Current:Home > MySen. Bob Menendez’s Egypt trip planning got ‘weird,’ Senate staffer recalls at bribery trial -Triumph Financial Guides
Sen. Bob Menendez’s Egypt trip planning got ‘weird,’ Senate staffer recalls at bribery trial
View
Date:2025-04-18 12:48:19
NEW YORK (AP) — A Senate staffer testified at a bribery trial that planning for Sen. Bob Menendez’s 2021 trip to Egypt and Qatar got “weird” after the Democrat directed that Egypt be included in the process, a Senate staffer testified Monday.
Sarah Arkin, a senior staffer with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, testified as a government witness at a trial over bribes of hundreds of thousands of dollars in gold and cash allegedly paid to the senator in return for benefits he supposedly delivered to three New Jersey businessmen from 2018 to 2022.
Among favors he allegedly carried out, one included helping Egyptian officials in exchange for one businessman gaining a monopoly on the certification that meat sent to Egypt met Islamic dietary requirements.
Then, prosecutors say, he aided a prominent New Jersey real estate developer by acting favorably to Qatar’s government so the businessman could score a lucrative deal with a Qatari investment fund.
Besides charges of bribery, fraud, extortion and obstruction of justice, Menendez is also charged with acting as a foreign agent of Egypt.
Menendez, 70, and two businessmen who allegedly paid him bribes have pleaded not guilty to charges. A third testified earlier at the trial which entered its seventh week. When Menendez was charged last fall, he held the powerful post of chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, a position he relinquished soon afterward.
In her testimony, Arkin said Menendez had asked Senate staff to reach out to an individual at the Egyptian embassy who they didn’t know as they planned the weeklong trip to both countries, even though such excursions were usually planned through the State Department and U.S. authorities.
Although foreign embassies were routinely notified about any U.S. legislators who were traveling their way, Arkin portrayed it as unusual that a trip by a U.S. senator would be planned in conjunction with a foreign embassy.
Later, Arkin said, she was told Menendez was “very upset” after he’d been notified that two Egyptians, including Egypt’s ambassador, had complained that she notified Egyptian officials that Menendez would not meet with Egypt’s president during the trip “under any circumstances.” She said she was told that the senator didn’t want her to go on the trip.
She testified that she told Menendez that the claim that she told anyone that he would not meet with Egypt’s president was “absolutely not true” and that she would never use stern language such as “under no circumstances” even if he declined to meet with someone.
Arkin said another Senate staffer working to plan the trip wrote to her that “all of this Egypt stuff is very weird.”
“It was weird,” she said. Arkin said she was “not an idiot” and “would not have phrased anything that way” by saying the senator would not meet a foreign president of a nation important to the United States “under any circumstances.”
Questioned by Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Richenthal, Arkin also mentioned that Menendez’s wife, Nadine Menendez, was “trying to be involved in the planning” and had “lots of opinions” about what she wanted to do during the trip.
Nadine Menendez also has pleaded not guilty in the case, but her trial has been postponed so that she can recover from breast cancer surgery.
As he left the courthouse Monday, Menendez said Arkin could have gone on the trip if she wanted, but she “chose not to go.”
veryGood! (94671)
Related
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Teen Mom's Jenelle Evans and Husband David Eason Break Up After 6 Years of Marriage
- Nebraska’s Legislature and executive branches stake competing claims on state agency oversight
- Immigration judges union, a frequent critic, is told to get approval before speaking publicly
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Shehbaz Sharif elected Pakistan's prime minister as Imran Khan's followers allege victory was stolen
- Toyota, Jeep, Hyundai and Ford among 1.4 million vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
- Denver Broncos to cut QB Russell Wilson, incurring record cap hit after two tumultuous seasons
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Crowded race for Alabama’s new US House district, as Democrats aim to flip seat in November
Ranking
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Why Kate Winslet Says Ozempic Craze “Sounds Terrible”
- Man convicted of New York murder, dismemberment in attempt to collect woman's life insurance
- 'Effective immediately': University of Maryland frats, sororities suspended amid hazing probe
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- 16 and Pregnant Star Sean Garinger Dead at 20 After ATV Accident
- A revelatory exhibition of Mark Rothko paintings on paper
- Donald Trump wins North Dakota caucuses, CBS News projects
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Maple Leafs tough guy Ryan Reaves: Rangers rookie Matt Rempe is 'going to be a menace'
Cigarettes and cinema, an inseparable pair: Only one Oscar best-picture nominee has no smoking
Conspiracies hinder GOP’s efforts in Kansas to cut the time for returning mail ballots
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
A list of mass killings in the United States this year
Russian drone attack kills 7 in Odesa, Ukraine says
For Women’s History Month, a look at some trailblazers in American horticulture