Craig Whitlock offers a piece
in Stars and Stripes on the outcome of the Navy intel chief who was
implicated in the Navy’s ‘Fat Leonard’ bribery and fraud scandal.
After a four-year
investigation, federal authorities concluded that the Navy's former
intelligence chief accepted extravagant meals, cigars and other illicit gifts
from a corrupt defense contractor known as "Fat Leonard," but were
unable to verify allegations that he also partied with prostitutes, new
documents show.
The documents reveal that
retired Vice Adm. Ted "Twig" Branch (seen in the above photo), a
fighter pilot and aircraft carrier commander who became the steward of the
Navy's secrets, enjoyed a decade-long friendship with Leonard Glenn Francis
(seen in the below photo), a Singapore-based maritime tycoon who has pleaded
guilty to bribing scores of military officers and defrauding the Navy of $35
million.
The nature of their
relationship had been a long-running mystery. In November 2013, the Navy
announced on a Friday night that it had suspended Branch's access to classified
material because he was under criminal investigation by the Justice Department
for his ties to Francis. The contractor's firm held lucrative deals to provide
supplies, fuel and port services to Navy vessels in Asia.
For years, Navy and Justice
officials remained silent about the investigation, though in private Navy
leaders expressed frustration that federal prosecutors were taking so long to
review the case. In an unusual twist, the Navy allowed Branch to keep serving
as its intelligence boss for more than 1,000 days even though he was barred
from reading, seeing or hearing military secrets. Branch retired from the
military in October 2016, but the investigation into his conduct continued.
Last September, on another
Friday night, the Navy announced in a brief statement that the Justice
Department had referred the case to the Pentagon after finally deciding not to
bring charges against the three-star admiral. Cryptically, Navy officials said
they had taken "appropriate action" against Branch for unspecified
wrongdoing, but would not provide details and declared the case closed.
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:
No comments:
Post a Comment