Fresh Air - The Corruption Scandal That Rocked The Navy
Episode Date: May 23, 2024In Fat Leonard, journalist Craig Whitlock tells the story of a defense contractor who plied Navy commanders with lavish meals, trips, cash and sex workers. In return they let him overcharge taxpayers....Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Fresh Air. I'm Dave Davies. Few institutions are as revered in the United States as the U.S.
military. Our guest, Washington Post reporter Craig Whitlock, has spent much of the last 10
years investigating a shameful and very recent chapter in the history of the United States Navy.
It's a case in which hundreds of senior officers on active duty accepted perks and payoffs
from a defense contractor who in turn made tens of
billions of dollars overcharging for his services with their help. There's a colorful con man at the
heart of this story, a charming rogue whose company provided services to ships docked in Asian ports,
including tugboat escorts, security, food, water, bilge pumping, and more. He had a talent for seducing Navy
commanders into helping him, metaphorically and literally, with trips, lavish gifts, gourmet meals,
fine wines, and often sex workers, sometimes in such numbers that one party was described as a
Roman orgy. The contractor, Leonard Glenn Francis, was a 6'3 gladhander who struggled with obesity
and was often referred to by his Navy friends, at least behind his back, as Fat Leonard.
In reporting the story, Whitlock doggedly pursued information about the scandal that the Navy did its best to keep hidden.
He filed dozens of public records requests and a federal lawsuit
and was able, through his own sources to accumulate
a breathtaking amount of detail about the revels of Navy officers with the contractor
and the sprawling criminal case that followed. Craig Whitlock is an investigative reporter for
the Washington Post who specializes in national security issues. He's covered the Pentagon,
served as Berlin bureau chief, and reported for more than 60 countries. He was last on Fresh Air to discuss his book on secret government documents about the war in Afghanistan.
His new book is Fat Leonard, How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy.
Well, Craig Whitlock, welcome back to Fresh Air.
Thanks so much for having me, Dave.
Tell us about the central character here, Leonard Glenn Francis.
Leonard Francis is this, he's a maritime tycoon, or at least he was till he was arrested 10 years ago. He's from Malaysia. He grew up on the island of Penang, which is right in the Strait of Malacca,
one of the busiest waterways in the world. Most of the world's shipping traffic
goes through the Strait near Malaysia from Asia to Europe and points beyond.
And so he grew up in this international port, and his company owned a small firm that serviced
ships, cargo ships, merchant ships going through the strait. But over time, he had big ambitions,
and he wanted more and more. He sort of saw himself, he dreamed of himself becoming a Malaysian Aristotle Anasis.
And the way he did this and pursued his ambitions was to win defense contracts with visiting
foreign navies.
And of course, starting in the early 1990s, when he started to expand his business, no
navy in the world was more powerful than the United States
Navy. And they were frequently coming through that part of the world. And he saw a real opportunity
to service U.S. Navy aircraft carriers, destroyers, submarines. And over time, he became
a big tycoon doing this. He had contracts worth $200 million at one point with the U.S. Navy to supply fresh water, food, fuel, tugboats, barges, you name it.
Anything a U.S. Navy ship might need when it came into port, Leonard provided.
He referred to himself as the Walmart for the U.S. Navy.
Wow.
We should hear just a little of his voice, and we have a cut here. This is from some interviews he did for a podcast called Fat Leonard with journalist Tom Wright.
This is after his conduct was exposed, and he didn't mind talking freely about it.
And here he's describing a party he threw in Hong Kong for some U.S. Navy officers.
It's a Christmas party. Let's listen. So when we had this Christmas party,
I had like half a dozen or more girls
that basically charaded in Santanina outfits,
little short mini skirts, you know,
dressed up as Santa, little Santas.
And they were like sitting on everybody's laps
and snapping pictures and, you know, rubbing everybody down.
And a couple of the important customers got laid.
So I set that up, you know, at my reception.
That's what we always do because these guys, you know, they're never going to say no.
And that is Leonard Glenn Francis, the guy at the heart of this story, in a podcast called Fat Leonard.
Well, we hear there, Craig Whitlock, that he speaks English fluently and is pretty unashamed about what he's done.
That's right.
And it's important to remember a few things about Leonard Francis. One is that he has a pretty big ego. So he's telling this story after he's been
arrested. He's not ashamed at what he did in terms of bribing and lavishing gifts on U.S. Navy
officers over the years. He's proud of this. And Leonard is also a showman. So the secret to his business success over the years was that he would bribe U.S. This was a party he organized in 2004
for the USS Abraham Lincoln,
a carrier strike group that was visiting Hong Kong.
And this dinner party cost $60,000.
It was about $800 a person.
And he had lobster thermidor
was one of his favorite main dishes.
He had caviar, truffles.
Of course, he served cigars and not just any cigars.
They had to be Cuban Cohiba cigars.
And as he described, he had what he called Santa Ninas or Santa girls, who were several attractive young women in skimpy elf costumes parading around. He had a troop of bagpipers welcoming
the U.S. Navy personnel to this party, which was on the top floor of a five-star Hong Kong hotel
overlooking the harbor. So with Leonard, everything was over the top. He wanted to
wow his U.S. Navy friends. He wanted to give them a taste of the high life that he knew they would
never be able to afford on their government salaries.
Right. And boy, it had an impact.
You know, in a way, particularly the sex and the drinking is sort of rooted in this long history of sailors who, having been at sea for months, come ashore and want something a little more exciting than a sightseeing tour, right?
Exactly. And Leonard took advantage of that history, particularly in Asia, going back
generations when U.S. Navy ships would pull into port in places like Thailand or Malaysia or
South Korea. There is a history of legalized or semi-legal prostitution that sailors would
take advantage of. But he wouldn't be so crass as to just supply,
for lack of a better description, sex workers off the street. He was only targeting the senior officers, admirals, ship captains. And he had to fly in what he saw as high class sex workers from
other countries who were, again, seen as a higher class level than Navy sailors might otherwise encounter.
All very memorable, I'm sure, to those servicemen.
You know, it's interesting.
In the book, you describe so many of these parties.
I mean, there are a lot of them, and you got an enormous amount of details.
But he didn't just offer, you know, booze, sex, and food.
He was smart about approaching people who might need companionship. He also courted
admirals and commanders' wives too, didn't he?
He did. Leonard had a real knack for sensing people's weaknesses, or as he called them,
their vices. He would put an arm around someone, a Navy officer or a law enforcement agent, and say,
tell me, what are your vices? And he'd laugh. He was very
charming, but he was very direct. You know, his saying was every sailor has a weakness. You just
have to find it. So he would study people to see, you know, who was having marital problems,
who in the rumor mill had a drinking problem, who would be willing to take a small gift. You know,
he wouldn't just start out over the top with a big envelope of cash. He'd see who's willing to take a Cuban cigar, who's willing to take a small dinner,
and then he'd escalate from there. Under federal ethics regulations, if you're in the Navy,
you're only allowed to accept gifts worth $20 or less from a defense contractor like Leonard
Francis. And again, it's important to remember that his company had millions of dollars in defense
contracts with the Navy.
So everyone in the Navy knew who Leonard Francis was, what his official job was, and that they
were not supposed to accept gifts, at least not worth more than $20.
But Leonard had this way where he would slowly reel people in.
He would see who was willing to take a $50 gift, then a $100 gift.
And before they knew it, he was giving them, you know, thousands of dollars.
And by that point, he had them over a barrel,
and he could blackmail them if they didn't do what he wished.
Reading all this, I wondered how he had time to run a business.
I guess this was running the business.
It is remarkable his fortitude and his stamina,
given, frankly, how big he is and his health deteriorated over the business. It is remarkable his fortitude and his stamina, given, frankly,
how big he is and his health deteriorated over the years. But this was a big man. He weighed,
on average, 350 pounds. But there were times when his weight ballooned out of control to 500 pounds.
And yet he's flying all over Asia, sometimes the United States, going from port to port to greet U.S. Navy senior officers
whenever they pull in on a ship. And he was essentially a full-time concierge having parties
and dinners and just making sure these Navy officers were taken care of. But he was constantly
on the go, flying business class from Singapore to Japan to Australia, you know, day after day.
You know, these events happened in the early 2000s.
And by then, some women were making their way into the senior command ranks of the Navy.
How did Leonard deal with that?
Did they attend these parties?
Did they hear about them and object?
How did they figure it?
When Leonard first started working for the U.S. Navy, just when the United States military was allowing female service members to serve on warships, you know, up till then, there had been a segregation of sorts in the Navy.
And this was a big cultural change.
But even to this day, the U.S. Navy is about 85 percent male.
So female officers and enlisted sailors are still a distinct minority.
But Leonard sort of, he would get a sense of who might complain or who might not. But I'll give
you one example. There was an enormous party he threw in 2003 for the USS Pellew. It was a
Marine Expeditionary Strike Force that was coming through to the Persian Gulf. It
stopped off in Singapore, and Leonard threw one of his crazy bashes that probably cost $30,000.
And at this party, most of the officers were men. The admiral in charge of the strike group was a
man, and he was more than happy to go to Leonard's party. There were prostitutes sitting on people's laps. Leonard was unabashed about this. This was one of the parties that another
officer years later described as a Roman orgy. Yet there was a woman, a female ship captain,
the commanding officer of a destroyer, the USS Decatur, who was president in the party and was
clearly very uncomfortable. But her boss,
the admiral, of course, was having the time of his life. So she had to walk a very fine line
about how she responded. She left a little early, but she couldn't really protest right there.
The next day, she sent an email to the admiral's chief of staff to complain. But again, she had
to be careful. You can't call your boss an idiot for allowing this kind of party to happen. So she worded it in a way like this. She said, you know, I was uncomfortable with last night's event. Perhaps it turned out in a different way than the admiral intended. But it was clear, as she wrote, that this would fail the Washington Post front page test. And this is a saying they have in the Navy that if you do something and it gets on the front
page of the Washington Post, you know, is that a good idea? Right. This is sort of an ethics check.
And but again, she she had to be careful. Clearly, she was trying to tell her boss that you were an
idiot. What if this gets out? We're all going to look like fools and we'll get in trouble. But
that's the way she had to word it. Now, interestingly, the admiral, of course, didn't even respond, didn't care. And all details of this dinner party were kept under wraps for
20 years by the Navy until I was able to get details of it for my book. So the Navy was very
good at putting a lid on this kind of behavior for years and years. So Leonard, this Malaysian businessman, found that he could
ingratiate himself with officers by providing parties and drinks and perks and in some cases,
cash. Tell us a bit about how he managed to turn this into money for himself. What were some of the
ways that he overcharged the government? So there were two ways, really.
He had contracts signed in advance with the Navy to provide certain services in certain ports.
And the contracts would lay out you can only charge X amount for a particular service. And, of course, hundreds of pages and laying out the line items and what he could charge.
Federal contracting is pretty detailed that way.
But Leonard was always looking for a way to break the rules or get around it.
So by providing these gifts or bribes, he was essentially trying to get Navy officers,
whether the supply officer on the ship or the commanding officer or the contracting
personnel, he wanted them to look the other way while he overcharged them by hundreds of thousands of dollars to remove sewage or wastewater from his ship or to overcharge for fuel.
He really wanted them to not pay attention to the bills. he would submit phony invoices in foreign languages like Thai or Indonesian, knowing
that most U.S. Navy personnel didn't speak those languages.
So he would just forge invoices sometimes for tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands
of dollars to get money off the top.
And again, people in the Navy knew he did this sort of thing.
He had a reputation for being dodgy. Even though he provided pretty reliable
services, everybody knew he overcharged. Yet by, again, with all his gifts and favors, he was asking
and essentially demanding that Navy personnel look the other way. And sometimes he would give them
kickbacks and returns, whether cash bribes or, you know, night out with sex workers. And this was a
pretty enormously successful formula for him.
You know, you describe a case in which he charged a ship for delivering water
and claimed he delivered more gallons than the ship's tanks would actually hold.
There are just so many galling examples of this stuff.
And, you know, I have to say, I mean, any public employee with any level of seniority or responsibility would know implicitly that going to these parties and taking these expensive dinners and gifts and prostitutes and all that, they would know that that is wrong.
They knew about the rules.
Did any hesitate or get advice from Navy lawyers?
They did. There were a number of people throughout the years,
a striking number, who tried to blow the whistle on Leonard Francis, who tried to sound the alarm
at the chain of command. And invariably, each time they were ignored or shouted down or even
drummed out of the service. Leonard had such connections with admirals and senior officers,
and he had so many informants or moles embedded
throughout the Navy, people were taking his bribes, that he was always able to squash any
note of protest. You know, we talked about this Christmas party for $60,000 that he threw in Hong
Kong one year for an aircraft carrier. Well, the supply officer of the aircraft carrier was a
captain, a senior officer. He had gotten wind of this party.
He saw the invitation, and he went immediately to the ship's commanding officer and said,
you know, you can't go to this party. You can't let people on the ship go to this party. Leonard Francis is a contractor. You know, under the federal regulations, we can't accept gifts from
him like this. You know, he's just looking for a way to a justification to
overcharge us for this port visit. So it was as direct of a warning as it could get. And the
supply officer actually forbade any officers under his command from going to the party.
But his superior officers just ignored him. They wanted to go anyway. And sure enough,
at the end of the port visit, Leonard came in with a big smile on his face to the ship, to the supply department, and wanted to charge them twice as much as was theoretically possible for pumping wastewater off the ship.
And he was laughing about this.
And the supply officers knew, again, Leonard was in tight with the commanding officer. He had just thrown this extravagant party. And Leonard was essentially pulling rank on them, forcing them to accept his overcharged bills. And
this was, again, a formula that he relied on time after time after time. And it almost always worked.
Yeah. There was one case where someone objected to him and he said, look, I don't take orders
from lieutenants. He had guys with a lot of stars on their shoulders. You were covering the Pentagon
in the 2000s. I guess his case first came to your attention when there were arrests in it,
which was 2013. When you started asking people in the Navy, did it turn out that they knew of
this guy for a long time? Absolutely. So I still vividly remember to this day, I was
wandering the corridors of the Pentagon. I was a beat reporter for The Washington Post. And there had been a short item on the Associated Press Newswire in September of 2013 about how there had been arrest of a defense contractor from Malaysia named Leonard Francis, and there had been one Navy officer, a former ship captain, and a federal
law enforcement officer from NCIS or the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, NCIS. It's like
the famous TV show. But these two personnel were arrested on bribery charges for taking bribes from
this contractor. And it's, you know, back in that day, it was really rare for a Navy officer and a
law enforcement officer to be charged with taking bribes.
So I was curious if there was more to the story.
And I bumped into someone I knew in the Pentagon who was a Navy officer.
I said, do you know anything about this case?
Who's this person, Leonard Francis?
And the officer got a big smile and goes, oh, you mean Fat Leonard.
Everybody in the Navy knows Fat Leonard and just started to laugh.
And of course, you know, I could smell a good story, right?
You know, what do you mean that's his name and how everybody in the Navy knows him?
He goes, he's legendary.
Anybody who goes to Asia and the Pacific knows about Fat Leonard.
So from that point forward, I knew there was a bigger, more important story waiting to be told here about not just who was this figure from Malaysia who had conned so many people in the Navy, but how had so many in the Navy fallen for it?
How was he able to infiltrate the fleet like he did?
And those are the big questions that took me the better part of 10 years to unravel.
Let's take another break here.
We're speaking with Craig Whitlock.
He's an investigative reporter for The Washington Post. His new book is Fat Leonard, How One Man
Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy. Craig will be back to talk more after this short break.
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So, Leonard Francis, this contractor, had quite a thing going, entertaining and seducing and bribing so many people in the Navy.
He also apparently kept pretty good records of these hijinks, which you would eventually, when it all blew up, get copies of all of this.
What was his game in keeping track of all this?
What was he up to?
That's a really good question.
So Leonard was a pack rat.
He kept everything, emails, phone texts, Christmas cards, hotel receipts.
He just kept everything.
And part of it, I think, was he just he he liked to keep
his hands on records like this. He liked having these mementos of his encounters with U.S. Navy
officers. But if he had to, he could always use it as leverage. This was potential blackmail
material. And that's something that an astonishing number of senior U.S. Navy officers didn't realize until it was too late that Leonard
had potential blackmail material over them. He would go so far as to interview sex workers after
he provided them at parties for U.S. Navy officers. He wanted to know all the intimate details of who
liked to do what, and he would keep notes on these things. He would keep notes of the prostitutes
whose preferences, who liked girls from certain countries, and he would use notes on these things. He would keep notes of the prostitutes whose preferences,
who liked girls from certain countries, and he would use this information to cater to them in
the future. But it was also very useful if he ever needed to crack down and make people do what he
wanted. Sometimes people in the Navy would partake of Leonard's parties or take gifts, but then they
would get cold feet and they wouldn't want to
carry out his demands, which they knew were often illegal, but Leonard always had leverage over them.
And by that point, it's too late. If you've taken Leonard's prostitutes or his, you know,
envelopes of cash, he owns you, he controls you. And Leonard recognized this. And I think
one thing U.S. Navy officers, they really underestimated Leonard. And this is part to deal with his girth, right? He was this big guy. He was this jolly guy. He was Malaysian, but he had an Anglo name and he talked like an American. He wore American flag ties. He sounded very patriotic. So they never saw him as a potential threat until it was far too late.
And this was a real secret to his success. You know, it's interesting because we've been
talking about how this contractor, Leonard Francis, entertained officers on a lot of ships,
and as a result, were able to overcharge for services provided to those ships. But this
really went far beyond this, right? He actually got so embedded in command
levels of the Navy that he was able to influence which ships went to which ports, get advanced
notice of when they would be coming to which ports, which was very helpful, right? This is
pretty remarkable. It is. And while there's a lot of sordid nature of this scandal in terms of the bribes and the sex, you can't lose sight of the fact that Leonard also became a pervasive threat to national security.
And he did this because he wanted to get classified ship schedules.
He wanted to know months or even years in advance which ships were scheduled to go to which ports. This would enable him to pre-position
his barges and tugboats and workforce to more efficiently. He'd make a lot more money if he knew
where Navy ships and submarines were going months in advance. But this information was classified.
This was carefully guarded by the U.S. Navy for obvious reasons. They didn't want to telegraph
to hostile forces or terrorist groups where ships were going. They didn't want to put them at increased risk of attack. So even
Navy sailors or families back home aren't allowed to know what ports are going to when until maybe
a few days or a couple of weeks beforehand. So Leonard really hungered for this information
because it could make his company very, very profitable if he had this advance notice of where the ships were going.
So over time, he was able to cultivate 10 different U.S. Navy officers to leak him military
secrets in the form of these classified ship schedules.
And for seven years straight, he had people in the 7th Fleet in Asia leaking him this
classified information. And this gave him an
enormous leg up to be able to overcharge the Navy and pre-position his equipment. But this was also,
of course, classified information. And if he had given this to a hostile power, such as Russia or
China, it would have put U.S. crews at real risk of attack. And once the U.S. Navy and the Justice Department discovered
when they were investigating Leonard that he had classified information, this flipped them out.
This went from just being a fraud case, a bribery case, to one that had real national security
implications. And to this day, people in the Justice Department and NCIS don't really know
what happened to all that classified information.
And Leonard would keep it unprotected on his computer servers.
He told federal investigators that he did not sell any of it to the Chinese.
But he also acknowledged that the Chinese military kept a keen interest in his business and that his IT guy, the guy who kept his computer servers, played golf regularly with the Chinese defense
attache in Singapore. So this was not securely held information. And you almost have to assume
that other governments did get their hands on it from Leonard, even if it was indirectly.
In addition, you know, he was always concerned about investigations into his
deeds, particularly as the years wore on. And there were
some inquiries by the National Criminal Investigation Service, the NCIS. He had
somebody on the inside there, didn't he? He had several. He was buddies with a number of NCIS
agents who he would trade information. Now, not all of them were taking bribes. There were two in particular who were taking bribes who had worked in the 7th Fleet area. But he was a
raconteur and he was always trading information. NCIS agents wanted to know what his intel was
about what was going on in different ports. And again, NCIS had agents on every ship, every U.S.
Navy ship, particularly the aircraft carriers.
They had agents in most of the ports in Asia.
So they were a pervasive law enforcement presence and counterintelligence presence.
But Leonard, again, he didn't shy away from them.
If anything, that attracted him to them more.
And he did.
He recruited two NCIS agents in particular, one who was a special agent of the year to leak Leonard internal law enforcement files.
So every time NCIS would open an investigation into Leonard's company, this agent would leak him the files, the witness statements, the interview notes.
So Leonard was always able to stay a step ahead.
It's really shocking that over the years, NCIS opened more than two dozen
criminal investigations into Leonard's company and closed each one of them down over a period of 15
years or so because Leonard was always able to stay a step ahead or they just didn't take it
that seriously. They didn't want to jeopardize their relationship with this Malaysian contractor
who frankly did have a lot of good
intel for them on what was going on in that part of the world. We're going to take a break here.
Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Craig Whitlock. He is an investigative reporter
for The Washington Post. His new book is Fat Leonard, How One Man Bribed, Built, and Seduced
the U.S. Navy. We'll continue our conversation after this short break.
This is Fresh Air. So Leonard Francis managed to get away with this for years, you know,
throwing these parties for people and building these relationships and paying bribes and making
a fortune and was pretty confident that he could use his influence to avoid accountability. What
finally broke his string and sparked an investigation with some teeth to it?
There were finally two NCIS investigations into reported fraud of Leonard's company
that started to gain some traction.
Two very clear examples of Leonard just making up charges and hoping the Navy would pay for it.
It was really naked fraud.
And so the agents started
gathering string on this and it was taking them a while. It really took them three years to finally
bring enough evidence that they felt they had a good enough case to indict Leonard. But then the
question is, what do you do with him? You know, a lot of these countries in Southeast Asia either
didn't have extradition treaties with the U.S. or Leonard had
so much influence over there, the Navy was afraid that Leonard would buy off people to prevent him
from being handed over to the U.S. justice system. So they cooked up a plan to lure him to the United
States so they could arrest him on U.S. soil. And that's what finally did him in in 2013.
Right. They managed to lure him to a meeting in
San Diego where he thought he was going to do more influence peddling. And he's, in fact,
tackled and arrested simultaneously with a bunch of other Navy personnel who were part of this
ring. There was a bunch of arrests. And by the way, this is beautifully described in the book.
And particularly, you described all the interviews of how these Navy personnel are confronted.
And they begin by saying, oh, it was nothing and lying.
And then information is presented, which is more threatening to them.
It's interesting reading.
But after a couple of weeks in jail in San Diego, Leonard and his lawyers realize that he's in a lot of trouble.
And because he has kept all these meticulous records for years, he can help the government if they give him a cooperation agreement and some leniency.
And so he sits down with what's called a proffer.
That's one of these legal arrangements in which a criminal defendant will sit down with prosecutors and say, I will tell you – this is going to be off the record.
But I will tell you what kind of information I can provide if we have an agreement.
And when Leonard does this, boy, is it an eye-opener.
And he spends two full days telling prosecutors a lot of what he knows that they didn't know.
What was the effect of this on the investigators and prosecutors in the case?
Well, in legal terms or descriptions, it's like pouring gasoline on the fire. At that point,
the Justice Department and NCIS, they knew Leonard was buddies with a lot of people in the U.S. Navy.
They knew he had bribed some. They had already put out arrest warrants for a handful of people,
but they didn't know how far it went. They didn't know how many years back he had been doing this.
They didn't know how many people had been leaking classified information. So when the Justice Department invites Leonard in for this proffer session to see if they can cut a deal, if they can talk about making some kind of plea bargain arrangement, depending the Navy and who did what, but he starts blabbing the names of very high ranking naval officers.
He tells them that he had provided prostitutes to the director, the chief of Navy intelligence.
He talks about his relationship with the commander of all U.S. military forces in the Pacific, his friend, the superintendent of the
Naval Academy. So immediately, this case goes from a few Navy officers being under investigation for
bribery to, oh my God, did this guy compromise the leadership line of the U.S. Navy? How bad
is this going to get? So from that point forward, the whole scope and scale of this already large investigation just became something else had kept the hotel records, the emails, the Christmas
cards, the menus that people had signed as gifts to him. He had kept it all, and he gave NCIS and
the federal government a taste of it to see if they would cut a deal with him.
Right. You say in the book that prosecutors were starting to realize that their case could
paralyze the Navy's chain of command. It was that big.
It was that big. And the Navy's scrambling to
find out. And you have this other element that NCIS, which is a federal law enforcement agency
that's part of the Department of the Navy, their leadership doesn't know who they can tell about
all this. They had confided in a very small number of individuals, including the Secretary of the
Navy, who was a civilian boss of the whole department.
But they didn't want to tell any admirals because they knew Leonard was friends with so many.
They were worried that word would get out. People would cover things up. They would hide the trail of their interactions with Leonard. So they had to keep this a secret internally as well. They
didn't know whom to trust. And for years, you had to be only a select number of people within the Navy could be read into this investigation.
So word spread that Leonard had been arrested.
People started to panic because they didn't know at the Pentagon or at Navy bases throughout the world who might come under investigation.
And there was this real fear that gripped the uniform ranks of the Navy.
Anybody who had encounters with Leonard were always wondering for years, am I going to be under investigation? Am I next? People didn't know if there was going
to be a knock at the door or a call from NCIS. And really, NCIS and the Justice Department had
to keep this under wraps for years to come because they didn't know how high it reached into the
ranks. We need to take a break here. Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Craig
Whitlock. He's an investigative reporter for The Washington Post. His new book is Fat Leonard,
How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy. We'll continue our conversation in just a
moment. This is Fresh Air. Leonard's personal journey gets pretty crazy. I mean, he agrees
to cooperate, and then he gets mad because they're still keeping him in jail while he's providing all this information, and then stops
cooperating, and then eventually reaches an agreement, gets a lot of special privileges,
and then somehow manages to escape to Mexico, gets to Venezuela, and then eventually is taken
back to the United States in a prisoner exchange.
When this is all done, broadly speaking, how many Navy officers were tainted by this investigation?
So there were nearly 1,000 individuals who were investigated or questioned by the Justice Department and NCIS over a period of several years.
Now, of that, that's a big number.
Of those, 90 were admirals. So fully 90 admirals retired in active duty in the U.S. Navy were investigated or questioned about
their ties to Leonard Francis over the years and whether they accepted gifts or bribes.
Only a small number were prosecuted. The Justice Department brought charges against 35 people.
They got guilty pleas from 29 of them, although
some of them would later fall apart. But that's a pretty big case. In addition to that, the U.S.
Navy did its own reviews under military disciplinary laws and military justice laws,
and they court-martialed about another half-dozen people. They censured a number of high-ranking officers and admirals.
But the vast majority of them, frankly, they got away with it.
The Navy kept its disciplinary rules confidential.
It did not disclose this information, even though its own regulations stated that they should make it public.
If a senior officer is found to have committed misconduct, that's something under its own rules it's supposed to make public. And I had to fight tooth and claw to get information about certain cases. The Navy just didn't want to disclose it because it was too embarrassing. So to this day, it's still unclear how many of the thousand people who are in investigation, how many of them got in trouble, even if it was just a memo or a slap on the wrist? The Navy hasn't been transparent about how it handled any of those cases.
And even some of those who were convicted at trial or pled guilty, in a number of those cases, the convictions were undermined by prosecutorial misconduct.
Do you want to explain that?
Yeah.
So the Justice Department was sort of beating its chest for a number of years about how many convictions it had been able to obtain.
It had gotten 29 people, including Leonard Francis, to plead guilty, to admit guilt.
But then there were five defendants who were holding out who had been indicted in a major case with bribery and conspiracy charges.
Some of them had allegedly leaked Leonard classified information.
And so there was a big trial in San Diego in federal court in 2022. And the jury convicted four of
the five officers of bribery charges. And it looked like they were going to go to jail for a long time.
They had rolled the dice and lost at trial. But it quickly emerged that the prosecution had not
been forthcoming with all its evidence. There was some
exculpatory evidence or information that was favorable to the defense that it had failed to
turn over, at least in time. And this is a big no-no in legal circles, that if the prosecution
has any information that would be beneficial to the defense and they know about it, they're
obligated under the law to provide it. And the Justice Department attorneys at this trial had hidden some witness statements, had hidden the fact of how
Leonard had been afforded all these cushy privileges when he was supposed to be a federal
prisoner. They didn't disclose things under the law they were required to. So in the end, the judge
had to vacate those four felony convictions at trial and let these people plead guilty instead to misdemeanors with no time served in jail.
The problem is that that prosecutorial misconduct really ended up tainting the entire case.
So even though you had all these other people, 29 people who had pleaded guilty, they started saying, hey, you know, you're letting those guys off the hook.
How did this affect my case?
I wouldn't have pleaded guilty if I'd known there was this kind of legal hanky-panky going on.
So just this week, the federal judge in San Diego who is overseeing this whole case dismissed the felony convictions of five more officers who had admitted to taking bribes from Leonard.
And undoubtedly, there will be more cases that will unravel because of this. And the big question is, how will it affect Leonard Francis himself? You know, this is a guy
who confessed and admitted and pleaded guilty to bribing scores of Navy officers. But the question
is, will they have to let him go too? And this is something we just don't know at this point,
but as hard as it is to get our minds around it, the fact is Leonard,
in the end, may get away with it. Wow. Now, what is his status today? He's in prison in the United
States, right? That's right. So he, again, another mind-blowing episode. Leonard was this great con
man. He not only conned the Navy, but even after his arrest, he slowly conned the Justice Department
and a federal judge into thinking that he was dying.
And he was sick.
He did have cancer, kidney cancer.
But he convinced a judge to give him a medical furlough to let him out of jail so he could receive treatment.
And under this ridiculous arrangement, he was allowed to provide his own security guards.
And he was held under federal house arrest. But one day he decided he was going to
escape in 2022. And he sliced off his ankle bracelet, called an Uber and headed to Mexico
and ended up in Venezuela. So this, you know, most wanted criminal, notorious criminal, you know,
people throughout the world had heard about Fat Leonard. He still managed to escape. About a year
later, he was finally returned to the United States by the government of Venezuela and in a prisoner swap that was orchestrated by the White House.
So he's now in jail in San Diego, but there's a real prospect that they may have to let him go again because of this prosecutorial misconduct.
Did you hear from people in the Navy or family members about this as you reported it? of Malaysia, what they see as traitorous behavior by a large number of officers, particularly
senior officers, and people are really angry at how, in the end, very few of them are being
held to account.
At the same time, I think there's an acknowledgement that the Navy, in particular, had a real cultural
problem, a real ethical problem, that in public, the Navy's reputation is pristine. And yet,
behind closed doors, halfway around the world, they were acting in a completely different manner
compared to their public reputation. And I think this episode is doing real damage
to public faith in their ability to carry out their duties.
And are you aware of any steps the Navy is taking to deal
with this culture? No. And in fact, I had a very sobering conversation with a four-star admiral at
the Pentagon several years ago when I was working on this book and pushing to get documentation on
senior officers who had been found guilty of misconduct. And the Navy was digging in its heels. And this
four-star admiral told me, you know, what metric exists that says this will benefit the Navy if I
give you that information? And I was pretty appalled. I was like, well, you know, it's the
right thing to do. And your own regulations state that this information should be made public,
that the Navy is supposed to be transparent
about misconduct by senior officers, that its own regulations state you should make that public.
And he was unmoved. He said, well, why should I throw our people under a bus? This is so
embarrassing. It's going to embarrass our people and it's going to damage our reputation. So
clearly a decision had been made at the highest levels of the Navy that they were going to bury this story and hope the storm blew over.
And that's really still the approach it's taken is it doesn't give interviews.
It doesn't disclose documents.
It just is hoping this will eventually blow over.
It's decided that if it acknowledged it or talked about it, that maybe this would be even more damaging than people knew.
So that's its calculus at this point.
Well, Craig Whitlock, thank you for your reporting.
And thanks for speaking with us.
Thanks so much for having me, Dave.
Craig Whitlock is an investigative reporter for The Washington Post.
His new book is Fat Leonard, How One Man Bribed, Built, and Seduced the U.S. Navy.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Amy Salet, Phyllis Myers, Roberta built, and seduced the U.S. Navy.