Scamfluencers - ENCORE: Bob Menendez: Bad Romance Part 2 | 186
Episode Date: November 5, 2025Senator Bob Menendez and his wife have just been indicted for wheeling and dealing with the government of Egypt, along with many other crimes. In a bid to save his career, Bob throws his co-c...onspirators under the bus—including his wife, Nadine. But after decades avoiding consequences, Bob faces a mountain of evidence in court. He’s about to go from lion of the Senate to major liability.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, scam influencers listeners. If you're as hooked on these jaw-dropping schemes as we are, you'll love Wondry Plus. Think of it as you're all access past the world of scams. Add-free episodes, early access, and exclusive deep dives that uncover even more shocking details. Don't just listen. Emmerse yourself in the chaos with Wondry Plus. We'll be back in two weeks with all new episodes of scam influencers. But first, we wanted to revisit a political scandal that's been back in the headlines recently. Yes, we are talking about Senator Bond
Bob Menendez, a.k.a. Gold Bar Bob. When we first covered him, he was under indictment for
allegedly taking bribes in the form of cash, gold bars, and a Mercedes-Benz. He was convicted
last year on 16 counts, including bribery, obstruction of justice, and acting as a foreign
agent. And in January, he was sentenced to 11 years in prison. As of this summer, he's officially
behind bars. He reported to prison on June 17th, but that's not all. In September, his wife,
Nadine Menendez was also convicted in the same bribery scheme.
She was sentenced to four and a half years in prison, along with three years of supervised
release.
At her sentencing, she called herself a puppet and said that her husband was, quote, not the
man I thought he was.
Oh, Sarah.
They never are, are they?
They never are.
And another detail, Bob tried to make amends before Nadine's sentencing by submitting a
letter to the judge stating he regrets that his attorneys tried to place the blitz.
on her. He wrote, to suggest that Nadine was money hungry or in financial need and therefore
would solicit others for help is simply wrong. I mean, nice try, I guess. Too little too late,
in my opinion. Well, they'll have plenty of time to work it out or not while they complete their
sentences. In the meantime, this feels like the perfect moment to revisit this love story gone wrong
and to see how Bob Menendez went from Senate heavyweight to cautionary tale. So grab your
metaphorical gold bars, settle in, and enjoy the encore of our episodes on Bob Menendez.
A note to our listeners. This episode involves mention of suicide. Please listen with care.
Sarah, what do you know about the Menendez's? It's those brothers who like probably killed their
parents, but everyone on TikTok thinks they're innocent. I'm too scared to. I'm too scared to
learn more, to be honest. Okay, that is not actually who I'm talking about. They do share a last
name. I am talking about the politician power couple. I have never heard of these people.
Okay, well, wonderful news, Sarah, because I am here to tell you all about the other less
murdery Menendez pair. And trust me, it is still a wild ride.
It's October 2019, and Bob Menendez is ready for the spotlight.
Bob is 65, has a helmet of white hair, a round face, and wears rimless glasses.
Picture middle management at the Keebler Elf factory.
Bob is actually a pretty powerful guy.
He's a U.S. Senator from New Jersey, and he's the ranking member of the very important Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
He's known as a ruthless politician.
But for Bob, today is all about love.
He's been on a whirlwind vacation with his girlfriend of a year and a half, Nadine Arslanian.
Nadine looks way out of Bob's league.
She's a striking blonde in her early 50s,
tall and lean with olive skin.
During this trip, they've made stops in Greece,
Tarks and Caicos, and Colombia.
But today, Bob has taken Nadine to the Taj Mahal.
She's wearing a blue dress with flowers
and sitting in front of him on a bench near the very one
that Princess Diana made famous.
A dusky haze falls over the famous palace
as tourists stream in and out.
The whole thing has a sereneer.
real dreamlike quality to it, which makes it a popular place to pop the question. And that is
exactly what Bob plans to do. A few months ago, Bob told Nadine he was going to propose to her by
singing a certain song. But he wouldn't tell her what the song was or when he was going to do it.
But now, as Nadine gazes up at him, he starts singing. Thankfully, someone with a video camera
was there to capture the moment, and I am going to make you watch it.
Because you're still from a light sky.
Never be enough.
Never be enough.
This was disgusting to watch.
It's like over a minute and ten seconds of him just straight up singing
before he sits beside her and proposes.
Everything about it was gross and weird and uncomfortable,
and I think public proposals are evil.
Okay, well, that's good to know.
I won't propose to you in public.
Well, the song is never enough, which is from the movie musical The Greatest Showman.
It's not hard to see why Bob might like it.
The subject of the movie, P.T. Barnum, was the son of a tailor and eventually became a power player in government and a household name for his traveling circus.
Bob is the son of a seamstress and carpenter.
But now, he's one of the most powerful people in the U.S. government.
The other thing that Bob and P.T. Barnum have in common?
They're both big-time fraudsters.
Bob and Nadine's jet-setting love story comes with a hefty price tag,
and they've been lining their pockets using Bob's influence and Nadine's connections with a foreign government.
They're riding high on their proposal for now, but the FBI is on to them.
And soon, a federal investigation will reveal Bob's circus trick.
Good old-fashioned bribery.
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That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N.
From Wondry, I'm Sachi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Haggy.
And this is scamfluensers.
Today, I'm going to tell you about a love and I feel like a legend.
Today, I'm going to tell you about a love story so epic that it undermined American democracy.
When Senator Bob Menendez first entered politics, he wanted a root-out corruption.
But by the time he got together with Nadi Narslanian in 2018, he was more than happy to loan out the power of a Senate seat for money, luxury items, and even gym equipment.
This story isn't just about how far bribery will get you in New Jersey, it's also about how absolute power corrupts absolutely, and how far some men will go for the women of their dreams.
This is Bob Menendez's Bad Romance, Part One.
It's the winter of 1982, and 28-year-old Bob Menendez is at the federal courthouse in Newark, New Jersey.
He's wearing big glasses, a trench coat, and a bulletproof vest.
Bob isn't being paranoid.
He's about to testify in a high-profile corruption case, and a judge was recently assassinated during a similar trial.
So he's taking extra precautions.
Bob grew up in Union City, New Jersey, right across the Hudson River from Manhattan.
His parents were immigrants who fled from Cuba in the 50s.
Once they were in the U.S., Bob's dad worked as a carpenter
while his mom worked as a seamstress.
So growing up, Bob's family didn't have a lot of money.
When Bob got to high school,
he had big sideburns and sideswept 70s bangs.
He was a good student.
He did so well that his teachers wanted him to take honors classes.
There was just one problem.
They said that Bob had to pay for the extra books.
Having to pay for the extra books just didn't feel right to Bob.
Thankfully, he was working as a teenage aide to a local Democratic power player, William Moosto.
William was in the state legislature at the time, and he used some political muscle to help Bob organize a successful petition drive to reform the city's school board.
This gives Bob a taste of local politics.
And a couple of years later, when Bob was just 20, he actually won a seat on that very same school board.
And that year, William was elected mayor of Union City.
Wow, that is quite a trajectory.
I mean, obviously, as many scammers, he started off very ambitious and hardworking.
Yes, but his happiness does not really last.
A few years after that, Bob's father dies by suicide.
Bob started to see William as a father figure, as well as a mentor.
And in the late 70s, just as Bob was finishing up law school,
while still serving on the school board,
he approached William with another problem.
Bob discovered that a company owned by a mob hitman
had been overcharging the district for construction
on two high schools.
He took the problem to William,
but the mayor didn't take any action to stop the corruption.
In fact, Bob was taken off the project entirely.
He was forced to face reality.
His mentor was just another corrupt New Jersey politician.
And this is why Bob is at the courthouse today.
He's testifying against William in a bribery case.
Oh, my God.
That is crazy, like someone who basically became your second father, your mentor,
and then you just see that they're a cheater?
Yeah.
Well, Bob is determined to stick to his principles and go after corruption,
even when it means facing down a powerhouse like William.
At least, that's how Bob tells it.
For what it's worth, Bob is testifying against William while also running,
for mayor against him. And even though William is found guilty and sentenced to seven years in prison,
in classic New Jersey fashion, he still wins the election. After this loss, it seems like Bob's
political career might be over before it even begins. But just like he showed by taking the stand,
Bob isn't going to go down without a fight. Bob is humiliated by his loss to William, but he keeps his
eye on the prize. For the next four years, he builds his law practice. And then, in 1986,
he runs for mayor again. And this time, he wins. From there, he advances steadily through the
political ranks. He gets elected to the New Jersey State Assembly and then the state Senate.
In 1992, 10 years after he testified against his former mentor, Bob wins a seat in the U.S. House
of Representatives. His political stock is rising, but he wants more. Former staffers later told Van
Fair that Bob always wanted to be rich, but he didn't want to have to kiss donors' asses
at fancy fundraisers. Unfortunately for Bob, he does not have much of a choice. That's why in
1993, a couple of months after his election to Congress, he's at a Democratic Party fundraiser
in South Florida. It's a $250 a plate dinner with about 50 donors, and one of them is a prominent
local eye doctor named Solomon Melgan. Solomon is in his late 30s with around
face and a slightly receding hairline. After an investment in a supercomputer system made him
a multimillionaire, he became a prominent political donor in Florida. When Bob meets Solomon,
he senses a kindred spirit. They're about the same age, and they both have Latin American
backgrounds. Solomon is from the Dominican Republic. At the fundraiser, Solomon gives Bob $500.
It's a small start, but soon enough, the two men become buddies, to the point where their families
start vacationing together. And Bob might hate sucking up to most donors, but he and Solomon
legitimately seem to love hanging out. Bob attends Solomon's daughter's wedding, and Solomon flies
to be by Bob's side after his mother dies. And Solomon is probably there for his friend in 2005,
after Bob's divorced from his first wife. In 2006, Bob gets a big promotion. He's appointed to the
Senate. Given their close friendship, it's no surprise that months later, when it's time for him to run for a
full term, he knows that he can rely on his friend.
Solomon flies Bob around on a private jet, holds fundraisers for him, and makes large donations
to his campaign.
In November 2006, Bob wins.
I understand this is probably a genuine friendship, but it reeks of, you scratch my back,
I scratch yours.
Sarah, I think it's a lot like our friendship in so many ways.
We scratch each other's backs, and it works.
And we also do lots of fraud.
Now, we don't know exactly when Bob starts using his power to help Solomon,
but he is definitely doing it once he's in the Senate.
For instance, in 2008, Solomon tells Bob that his 22-year-old Dominican model girlfriend
was supposed to get a visa to visit him for the holidays,
but her application was denied.
Could Bob fix the problem?
Bob reaches out to the ambassador,
and Solomon's girlfriend gets her visa almost immediately.
Then, Bob goes on to secure visas for 10.
two of Solomon's other girlfriends.
But soon, Solomon will ask Bob for even bigger favors,
ones that veer into outright corruption.
It's June 2009.
Bob has been in the Senate for about three years.
And today, he's emailing a staffer to let them know that Solomon needs help.
His friend has a Medicare problem.
The problem is that Solomon overbilled Medicare for a drug that he used in his practice,
to the tune of almost $9 million.
Bob initiates conversations on Solomon's behalf
with the Senate Majority Leader's office
and even with the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
But his efforts to make Solomon's problem go away are in vain.
Two years later, Bob gets another chance to help out his friend.
Solomon tells Bob that he has an ownership stake in a port security company,
and this company has a $500 million contract with the government of the Dominican Republic.
But the government is trying to back out of the deal.
Bob steps in.
And by this time, he's not just on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
which helps shape legislation related to foreign affairs.
He's also the chair of the subcommittee that oversees the Dominican Republic.
So Bob may be better positioned than anyone in the country
to lean on both the state and the Commerce Departments
to persuade them to enforce the contract.
And that's what he does.
Bob really isn't supposed to be doing this.
Yes, the rules are a little fuzzy,
but Bob has been accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of gifts from Solomon for years.
He's supposed to report these in his financial disclosure reports,
but he hasn't.
So when he starts pushing to enforce the contract,
he's omitting some very relevant information.
And if he is on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
that means he is quite influential.
Like, he's not just like some regular guy.
Well, he's actually about to get even more powerful
because a couple of years later, in January 2013,
Bob is sworn in as the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
He's the first Latino to hold the job,
and it's a huge moment for him.
But as he's going through the pomp and circumstance
of the swearing-in ceremony,
the FBI is raiding Solomon's Palm Beach Eye Clinic
along with several of his other businesses.
Because Solomon isn't just over-es
over-billing Medicare for one drug.
He's also been falsely diagnosing patients with a retinal disorder called macular degeneration
and billing for related tests and procedures.
So, Medicare fraud.
The raid forces Bob to spend his first month as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee
playing defense, because now there's a public spotlight on Bob's friendship with Solomon
and a growing FBI investigation.
Bob tries to cover his tracks by paying Solomon back for two free-free.
to the Dominican Republic, but he's taken more than a dozen. And remember, none of these flights
have ever been disclosed properly. And that's just one part of the investigation. After about a year
of scrutiny in 2014, Bob's campaign pays a quarter of a million dollars to retain a Washington
law firm and set up a legal defense fund. It might seem like, even with all his power,
Bob is fully cooked. But he's about to get support from a surprising ally, a part of the
government even more corrupt than he is.
In April 2015, Bob walks into a stuffy conference room in Newark.
He's just been indicted on federal corruption charges related to his relationship with
Solomon.
But the room is full of supporters who erupt in applause when he walks in.
Flanked by the American and the New Jersey state flags, Bob delivers a speech defending
his record as an anti-corruption politician.
He even evokes his stand, decades ago, against.
William Moosto. Bob might have a good origin story, but the indictment tells a different one.
It includes reams of emails that show Bob interceding to help Solomon with his Medicare fraud
troubles, his port security contract, and, of course, his girlfriend's visas. The indictment shows
that Bob accepted private jet rides, fundraisers, and large donations to his political action
committee. Still, he has supporters in New Jersey and in the Senate, where he continues to serve for the
more than two years it takes for the case to finally go to trial.
Things look bad for Bob, but in June 2016,
about two months before the trial is supposed to begin,
he gets an unexpected gift.
The Supreme Court hands down a unanimous decision
in a case called McDonald v. United States.
The decision redefines bribery for politicians
so that it only applies if someone is given money or goods
in exchange for, quote, official acts.
But the justices significantly
narrow the definition of what an official act is.
They say it needs to be something like calling a hearing or filing a lawsuit.
Sarah, can you read how the SCOTUS blog characterizes the changes?
Yeah, it says, to qualify as an official act,
the public official must make a decision to take an action on that question or matter
or agree to do so.
Setting up a meeting, talking to another official, or organizing an event without more
does not fit the definition of an official act.
so to me this sounds like you have to receive whatever gift or amount of money and say
this is a bribe and I'm using this bribe to pass this law and that's what counts as a bribe
otherwise I guess it's pretty vague yeah thanks to the supreme court it is now much more
difficult to call something a bribe and what looked like a slam-dunk corruption trial becomes a
disaster for the prosecution given that the burden is on them the more confusing things get
the harder it is for them to make a firm case.
About a week into the trial,
the prosecution calls a woman
names Fittlana Busek as a witness.
She's a part-time model from Ukraine
and one of Solomon's many girlfriends
who Bob helped get a visa.
She shows up to the courthouse
looking like mob wife, Martitia,
with long black hair,
an all-black outfit,
and blood-red nails.
Here's a photo of her.
I mean, listen, this woman is very hot,
and she does look like someone
who would be in the Sopranos for sure.
Yeah, I love her immediately.
Well, the prosecution wants Fittlana to establish
that Bob manipulated the system
to get her a visa in exchange for money and favors.
Instead, her testimony ends up supporting the defense's argument
that Solomon was doing things like loaning Bob a private jet
or giving him big gifts as a friend.
She talks about how Solomon called Bob Ehrmano.
She insists that the two of them are just besties.
When one of the defense attorneys asks if she knows why she's in court, she says no.
Instead, she points to the lead prosecutor and says, quote,
I don't know why I'm here.
He has just been forcing me to be here.
She also implies that she finds the prosecutor boring,
which sends the courtroom into peals of laughter.
As she leaves the courtroom, she throws Solomon a cute little smirk.
Okay, I love her, and she deserves some kind of,
of award for that performance.
Yeah.
This is like, what's that scene in my cousin Vinny?
Like, the defense is wrong, except it's the other way around.
Yes, that's exactly it.
I mean, she's just like, I guess I'm here, but whatever.
Queen, icon.
Well, Svidlana isn't Bob's only ally in the courtroom.
Corey Booker, the other senator from New Jersey, testifies on Bob's behalf.
Corey is in his late 40s with a shaved bald head and a woman.
wide smile, and he is very charming on the stand. He emphasizes how Bob stands up for the people of
New Jersey, and Corey might really believe that. But Democrats are also trying to protect Bob,
because if he's found guilty, he could be expelled from the Senate. And if that happens,
New Jersey's Republican Governor Chris Christie would get to pick his replacement.
All of these defenses add up. And just before Thanksgiving, Bob's case ends in a mistrial.
Ten jurors think he's innocent, while only two think he's guilty.
After this debacle, the prosecution decides not to pursue the charges any further.
Bob escaped this trial with his political career intact.
He could go back to his roots and stay on the straight and arrow,
but he's about to find a partner in crime who will fill his life with even more plotting
and international intrigue, a single mom from New Jersey.
Nearly 30 years ago, a vicious serial killer murdered five women in and around the city of Mons in Belgium, not far from where I'm standing right now.
He taunted authorities, placing their dismembered body parts in locations designed to terrorize the population.
There was a macabre and mysterious discovery of body parts apparently dismembered with a sore, according to investigators.
His identity remains unknown, but his name still sparks fear, The Butcher of Moss.
Ten trash bags have been discovered so far.
Investigators believe it is the work of a serial killer.
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This is Le Monstre, Season 2, The Butcher of Moss.
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There was a woman moving through the hall.
I stepped back and I was completely alone in the hallway.
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It's New Year's Day, 2018,
and 50-year-old Nadine Arcelanian sits in her split-level home
in the middle-class suburb of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.
Nadine is a single mom with grown children.
She's very popular in the Bergen County dating scene,
but not everyone is wild.
about her. For example, Nadine has been mingling with the Real Housewives of New Jersey cast for
years, ever since she started going to fashion shows at a boutique owned by Kim Dee, a friend of several
housewives and enemy to even more. But she's a little much, even for them. Kim Dee later tells
Vanity Fair that while all of her friends enjoy getting Botox and buying designer clothes, Nadine is
even more obsessed with these status symbols. Okay. If a real househouse
housewife and more specifically a real housewife of New Jersey finds you a bit much. That means
you are scary. You are a scary person. I can only assume you are a ball of fire. An active house
fire. You are arson. Yes, absolutely. Like that is a powerful woman. Well, there is someone who's
always accepted Nadine, her friend, Bob Menendez. She first met Bob in 2008, and they've stayed in touch
for the past decade. Nadine calls him every year on his birthday, and today, Bob is turning 64.
Nadine has always felt a connection to Bob. Like him, she comes from a family of refugees and immigrants.
Her grandparents fled the Armenian genocide and landed in Lebanon where Nadine was born.
After a civil war broke out in the 70s, her family moved again, this time, to America.
Nadine thrived in the U.S. and ended up getting a degree in international politics. But after she got
married in 1989, she had two kids and prioritized being a wife and a mother. She got divorced
in 2005, and things got rough. Her kids went to an expensive private school and money was so
tight that her house was on the verge of foreclosure. She's been desperately trying to get back
on her feet. Her dating life hasn't been going much better. Several of her exes have described
Nadine as being extremely insecure and possessive, and in 2010, she was even arrested for
entering the home of a man she had been court ordered not to contact. Before the cops took her
away, she managed to throw a photo album at him. This is a very dramatic timeline, and someone like
Bob who's scamming might not be a great idea to be around such a loose cannon. I don't know.
Yeah, a lot of suggestions could be made here. Well, the most promising relationship Nadine's
had since her divorce has been with a lawyer named Doug, who represented R. Kelly and several
reality TV clients.
And he and Nadine have traveled the world together,
but they aren't super serious.
They're both seeing other people.
Bob's not having much luck on the dating scene either.
His last girlfriend recently dumped him
because she couldn't take the stress of his legal issues.
During his birthday call with Nadine,
Bob drops a bombshell.
He asks her if she's still dating that Doug lawyer
and confesses that he's been in love with her
since they first met.
Nadine thinks this could be the real thing.
Bob could be her knight in shining armor.
And just a few months after they start dating,
he whisks her away to one of his favorite playgrounds,
the Dominican Republic.
The only problem is that Nadine is so head over heels in love,
she neglects to tell anyone that she's leaving the country,
including her children.
And even her on-again, off-again, boyfriend Doug,
later tells the New York Post that he filed a missing person's report.
The situation eventually gets cleared up.
But it's an early sign that this couple is madly.
in love, and maybe a little out of their minds.
It's March 2018, and Wa'El Hana is striding towards Capitol Hill.
Wa'L is 34 years old, with short dark hair and resting bitchface.
He's here to meet with his old friend Nadine and her new boyfriend, Bob.
And he is desperate.
Weel came to the U.S. from Egypt more than 10 years ago after winning the visa lottery.
But it hasn't been easy.
He's cycled through a bunch of failed businesses,
including a limo company, a truck stop,
and even an Italian restaurant.
He's in dire straits.
Like Nadine, his house is on the verge of foreclosure.
Weil does have one thing going for him.
He's well connected with Egyptian government officials.
But that hasn't translated into any real money or power.
Until now.
Wael and Nadine became friends a few years ago,
in part because they have a lot in common.
They're both immigrants who speak multiple languages and work hard.
But they just can't seem to catch a break.
So Waal hatched a plan.
He recently started another business, a halal meat company.
And according to federal prosecutors, his plan was pretty straightforward.
Weil's friends in the Egyptian government will award a monopoly contract to his company
so long as Bob uses his power as the head of the Foreign Relations Committee
to loosen up military and financial aid to Egypt.
In exchange for Bob's help,
Wael will hire Nadine for a high-paying, basically fake job.
And Bob is already on board with the plan.
Wael is here today in Washington
to go with Bob and Nadine to a meeting with some Egyptian officials.
This is all pretty out in the open.
They even snap a picture to commemorate the moment.
Here, take a look.
Yeah, you know, it's a photo in an office.
It's very viblous.
It's a bunch of guys in suits, our boy, Waal, Nadine, and Bob.
And you couldn't imagine three people who belonged together less.
It looks like they just got shoved together into a room, just three random people.
They shouldn't know each other or be around each other.
That's the vibe I'm getting when I look at this.
That screams fraud to me, really.
Yeah.
Well, over the next year, Bob, Nadine, and YL have several more meetings with Egyptian officials.
Federal prosecutors later alleged that Bob wielded his power in the Senate
to advocate for additional military aid for Egypt,
and that Nadine worked as a go-between to pass along information.
For example, at one point, Bob texted Nadine some sensitive information
about personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo,
and she passed it along to Waal, who sent it to the Egyptian officials.
This high-stakes game of telephone eventually pays off.
In April 2019, the Egyptian government grants Wa'el's
company a monopoly on certifying that meat exports from the U.S. to Egypt are compliant with
halal standards. But the plan almost immediately runs into another obstacle, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. The USDA prepares a report warning that this monopoly will increase the costs
of halal certification and could even cause a disruption in the U.S. market. They start looking
into the deal, and federal prosecutors later say that Bob comes to O'L's defense, calling a U.S.
official and telling him not to interfere.
I think now is maybe a good time to talk about the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
Sarah, do you know what that is?
I do not know what that is at all.
Never heard of it.
Well, it's a law that requires private U.S. citizens to register as foreign agents in order
to prevent covert influence.
A foreign agent is someone who represents the interests of a foreign country or entity within
the United States.
And while Nadine could just claim that she forgot to register, people in the federal
government aren't allowed to act as foreign agents, ever.
At the end of the day, Wael winds up keeping his halal monopoly.
He's finally gotten a financial foothold in the U.S.
But he's also gotten himself involved in a bigger conspiracy.
And while he has a cozy relationship with a senator,
another part of the government is about to start breathing down his neck, the FBI.
It's May 21st, 2019, an FBI agent Terry Williams-Thompson,
is at Morton Steakhouse in Washington, D.C.
Terry, a petite woman in her early 40s,
is wearing a black dress.
And it might look like she's on a date,
but she's actually at work.
She's been with the FBI for more than a decade,
so surveilling someone at a restaurant is pretty routine.
Terry is positioned to observe her target,
but then she notices someone else walking to the restaurant,
Senator Bob Menendez.
Even though Bob isn't her intended target,
Terry ends up paying a lot of attention to him
and his dinner companions.
They include Waal and at least one Egyptian intelligence officer.
Terry records everything,
but she can't hear most of the conversation herself.
That is, except for something Nadine says,
what else can the love of my life do for you?
We actually have one of the photos that the FBI took of the dinner right here, Sarah.
This is an incredible creep shot.
It looks like when someone is trying to take a photo of a celebrity at a restaurant,
It's just like you can't really make anyone out, but you do see Nadine and she's looking at Bob with adoring eyes.
Just enough to make it to Des Mois, that's for sure.
Oh, totally.
Well, Terry must pass the information up the chain because before long, the FBI is on Bob's tail.
And a couple of months after that, he funnels $23,568 and 54 cents into a fake consulting company that Nadine has set up.
The exact amount she needs to save her house from foreclosure and bring her mortgage current.
Terry and the feds are watching carefully and see firsthand how Bob, Nadine, and Wa-El have gotten comfortable dining out on the power of Bob's office.
But soon enough, the bill is going to come due.
Three months later, Jose Araube relaxes with Bob and Nadine in their backyard.
They're sitting around enjoying brandy and cigar.
Jose is a New Jersey insurance broker
in his early 50s
with close-croped salt and pepper hair.
Jose met the couple through Waal
last year, and since then
he's been trying to build a relationship with them
because, like so many other people,
Jose wants Bob's help.
One of Jose's associates
as being investigated for insurance fraud,
and Jose knows that he will be implicated too.
He's hoping that Bob can help
keep the feds off of his back.
Jose has already done his part
by throwing Bob a fundraising.
And after hearing from Waal that Nadine wanted a new car,
Jose arranged a handoff of $15,000 in cash,
which Nadine used as a down payment on a new Mercedes.
Jose then starts making the car's monthly payments.
Lots of Bob and Nadine's text later become public.
So we know what Nadine texted Bob immediately after getting the car.
Sarah, would you please read it for us?
Yes.
Uh, Nadine texts Bob.
Congratulations, mon amour de love you.
we are the proud owners of a 2019 Mercedes heart.
It always is humiliating when we have to read texts between couples.
It's so embarrassing.
Yeah, I never want to talk to a man again after these.
Also, that is definitely evidence.
Yeah, it sure is.
Well, Nadine is obviously pleased,
but by the time he's swirling brandy in Bob's backyard,
Jose is probably frustrated.
months have gone by since he helped Nadine get her car,
and he hasn't heard any real updates about his case.
At some point, Nadine heads inside, leaving Jose alone with Bob.
And Bob gives him good news.
He's about to meet with the New Jersey Attorney General
to talk about the insurance fraud case.
But Bob needs to make sure he knows who he's going to bat for.
So he summons Nadine by ringing a little bell,
and she materializes with a piece of paper in hand.
Bob tells Jose to write down the names of his associate,
and tucks the list into his pocket.
You know, ringing the bell to summon Nadine is absolutely crazy,
but it also does make me think that these two have some sort of sick dynamic
that proves they're really in love.
I get bribery and craziness is a big part of it,
but they kind of match each other's freak, and I'm sorry to say that.
Okay, cool, gross, and weird, and troubling.
In any case, a couple of weeks later, Jose sees that
Bob has dramatically proposed to Nadine in front of the Taj Mahal.
I'm sure you remember that haunting melody from the beginning of this episode.
Well, soon after the proposal, Jose gets a call from Bob.
He later says that Bob told him, quote,
That thing you asked me about, there's nothing there.
I give you your peace.
In other words, Bob has made Jose's legal troubles go away.
Bob is blissfully engaged and Jose doesn't need to worry about going to prison.
But another party is about to butt in on their happiness.
It's the middle of December,
three months after Bob's backyard meeting with Jose.
He's standing on the Senate floor about to give a very important speech.
After four unsuccessful attempts,
the Senate has unanimously voted to formally recognize the Armenian genocide
and honor the memory of its 1.5 million victims.
Given how much Nadine cares about her Armenian heritage,
you can imagine how huge the same.
for her. Here's what Bob says
on the floor. We have just passed
the Armenian
genocide resolution
recognition, and it is
fitting and appropriate
that the Senate stands on the right side of history
in doing so.
It commemorates the truth
of the Armenian genocide.
It's such a moving moment
that even Ted Cruz,
who sucks, gets up and
says some supportive words.
The only person who seems to dislike the
resolution is then President Trump, who's mainly concerned with maintaining a good relationship
with the president of Turkey, much like a certain New York City mayor.
Yeah, I mean, that is kind of surprising he made that statement because it is pretty
overtly political. And for some people, it is like controversial, right? Yeah. So further proof
that they're really in love. My God. Well, things still aren't all roses for Bob. Because a few
weeks ago, the feds raided Wael's home and offices and confiscated a ton of evidence that might
lead back to him. But for some reason, maybe because he's avoided consequences for so long,
Bob doesn't seem worried. And a couple of months after the big Senate vote in March 2020,
he holds a secret meeting in his office at D.C. with a general who happens to be Egypt's top spy.
This guy has a new mission for Bob. Apparently, Ethiopia is building a hydroelectric dam.
on the Nile River.
Egypt is worried that the dam
will cut into their water supply
and they want the project shut down.
A few weeks after their meeting,
Bob writes to two cabinet secretaries
to pressure the State Department
to get more involved in the dispute over the dam.
This time, Bob and Nadine
aren't just nudging more aid dollars towards Egypt.
They're potentially interfering
with the water supply
of multiple countries in a tense region.
And what does it get them?
In exchange for helping with the dam,
Waal buys Nadine and Bob stuff, things like exercise machines and an air purifier.
They are so selfish and so focused on their own hedonism that they're not even like,
hmm, you know what, there are actual people and countries and, you know, resources involved in this.
Maybe we should not get involved and do something smaller to get our exercise equipment.
Rich people always want more stuff, like stuff they can already purchase.
Well, a few months after that, in October 2020,
Bob and Nadine get married at the Armenian Church
of the Holy Martyrs in Queens.
Nadine wears a teared white cupcake of a dress,
and they look giddy as teenagers as they cut into their cake.
Now, Nadine doesn't just have a new husband.
She also has a good reputation.
She's becoming known as the woman
who convinced the Senate to recognize the Armenian genocide.
But Bob is walking on a razor's edge,
and he's about to make things
even worse by finding another even wealthier foreign client.
Okay, Carrie, you ready? Quick, quick, quick.
List three gifts you'd never give a cowboy.
Lacey Bobby Sox.
A diamond bracelet.
A gift certificate to Sephora.
Oh, my God, that's outrageous, Carrie.
Oh, wait, we're recording a commercial right now.
We've got to tell them why we're doing this.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry, pod listeners.
Okay, so we're five besties who've been friends for five million years, and we love games, so of course we made our own.
It's called Quick, Quick, Quick.
You just pick a card and have your partner give three answers to an outrageous question.
It's fast, fun, fantastic, and a bunch of other funny adjectives.
Anyone can play.
Your mom, your dad, your kitten, your kids, your Auntie Edna, and even your butcher.
And you know it's incredible, there are no wrong answers.
Just open your brain and say what's in it, just quickly.
And you're not going to believe this.
Well, you might once you start playing, it's a little.
as much fun to watch as it is to play. Seriously. So get up and go grab your copy now at Target
and Amazon. Quick, quick, quick. It's the fastest way to have fun.
Now, I feel like a legend.
It's September 2021, about a year after Bob and Needene's wedding, Bob is at another fancy private party.
This one's in Manhattan. And it's being hosted by the government of Qatar.
Bob is here with another old friend, Fred Davies.
Like a lot of Bob's friends, Fred looks like he walked off the set of the Bada Bing.
He's a real estate developer in his mid-60s,
olive skinned with white hair, and he really likes to sport an open, popped collar,
usually with a gold chain.
Fred spent the first 10 years of his life in a Palestinian refugee camp
before emigrating to New Jersey.
Like Bob, his father died when he was young,
leaving him to support his four younger siblings.
But despite all of this adversity, Fred managed to build a real estate empire.
Oh, and another thing he has in common with Bob, he too is super corrupt.
Fred actually helped Waal set up his halal business.
And for a while, he was also dealing with fraud charges related to manipulating the FDIC.
But last year, he got Bob to step in and help.
I feel like it seems kind of like Bob is a lot more interested in helping these randos
stay out of prison than doing his job as a senator.
Well, federal prosecutors later say that around this time, Fred's getting Bob's help with
another project. Fred wants Qatar to invest in a real estate deal. The Qatari royal family
is worth about $150 billion, so getting them to invest would be huge. To help Fred out,
Bob has been publicly praising the country. A month earlier, he lauded Qatar for taking
an Afghan refugees. And it's a big deal for the country's government.
because they're taking a lot of heat for human rights violations
and for the thousands of deaths related to construction
for hosting the 2022 World Cup.
Bob continues to help Fred by attending this fancy party in New York
hosted by Qatar.
And Fred appreciates it.
According to prosecutors, several days later,
as a thank you for securing his connection with the country,
Fred sends Bob pictures of Paddock Philippe watches
and asks him to pick out his favorite.
And around this time, too,
he starts giving Bob gold bars.
Just straight up, gold bars.
Soon after that, Bob and Nadine take a trip to Egypt and Cutter.
And when they get back, Fred sends a chauffeur to pick them up at JFK.
As they drive to Nadine's house, Bob takes out his phone and Googles,
How much is one kilo of Goldworth?
This is so funny because this is an incriminating Google search to me.
Like, that soon in those exact words,
hold off a little bit,
find a way to find out without doing that.
Yeah, we're going to put this on our scam bingo board for sure.
But not everything is working out as plan.
Bob could not get rid of Fred's charges entirely.
So in April 2022,
but seven months after the big cutter party,
Fred pleads guilty to federal banking crimes
and his sentence to probation.
He was facing down a long prison sentence,
so he's still relieved to avoid jail time.
And besides, things are going well for Fred.
A month after he pleads guilty, the Qatari deal gets the official go-ahead.
As a thank you, Fred gives Bob and Nadine yet another gold bar.
For now, the bar stand is a testament to Bob's success as a schemer.
But they're about to turn into fools' gold.
A couple of months later, in June 2022, Bob and Nadine make one of their regular trips down to Washington, D.C.
When they return to New Jersey, they find their home in disarray.
The house looks like it's been robbed,
but Bob and Nadine come to find
that it was actually federal agents
executing a search warrant.
The agents went through the couple's filing cabinets,
desk drawers, dressers,
wardrobes, and closets.
They seized $480,000 in cash,
stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing.
They also took 13 gold bars.
When Bob and Nadine see the mess
and everything that's been taken,
Bob is furious.
FBI agents even
broke down doors that weren't locked in the first place.
Shortly after, the FBI served subpoenas to Nadine, Bob, Jose, and Whatel's Halal Company.
One gift the feds are particularly interested in is Nadine's Mercedes-Benz convertible.
Jose has been paying Nadine's car note, but after the raid, Bob and Nadine know that she'll
need to start making the payments herself to avoid suspicion.
Nadine meets with Jose and asks him what he'll do if law enforcement comes sniffing around.
He tells her that he'll say that the payments were alone.
Satisfied, Nadine walks away from the meeting feeling like she's dodged a bullet.
And it seems like Jose's approach gives Bob and Nadine an idea for how to avoid looking like
they were taking bribes.
Because by December 2022, about six months after the FBI rate of their home, the couple
cut a check to Wa'L for about 23 grand.
The amount that Wa'L had paid to help Nadine save her house.
In the memo line, Bob writes,
to liquidate loan.
Bob and Nadine may seem like a united front,
in love and in lying,
but about a year after the raid,
Bob makes a strategic move.
His lawyer meets with U.S. attorneys
for the Southern District of New York,
and prosecutors later claim
that when asked about his relationship to Wa'L
and the money that was funneled into Nadine's bank account,
his lawyer says that Bob only found out
about the payments after the raid.
Now, this may seem small,
but Bob has survived decades in New Jersey politics,
and one federal indictment.
He knows how to work an angle.
And this angle is,
I don't know anything about this.
You should ask my wife.
Bob knows that an indictment is coming.
And when it comes down to saving his reputation
as a line of the Senate
or his reputation as an all-time wife guy,
he's about to make his priorities very, very clear.
Stay tuned for part two of this series next week.
Loving scam influencers, get exclusive episodes and early access to new ones all ad-free on Wondry Plus.
Join now in the Wendry app, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
Before you go, help us out by taking a quick survey at Wondry.com slash survey.
This is Bob Menendez Bad Romance, Part 1.
I'm Sachi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Hagey.
If you have a tip for us on a story that you think we should cover, please email us
at Scampluencers at Wondery.com.
We use many sources in our research.
A few that were particularly helpful
were, in bygone days,
Menendez fought graft with courage.
By Jim Dwyer for the New York Times,
Nadine and Bob Menendez's flashy,
allegedly corrupt romance by Nina Burley for New York Magazine,
and the case of the developer,
the halal exporter,
U.S. Senator Bob Menendez and his wife,
by Dan Adler for Vanity Fair.
Our associate producer, Charlotte Miller,
wrote this episode.
Additional writing by us, Sachi Cole and Sarah Haggy.
Olivia Briley and Eric Thuram are our story editors.
Fact-checking by Sarah Baum.
Sound design by James Morgan.
Additional audio assistance provided by Augustine Lim.
Our music supervisor is Scott Falasquez for Fries on Sing.
Our managing producers are Matt Gant and Desi Blaylock.
Our senior managing producer is Nick Ryan.
Janine Cornelow and Stephanie Jenz are our development producers.
Our other associate producer is Lexi Peary.
Our producers are John Reed, Yasmin Ward, and Kate Young.
Our senior producers are Sarah Eni and Jennifer.
Jenny Bloom. Our executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman, Marshall Louie, and Aaron O'Flaherty for Wondry.
