Prosecutors in the bribery case against New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez are slowly presenting evidence to jurors in Manhattan federal court. The evidence includes documents, emails, and phone records, which they claim show that Menendez accepted bribes from two New Jersey businessmen over the last seven years. The prosecutors allege that the bribes, which included gold bars and cash, were given in exchange for Menendez using his power as a senator to assist the businessmen. All three defendants have pleaded not guilty to the charges.

One piece of evidence presented to the jurors was a series of text messages, emails, and phone records that showed Menendez requesting sensitive information about the number of Americans and Egyptians working at the U.S. embassy. He then passed this information to his girlfriend at the time, who relayed it to one of the businessmen on trial with him. This businessman, Wael Hana, used his connections to Egyptian officials and friendship with Menendez’s girlfriend to secure a deal that enabled his company to monopolize the certification of meat exported from the U.S. to Egypt as adhering to Islamic dietary requirements.

According to the evidence presented in court, Hana then passed the information to an Egyptian official, resulting in a dramatic increase in the cost of certifying meat. However, Menendez’s defense lawyers argue that the information about the embassy staff makeup was already public and not sensitive. Menendez’s then-girlfriend, Nadine Arslanian, who is now known as Nadine Menendez after marrying the senator, was also charged in the case. Her trial was postponed due to a breast cancer diagnosis, and she has pleaded not guilty. The trial is set to resume on Wednesday.

The trial is currently in its third week, and prosecutors are slowly presenting their case against Menendez and the two businessmen. The evidence shown to jurors includes a range of documents, emails, and phone records that purportedly demonstrate a pattern of bribery over several years. The defense maintains that the information about the embassy staff was not sensitive and was already publicly available. Nadine Menendez, who is now married to the senator, is also charged in the case and has pleaded not guilty, with her trial postponed due to health reasons.

The allegations against Menendez and the businessmen involve a complex web of relationships and transactions, with the prosecution claiming that the senator used his position to benefit the businessmen in exchange for bribes. The evidence presented in court includes communications between Menendez, his then-girlfriend, and the businessmen, as well as their associates. As the trial progresses, more details about the alleged bribery scheme are expected to come to light, shedding further light on the case against the defendants. The trial is set to continue with more evidence and witness testimony in the coming days, providing jurors with a comprehensive understanding of the charges.

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