Sen. Bob Menendez won’t say if he’ll run again as he pleads not guilty to new bribery charges: ‘Wouldn’t be announcing in courtroom’
Embattled New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez sidestepped questions Monday about whether he’ll run again in November — while pleading not guilty to fresh charges that he lied to investigators and did illegal favors for the Qatari government.
“Well, I wouldn’t be announcing it in a courtroom,” quipped the Democrat, 70, after he was asked to confirm — as The Post exclusively reported last week — that he’d be bowing out of the race to represent his Garden State district for another term.
Menendez then flashed a half smile as he stepped into an elevator at the Manhattan federal courthouse where he, his wife Nadine, 56, and New Jersey businessmen Fred Daibes and Wael Hana appeared for a brief hearing after being hit with another expanded bribery indictment.
“Once again, not guilty, your honor,” said the senator, wearing a checkered blue suit and standing next to his wife and his lawyers, when he was asked to enter a plea to the new charges.
Menendez now faces 16 charges stemming from what prosecutors have called a “corrupt relationship” in which Bob and Nadine were bribed with gold bars, more than $500,000 in cash and a Mercedes-Benz convertible in exchange for favors that benefitted the local businessmen, the Egyptian government and Qatar.
