Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy
(Libby/OverDrive eAudiobook)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Whitlock, Craig Author
Bittner, Dan Narrator
Published
Simon & Schuster Audio , 2024.
Status
Checked Out

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Libby/OverDrive
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Description

#1 New York Times bestselling author Craig Whitlock’s “masterly investigation into one of the Navy’s worst scandals” (The New York Times).All the admirals in the US Navy knew Leonard Glenn Francis—either personally or by his legendary reputation. He was the larger-than-life defense contractor who greeted them on the pier whenever they visited ports in Asia, ready to show them a good time after weeks at sea while his company resupplied their ships and submarines. He was famed throughout the fleet for the gluttonous parties he hosted for officers: $1,000-per-person dinners at Asia’s swankiest restaurants, featuring unlimited Dom Pérignon, Cuban cigars, and sexy young women. On the surface, with his flawless American accent, he seemed like a true friend of the Navy. What the brass didn’t realize, until far too late, was that Francis had seduced them by exploiting their entitlement and hubris. While he was bribing them with gifts, lavish meals, and booze-fueled orgies, he was making himself obscenely wealthy by bilking American taxpayers. Worse, he was stealing military secrets from under the admirals’ noses and compromising national security. Based on reams of confidential documents—including the blackmail files that Francis kept on Navy officers—Fat Leonard is the full, unvarnished story of a world-class con man and a captivating testament to the corrosive influence of greed within the ranks of the American military.

More Details

Format
eAudiobook
Edition
Unabridged
Street Date
05/14/2024
Language
English
ISBN
9781797177601

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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

In this rollicking exposé, Washington Post reporter Whitlock (The Afghanistan Papers) recaps the exploits of Leonard Francis, the Malaysian owner of Glenn Defense Marine Asia, a Singapore-based logistics company that robbed millions of dollars from the U.S. government by overcharging the Navy. (Exaggerating the amount of sewage pumped out of ships' septic tanks was a favorite scam.) From the 1990s onwards, Francis kept his fraud going by corrupting Seventh Fleet officers, who signed off on bogus invoices, steered contracts to his company, and quashed inquiries; he even had a mole in the Naval Criminal Investigative Service who helped him dodge investigations. Drawing on troves of incriminating emails and Francis's colorful testimony after his 2013 arrest, Whitlock's vivid narrative is a whirl of blithe graft as the charming, insidious, free-spending Francis recruits Navy personnel with gourmet feasts at swanky restaurants, luxury vacations, gifts of furniture and electronics, envelopes of cash, and many, many prostitutes, who sometimes snapped compromising pics of boozy sailors. It's also an appalling indictment of an out-of-control Navy that ditched its ethos of duty and honor in favor of craven toadying, and then, when the scandal came out, shielded the top brass from accountability while lower ranks went to jail. The result is an entertaining picaresque about a magnetic rogue that also spotlights troubling rot in the U.S. military. (May)

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Kirkus Book Review

A vigorous investigation into the life of a con artist and swindler who had half the leadership of the U.S. Navy in his pocket. Leonard Glenn Francis (b. 1964) was a high school dropout with few visible prospects. However, according to one of his former nemeses, he was "smarter than anyone he ever met." Francis, a former street hustler in Malaysia, made no effort to conceal himself: He was heavy and uncommonly tall, and he threw himself around on the principle that "with a little luck and the right connections, you could pretty much get away with anything." Washington Post reporter Whitlock, author of The Afghanistan Papers, capably chronicles how Francis did just that. Starting a seat-of-the-pants naval resupply business, which "faced scant competition in what was then a niche market," Francis serviced ships of the U.S. Seventh Fleet in the Pacific. Soon, as what the Navy calls a "husbanding contractor," he was gouging prices and cooking the books, such as when he billed one visiting missile destroyer $2.8 million for fuel and port services: "More than half the amount was fraudulent, based on fake invoices from fictitious subcontractors." To enable his bilking, he bribed Navy officers and officials with prostitutes, booze, and baubles, playing on weaknesses--drinking problems, failing marriages--as deftly as the KGB. He also had spies everywhere, including inside the Navy's vaunted NCIS. It all came crashing down when a few honest sailors began to doubt "Fat Leonard," who grew grotesquely obese as the dollars accumulated. By 2018, 90 Navy admirals came under investigation for illicit dealings with Francis. The close of Whitlock's account is the cat-and-mouse game of Francis' trials before U.S. judges, an unlikely escape to Venezuela, and now, in 2024, extradition and resumed judicial inquiry. Maddening and astonishing in its revelations of a crime spree that cost taxpayers untold millions. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

In this rollicking exposé, Washington Post reporter Whitlock (The Afghanistan Papers) recaps the exploits of Leonard Francis, the Malaysian owner of Glenn Defense Marine Asia, a Singapore-based logistics company that robbed millions of dollars from the U.S. government by overcharging the Navy. (Exaggerating the amount of sewage pumped out of ships' septic tanks was a favorite scam.) From the 1990s onwards, Francis kept his fraud going by corrupting Seventh Fleet officers, who signed off on bogus invoices, steered contracts to his company, and quashed inquiries; he even had a mole in the Naval Criminal Investigative Service who helped him dodge investigations. Drawing on troves of incriminating emails and Francis's colorful testimony after his 2013 arrest, Whitlock's vivid narrative is a whirl of blithe graft as the charming, insidious, free-spending Francis recruits Navy personnel with gourmet feasts at swanky restaurants, luxury vacations, gifts of furniture and electronics, envelopes of cash, and many, many prostitutes, who sometimes snapped compromising pics of boozy sailors. It's also an appalling indictment of an out-of-control Navy that ditched its ethos of duty and honor in favor of craven toadying, and then, when the scandal came out, shielded the top brass from accountability while lower ranks went to jail. The result is an entertaining picaresque about a magnetic rogue that also spotlights troubling rot in the U.S. military. (May)

Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Whitlock, C., & Bittner, D. (2024). Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy (Unabridged). Simon & Schuster Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Whitlock, Craig and Dan Bittner. 2024. Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy. Simon & Schuster Audio.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Whitlock, Craig and Dan Bittner. Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy Simon & Schuster Audio, 2024.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Whitlock, C. and Bittner, D. (2024). Fat leonard: how one man bribed, bilked, and seduced the U.S. navy. Unabridged Simon & Schuster Audio.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Whitlock, Craig, and Dan Bittner. Fat Leonard: How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy Unabridged, Simon & Schuster Audio, 2024.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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