egyptian government. The indictment was brought forth following an investigation and search of his New Jersey home, where authorities found over $480,000 in cash hidden throughout the property, a luxury vehicle purchased for his wife by the businessmen, and over $100,000 of gold bars, according to the indictment. (RELATED: Senator Indicted On Corruption Charges To File As Independent Ahead Of Reelection Bid: REPORT)
Prior to his latest indictment, Menendez had been the focal point of several other indictments and investigations throughout his career.
In 2006, Menendez was under investigation by the then-U.S. Attorney Chris Christie for allegedly helping secure federal grants for a non-profit that was simultaneously paying Menendez about $300,000 of rent over a nine-year period, according to Politico. Prosecutors eventually closed the case in 2011 without pursuing charges.
A year later in 2012, one of Mendez’s campaign donors, Joseph Bigica, pled guilty to making nearly $100,000 in illegal contributions to the second term senator, according to The Star-Ledger. The campaign was not accused of any wrongdoing, and pledged to donate the contributions to charitable organizations. (RELATED: Dems Face Potential Fiasco In Deep Blue State Thanks To Indicted Senator’s Refusal To Stand Down)
Menendez had also previously been indicted in 2015 for conspiracy, bribery and honest services fraud after an investigation found that Menendez allegedly accepted $1 million worth of lavish trips, gifts and campaign contributions from Salomon Melgen, a longtime friend and donor, in exchange for visa applications for Melvin’s girlfriends and influence over Medicare billing disputes that were worth approximately $8.9 million. Menendez claimed that they were simply gifts from a personal friend, and the hung jury forced a mistrial, eventually favoring an acquittal in November of 2017.
Despite his legal track record, Menendez opted to stay in the race for his New Jersey senate seat.
On March 21, Menendez announced that he won’t run as a Democrat, and officially filed as an independent candidate on Jun. 3. Menendez is running against Democratic Rep. Andy Kim and Republican candidate Curtis Bashaw.