Who is ‘Fat Leonard’? Military contractor sentenced to 15 years in prison for plotting one of the US military’s biggest scandals

Who is ‘Fat Leonard’? Military contractor sentenced to 15 years in prison for plotting one of the US military’s biggest scandals

Leonard Francis behind one of the largest U.S. Navy bribery scandals

Leonard Glenn Francis, infamously known as “Fat Leonard,” was sentenced to 15 years in prison on November 5 by United States District Judge Janis Sammartino. The former military defense contractor orchestrated an elaborate, decade-long bribery scheme that implicated numerous U.S. Navy officers and led to a significant breach of military ethics and financial misconduct.

Details of the sentencing

According to federal prosecutors, Francis was ordered to pay $20 million in restitution to the U.S. Navy and was fined $150,000. Additionally, the court mandated that Francis forfeit $35 million, which he had illicitly gained through his fraudulent activities. His sentence follows his initial guilty plea in 2015 for charges of bribery and fraud, as well as an additional guilty plea for fleeing the country before his original sentencing in 2022.

The escape and capture

In September 2022, just before his scheduled court hearing, Francis removed the GPS monitor he wore while under house arrest and fled to Venezuela. He was apprehended there and extradited back to the U.S. in December 2023. This escape added 16 months to his prison sentence, which will be served consecutively with the original charges.

Bribery scheme and misconduct

Francis, who once weighed 350 pounds and owned the Singapore-based company Glenn Defense Marine Asia Ltd. (GDMA), bribed Navy officials with high-value items including luxury gifts, concert tickets, Kobe beef, and extravagant sex parties hosted at luxury hotels. In return, these officers allowed him to inflate costs for supplies or charge for fraudulent services at various Southeast Asian ports controlled by GDMA. In some cases, naval ships were even rerouted to these ports for Francis’ financial benefit.

A federal sting operation in September 2013 led to his arrest in San Diego after luring him under false pretenses. Francis admitted in 2015 to offering over $500,000 in bribes to U.S. Navy officials and defense contractors, facing up to 25 years in prison. During the wait for his sentencing, he was hospitalized for renal cancer and other health issues. Post-discharge, he lived under house arrest with security and a GPS monitor until his escape in 2022.

Impact and response

The case, considered one of the largest corruption scandals in U.S. military history, implicated over two dozen Navy officials and defense contractors who were charged and sentenced for various corruption and fraud-related offenses. U.S. Attorney Tara acknowledged the widespread ramifications of Francis’ actions: “Leonard Francis lined his pockets with taxpayer dollars while undermining the integrity of the U.S. Naval forces… The impact of his deceit and manipulation will be long felt, but justice has been served today.”

Judge Sammartino had previously found that a lead federal prosecutor in the case committed “flagrant misconduct” by failing to disclose information to defense lawyers. However, this revelation was not enough to dismiss the case against the implicated officers.

Francis’ sentencing marks the closure of a significant chapter in military legal proceedings, highlighting the extensive consequences of corruption within defense operations.

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