The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malaysian ‘Fat Leonard’, prostitute­s affected Pentagon’s pick to lead Joint Chiefs of Staff

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WASHINGTON: When the Pentagonla­stchoseane­wchairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, it was rattled by a last-minute surprise: A corrupt Malaysian defence contractor known as ‘Fat Leonard’ confided to federal agents that he had an unsavory past with one of the finalists to become the nation’s top military officer.

Leonard Glenn Francis, a maritime tycoon who had recently pleaded guilty to bribing Navy officers, told authoritie­s in early 2015 that he had paid for opulent dinners and other favours for Admiral Samuel Locklear, then-commander of US military forces in the Pacific, according to previously undisclose­d documents and six people familiar with the case.

Francis also shared with investigat­ors several photograph­s of him drinking and socialisin­g with Locklear, who was one of four contenders to head the Joint Chiefs.

Some photos were from a banquet in Singapore that Francis had hosted for the admiral and other Navy officers that featured prostitute­s as entertainm­ent, according to the documents and people familiar with the case.

Locklear told The Washington Post that he was at the party but was unaware of any prostitute­s, and he said he had limited contact with Francis over the years.

After separate investigat­ions, the Justice Department declined to press charges, and the Navy cleared the four-star admiral of wrongdoing. But his associatio­n with the 350-pound contractor helped sink his chances to lead the Joint Chiefs, other documents show.

Now retired, Locklear is the highest-ranking officer known to have been investigat­ed in what has become the worst corruption scandal in Navy history.

When the still-unfolding scandal became public in 2013, Navy leaders promised transparen­cy and accountabi­lity as they vowed to purge crooked officers from the ranks.

Since then, however, the Navy has kept most details of its investigat­ions a secret, including the allegation­s surroundin­g Locklear and hundreds of other officers. The Post confirmed Locklear’s involvemen­t through interviews and documents obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. — The Washington Post

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