The Commercial Appeal

Retired Navy admiral indicted in bribery case

- ELLIOT SPAGAT AND JULIE WATSON

SAN DIEGO - A retired Navy admiral was among nine high-ranking military officers indicted and arrested Tuesday across the country in a burgeoning bribery scandal involving a Malaysian defense contractor nicknamed “Fat Leonard.”

The indictment unsealed in federal court in San Diego alleged that retired Adm. Bruce Loveless and the other officers accepted the services of prostitute­s, lavish meals and fancy trips from Leonard Francis in exchange for classified informatio­n that helped his company, Glenn Defense Marine Asia.

It was the latest indictment in the three-year-old case that has charged more than 20 former or current Navy officials so far and marks one of the Navy’s worst corruption scandals in history.

Prosecutor­s say Francis, whose nickname comes from his wide girth, bilked the Navy out of nearly $35 million — largely by overchargi­ng for his company’s services supplying Navy ships in the Pacific with food, water, fuel and other necessitie­s.

Francis obtained classified informatio­n by buying off Navy officers who helped him beat out the competitio­n or steer ships to ports in the Pacific where he could charge fake tariffs and fees, prosecutor­s said.

The new indictment also charged a former Marine colonel.

The defendants were arrested Tuesday in California, Texas, Pennsylvan­ia, Florida, Colorado and Virginia. Loveless was arrested at his home in Coronado across the bay from San Diego. None of the defendants or their defense attorneys could be immediatel­y reached for comment.

“This is a fleecing and betrayal of the United States Navy in epic proportion­s, and it was allegedly carried out by the Navy’s highest-ranking officers,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Alana W. Robinson.

She added that “the alleged conduct amounts to a staggering degree of corruption by the most prominent leaders of the Seventh Fleet — the largest fleet in the U.S. Navy — (who) actively worked together as a team to trade secrets for sex, serving the interests of a greedy foreign defense contractor, and not those of their own country.”

Among those charged so far was another admiral who was sentenced in June and is believed to be the first active-duty Navy flag officer charged in federal court.

Francis has pleaded guilty to fraud and is awaiting sentencing.

Twenty of the defendants are current or former U.S. Navy officials, and five are company executives of the Singapore-based company. To date, 13 have pleaded guilty while several other cases are pending.

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