“Where is the outrage?” asked the meme, posted on Facebook this month and running with more than 15,000 shares. “A senator is on trial for corruption,” it continues (for what seems like a lifetime), “in a case where his codefendant was convicted and is getting life in prison in a case that involves selling underage minority immigrant girls in prostitution.”
TWS Fact Check will make this short and simple for our dear readers.
- New Jersey senator Bob Menendez is no longer on trial in a corruption-related case
- The “co-defendant” Dr. Salomon Melgen did received a 17-year (not life) sentence. However, it was for Medicare fraud, not prostitution. And it was a separate trial.
- Menendez’s trial did not involve the selling of underage, minority immigrant prostitutes
For an in-depth read on the Menendez trial I recommend this, this, this, or this. But, our purposes don’t require such a lengthy review due to the meme’s failure to approach anything resembling accuracy.
Menendez was most certainly “on trial” for alleged corruption in 2017. But the case ended in a mistrial after the jurors shilly-shallied; and the DOJ filed to dismiss the case in January 2018. In April, the Senate Ethics Committee sent Menendez a “public letter of admonition,” which reads in part:
The trial, however, was not over the supposed selling of underage women for prostitution as the meme claims. There were unproven allegations against Menendez and Melgen having … relations with underage prostitutes, but this was not a part of the indictment against the senator.
In a case unrelated to Menendez, his pal Melgen was sentenced to 17 years “for stealing $73 million from Medicare by persuading elderly patients to undergo excruciating tests and treatments they didn’t need for diseases they didn’t have,” the Sun Sentinel reported in February.
The meme is a hornet’s nest of misinformation. TWS Fact Check is happy to have smacked it with a tennis racket of facts.
If you have questions about this fact check, or would like to submit a request for another fact check, email Holmes Lybrand at [email protected] or the Weekly Standard at [email protected]. For details on TWS Fact Check, see our explainer here.-