Democracy Dies in Darkness

‘Fat Leonard’ faces sentencing as epic Navy scandal nears end

Under plea agreement, the con man behind the most extensive corruption scandal in U.S. military history could be released from prison in as little as one year.

7 min
Leonard Glenn Francis, left, with Adm. Samuel Locklear III, the commander of U.S. Pacific Command between 2012 and 2015. Francis, a Malaysian defense contractor known as “Fat Leonard,” owned a Singapore-based firm that supplied U.S. Navy vessels in Asia for a quarter-century. (Obtained by The Washington Post)

SAN DIEGO — Leonard Glenn Francis, the rotund U.S. Navy contractor, con man and escape artist who repeatedly outwitted federal officials over two decades, could be freed from prison in as little as one year under a new plea agreement he has reached with the Justice Department, court records show.

The admitted mastermind of the most extensive corruption scandal in U.S. military history, Francis is scheduled to be sentenced on fraud and bribery charges Tuesday in U.S. District Court in San Diego, 11 years after he was first arrested here in an international sting operation and two years after he escaped and fled to Venezuela.