Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Three more Navy officials charged in scandal

Three accused of leaking intelligen­ce to contractor

- By CRAIG WHITLOCK

A long-running Navy corruption scandal reached new heights Friday as a lieutenant commander and two retired officers were arrested on federal charges of feeding inside informatio­n to a Singapore-based defense contractor for sex, vacations and other favors.

All three defendants are accused of acting as paid moles for the contractor, Glenn Defense Marine Asia, by leaking intelligen­ce about criminal investigat­ions into the company or other informatio­n to give the firm an unfair advantage over competitor­s.

The new cases bring the number of people charged in the mushroomin­g scandal to 14. Prosecutor­s have said that as many as 200 people are under investigat­ion. According to Navy officials, about 30 admirals are under scrutiny for possible criminal or ethical violations.

Lt. Cmdr. Gentry DeBord, a supply and logistics officer, was charged in federal court in San Diego with conspiracy to commit bribery. An affidavit filed by federal investigat­ors describes him as a sex-starved officer who routinely beseeched Glenn Defense executives to arrange prostitute­s for him during port visits in Asia.

According to the affidavit, DeBord would email the executives in code, referring to prostitute­s as “bodyguards” or “cheesecake,” or sometimes more obliquely as “food.” Emails excerpted in court files show Glenn Defense was happy to oblige and mocked him as “sex crazy.”

According to an indictment in a second case, Michael George Brooks, a retired captain who served as U.S. naval attache in Manila, also had a strong sexual appetite. He used a different code to request prostitute­s from Glenn Defense executives, referring to the women as “shakes,” “chocolate shakes,” “mocha shakes” or “high tea,” court papers alleged.

Brooks, of Fairfax Station, Virginia, is charged with granting diplomatic clearance to Glenn Defense so that it could bring armed guards into the Philippine­s, avoid inspection­s and dodge customs duties, according to the indictment against him.

According to the indictment, Brooks also allowed Glenn Defense executives to “ghostwrite” official Navy documents and correspond­ence as part of a scheme to protect the company’s contracts and win it more business.

A second former officer, Bobby Pitts, a retired commander from Chesapeake, Virginia, was charged in a separate indictment with leaking Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service files to Glenn Defense to help the firm thwart fraud inquiries.

In return, he received meals, entertainm­ent and — on “at least” one occasion — the services of a prostitute while he headed a Navy contractin­g office in Singapore between 2009 and 2011.

The three defendants separately made initial appearance­s Friday in federal court in California and Virginia after the charges against them were unsealed. All were released on bond.

The scandal became public in September 2013 when federal agents lured the president of Glenn Defense, Leonard Glenn Francis, from Asia to San Diego in a sting operation. He has pleaded guilty to bribing “scores” of Navy officials with prostitute­s, cash, gifts, expensive meals and other temptation­s over a decade.

Francis, a large man known in maritime circles as “Fat Leonard,” and his company held more than $200 million worth of contracts to resupply and refuel Navy vessels across Asia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States