Fat Leonard, Craig Whitlock
Fat Leonard, Craig Whitlock
4 Rating(s)
List: $26.99 | Sale: $18.89
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Fat Leonard
How One Man Bribed, Bilked, and Seduced the U.S. Navy

Author: Craig Whitlock

Narrator: Dan Bittner

Unabridged: 11 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/14/2024

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

Winner of the 2024 Investigative Reporters and Editors Book Award
Winner of the 2024 Commodore John Barry Award for Excellence in Maritime Literature

#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.

About Craig Whitlock

Craig Whitlock is an investigative reporter for The Washington Post and the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Afghanistan Papers. He has worked for the Post since 1998 as a foreign correspondent, Pentagon reporter, and national security specialist, and has reported from more than sixty countries. His coverage of the war in Afghanistan won the George Polk Award for Military Reporting, the Scripps Howard Award for Investigative Reporting, the Investigative Reporters and Editors Freedom of Information Award, and the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for international reporting. He is also a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Steve on April 28, 2024

File this one on the shelf of you can't make this stuff up or truth is stranger than fiction. The title pretty much tells the story, and the book does exactly what you'd expect, systematically unveiling a slow-motion horror story in painstaking detail. Rarely do I read a book where I've been followin......more

Goodreads review by Jon on July 27, 2024

A fat man who loved buttering up senior U.S. Navy officials with steaks, whiskey, and cigars? I knew that guy. No, I don’t mean Leonard Francis, the subject of this book. I’m talking about Drew Bahjat, my high school Drama Club and Model U.N. buddy, a larger-than-life Navy fanboy who improbably went to......more

Goodreads review by Joseph on May 24, 2024

65 years ago, I served proudly in the U.S. Navy. I treasured that time for the experiences, friendships and sense of pride of knowing that we were honorably representing and defending our country. I believed that the institution exemplified the highest standards of integrity, character and fidelity......more

Goodreads review by Barry on July 27, 2024

Whitmore does a fairly good job of taking the reader through the winding, complicated, and dramatic case of Leonard Francis, (aka “Fat Leonard”), a man who’s entrepreneurial drive and constant need for excess allowed him to build a husbanding company that served the US Navy into a commercial empire......more

Goodreads review by Anita on June 27, 2024

This story is pretty unreal. Fat Leonard (actual name Leonard Francis) ran a company, Glen Defense, that serviced naval ships in southeast Asia. Apparently fat or not, Leonard was very charismatic. He used money and charm to basically corrupt admiral after admiral into doing things that benefitted G......more


Quotes

"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....Maddening and astonishing in its revelations of a crime spree that cost taxpayers untold millions."Kirkus Reviews

"[A] rollicking exposé....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....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."Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Explosive, brilliantly reported and meticulously documented, Craig Whitlock's Fat Leonard reads like a thriller but depicts one of the most sordid chapters in U.S. military history, a tale of brazen corruption that soiled the Navy and is an infuriating insult to the American taxpayer. You won't be able to put this book down, and you won't stop wondering how it could have happened.”—David E. Hoffman, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal

 
“A relentless investigative reporter, Craig Whitlock has unearthed the truly jaw-dropping story the U.S. Navy hoped you’d never learn: how a master operator and defense contractor named Fat Leonard wined, dined and blackmailed senior Navy brass so they would help him bilk taxpayers of millions of dollars. This book has the receipts, down to the names of the sex clubs, the menus for the $30,000 dinners, and Fat Leonard’s own confessions.”—Carol Leonnig, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Zero Fail: The Rise and Fall of the Secret Service  
 

“Magnificently entertaining, meticulously reported, muckraking of the highest order, Fat Leonard might be the best true crime book you've ever read. It starts as the saga of a career criminal making millions in kickbacks by corrupting the admirals and officers of the United States Navy with Champagne, Cuban cigars, caviar, and sex. Everyone knew; almost no one cared. It gets better. He bamboozled the Navy's vaunted criminal investigators, conned the criminal justice system, and fled the country, heading for Russia. You can't put this book down, but once you're done, you'll hurl it across the room with a pleasurable sense of outrage.”—Tim Weiner, author of Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA, winner of the National Book Award 

Fat Leonard is a rollicking story of bribery and blackmail—of deceit, hubris, and greed. What makes this jaw-dropping account of corruption inside the mighty U.S. Navy so tragic, is that it’s all true. With The Afghanistan Papers, Craig Whitlock demonstrated his brilliance as an investigative reporter. With Fat Leonard, he’s done it again.”—Annie Jacobsen, author of Nuclear War: A Scenario

“The story of Fat Leonard is almost too improbable to be true, but Craig Whitlock documents every lurid turn and eye-popping detail in a masterful reconstruction of the rise and fall of one of the 21st century's most talented con men. Whitlock's exquisitely crafted narrative, with its depictions of U.S. Navy officers selling their country's secrets and their personal sense of honor to a corrupt businessman, will leave readers astonished and enraged—and utterly fascinated.”—Joby Warrick, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS  

PRAISE FOR THE AFGHANISTAN PAPERS

"Fast-paced and vivid... chock-full of telling quotes."
— The New York Times Book Review

"The excellent new book... Bombshell revelations... [and] damning evidence of things we already intuited.” 
— The Washington Post

“At once page-turning and rigorous, The Afghanistan Papers makes a lasting and revelatory contribution to the record of America's tragic management of our longest war.”
— Steve Coll, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Ghost Wars and Directorate S

The Afghanistan Papers is a gripping account of why the war in Afghanistan lasted so long. The missed opportunities, the outright mistakes and more than anything the first-hand accounts from senior commanders who only years later acknowledged they simply did not tell the American people what they knew about how the war was going.” 
— Barbara Starr, CNN Pentagon correspondent

“A searing indictment of the deceit, blunders and hubris of senior military and civilian officials.”
— Tom Bowman, NPR Pentagon correspondent