Carl Prine at the San Diego
Union-Tribune offers a piece on the U.S. Navy’s Fat Leonard bribery and fraud
scandal.
Fielding a flurry of tips,
complaints from commercial competitors and the concerns of Navy whistleblowers,
federal agents ratcheted up their probes between 2009 and 2012 into the
Malaysian tycoon nicknamed “Fat Leonard” and his company that services U.S. warships
overseas.
For a quarter-century until
his 2013 arrest during a sting operation in San Diego, the rotund Leonard Glenn
Francis (seen in the below photo) and his tugboats and fenders, security guards and sewage suckers, food
suppliers and trash collectors had catered to the Navy’s vessels. He kept the
cash flowing to his “pearl ports” by bribing top Navy officials with money,
booze and prostitutes.
Federal prosecutors have
indicted dozens of commissioned officers and civilian leaders, and the Navy
continues an internal probe into 30 admirals and more than 200 sailors for
corruption.
But this disciplinary
activity is taking place years after the initial investigations began. How did
Francis stay ahead of the law for so long? The answer involves a host of
self-inflicted problems by federal investigators, along with a mole helping
Francis.
You can read the rest of the
piece via the below link:
You can also read my
Counterterrorism magazine piece on the Fat Leonard scandal via the below link:
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