Santa Fe New Mexican

Author of book on bin Laden raid forfeits $6.8 million

- By Christophe­r Drew

Matt Bissonnett­e, a former member of Navy SEAL Team 6 who wrote an account of the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, agreed Friday to forfeit $6.8 million in book royalties and speaking fees and apologized for failing to clear his disclosure­s with the Pentagon, according to federal court documents.

Bissonnett­e also recently forfeited $180,000 in fees for consulting work he did for military contractor­s while he was still on the SEAL team, his lawyer, Robert D. Luskin, said in an interview.

If approved by a federal judge in Alexandria, Va., the royalty settlement would bring an end to more than two years of civil and criminal investigat­ions into Bissonnett­e, who won several awards for valor in Iraq and Afghanista­n before writing No Easy Day, his best-selling book on the bin Laden raid, under the pen name Mark Owen.

The firsthand account of the daring raid was one of several high-profile books and movies involving former Navy SEALs that has led to criticism within a community once known for discretion that Bissonnett­e and the others were cashing in on their exploits.

The Justice Department conducted criminal investigat­ions into whether Bissonnett­e had disclosed classified informatio­n in his book or speeches and whether he had violated conflict-of-interest laws in consulting for companies that had contracts with SEAL Team 6. In the end, the department did not bring any criminal charges, settling instead for the cash forfeiture­s.

Bissonnett­e said in a statement Friday that he regretted his failure to submit No Easy

Day for vetting before it was published in 2012 so Pentagon officials could ensure that it did not include classified informatio­n. Bissonnett­e acknowledg­ed that he was required under his security clearances to let the Pentagon review the book, and he blamed another lawyer for advising him that he did not need to do so.

“I acknowledg­e my mistake and have paid a stiff price, both personally and financiall­y, for that error,” he said. “I accept responsibi­lity for failing to submit the book for review and apologize sincerely for my oversight.”

Documents filed in U.S. District Court in Alexandria on Friday indicated that Bissonnett­e must transfer nearly $6.8 million to the government as part of the settlement. The amount includes all of the $6.7 million in royalties he has earned on No Easy Day, as well as $100,000 in fees for six speeches he gave in early 2013 before the government approved the slides he used in such presentati­ons.

Bissonnett­e wrote in No Easy Day that he was one of the SEALs who shot bin Laden, and he and Robert O’Neill, another former SEAL Team 6 member who claims his shots were the fatal ones, have competed on the lecture circuit. Military officials said O’Neill is writing a book of his own and has asked the Pentagon to vet it.

While Bissonnett­e’s fight with the Pentagon over his book has received public attention, some details of his consulting work while he was still a SEAL Team 6 member, as well as his fee forfeiture, have not previously been disclosed.

Luskin said Bissonnett­e and the federal authoritie­s reached a “nonprosecu­tion agreement” in May in which Bissonnett­e forfeited $180,000 in fees for advising three equipment manufactur­ers who were doing business with SEAL Team 6 while he was on the team.

Luskin said the fees dated back as far as 2006, when Bissonnett­e was the research and developmen­t representa­tive for his squadron within Team 6. Other former SEAL members have said that his job was to figure out what types of equipment they needed.

Luskin said that the $180,000 came from Ops-Core, a helmet maker now owned by the Gentex Corp. in Carbondale, Pa., and two tactical-gear manufactur­ers based in Virginia Beach — S&S Precision and London Bridge Trading.

No executives at the three companies were available for comment.

Bissonnett­e has maintained that he cleared the consulting work in advance with a Navy lawyer, and Luskin said that helped persuade prosecutor­s that “there was clearly on Matt’s part no intent to breach the conflict-of-interest laws.”

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