Monday, September 15, 2014

Singapore’s “Fat Leonard” bribes U.S. Navy with sex Arrested in San Diego, Singapore spying for China?



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Singapore’s “Fat Leonard” bribes U.S. Navy with sex
Arrested in San Diego
Singapore spying for China?

Council Vice President Mr. Scott Douglas, Northrop Grumman Corporation; Admiral Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval Operation; Admiral Walter Doran (Ret’d), Raytheon International Asia; Mr. Leonard Francis, Executive Group Chairman, Glenn Defense Marine (Asia) Pte Ltd; RDML Nora Tyson, Commander Logistics Group Western Pacific











 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Super-rich "Fat Leonard" who lives in a 70,000 square foot house on Singapore’s exclusive Nassim Road. His real name is Leonard Glenn Francis, the CEO of Singapore-based Glenn Defense Marine Asia. His company has lucrative contracts servicing ships of the U.S. Navy.On September 16, 2013, Leonard was arrested in San Diego, charged with bribing high-ranking U.S. Navy officers with bribes.
The bribes allegedly went to US Navy Commander Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz (originally from Cambodia) and Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) Supervisory Special Agent John Bertrand Beliveau II. Misiewicz and Beliveau were arrested in Colorado and Virginia, respectively.
A third senior official, U.S. Navy Cmdr. Jose Luiz Sanchez, 41, was arrested in Tampa, Fla., on November 6, 2013 and charged with accepting escorts, high-end hotels, pricey plane tickets, $100,000 cash and a bevy of other payoffs from Francis.
Rear Admiral Bruce Loveless, director of intelligence operations, and Vice Admiral Ted Branch, director of naval intelligence - the highest-ranking officers to be implicated in the Francis affair - suspended from duty.
Francis supplied prostitutes, Lady Gaga tickets, piles of cash and other bribes in exchange for the top-secret information that allowed him to rob the U.S. Navy of millions when the ships were serviced in Asian ports, federal prosecutors allege. He is scheduled to go on trial in the U.S.U.S. District Judge Janis Lynn Sammartino on Nov. 8 set a new hearing for Feb. 28.
Since Leonard was arrested in the U.S., Singapore judges cannot save him.
Vice Admiral Ted Branch, director of naval intelligence, and Rear Admiral Bruce Loveless, director of intelligence operations, are involved with "illegal and improper relations" with Leonard Francis according to the U.S, Navy. Both Admirals have been suspended from duty.
“We do believe there will be more Naval officers and perhaps Navy civilians implicated in this growing scandal,” said Adm. John Kirby, the Navy’s chief spokesman. “I don’t think anyone can predict where this is going to take us; we just don’t know.”
Francis collected all information on US war ship movements and the whereabouts of high officials. For the time being, the U.S. has not revealed the identities of all of those who gave the orders and those who benefited from the collected information.
Francis appeared in federal court on November 8th in San Diego on bribery allegations. Singapore operative, Alex Wisidagama, Francis alleged “bagman,” also appeared in court with Francis.
Given the fame of Francis in Singapore, it is difficult to believe that the Singapore government did not have full knowledge of Francis's activities.
With this threat to U.S. national security, questions have been raised involving the possible involvement of the Singapore government.
Investigators also want to know if foreign governments, specifically Singapore, could have gained access to the ships’ information, officials said.
Should the U.S. Navy continue to use Singapore’s port facilities? Certainly not.
Is Singapore spying for China?
CONTACT INFORMATION: Glenn Marine Group of Companies, Glenn Building, 15D Pandan Road, Singapore

Drug Lord Chung, Lo Ping (a.k.a. Htun Myint Naing; a.k.a. LAW, Stephen; a.k.a. LAW, Steven; a.k.a. LO, Ping Han; a.k.a. LO, Ping Hau; a.k.a. LO, Ping Zhong; a.k.a. LO, Steven; a.k.a. Tun Myint Naing; a.k.a. U Myint Naing and Cecilia Ng, aka Ng Sor Hong (Singapore citizen)
According to the United States Department of the Treasury (Treasury's diagram, below), Steven Law, is the son of Lo Hsing Han, chairman of Burma's biggest conglomerate, Asia World, founded in 1992.
Steven Law, the Managing Director of Asia World, runs many companies in Singapore with the help of his Singaporean wife, Cecilia Ng aka Ng Sor Hong.
Cecilia Ng is said to have close connections within the Singapore government, which permit these Burmese drug lords to operate and launder their money in Singapore.
Although Singapore is proud of its mandatory death penalty for smalltime narcotics smugglers and heroin addicts, both father (Lo Hsing Han) and son (Steven Law) travel freely in and out of Singapore.
"The family money is offshore," said a high-level US narcotics official. "The old man is a convicted drug trafficker, so his kid is handling the financial activities." That is, with the help of Cecilia Ng and her Singapore government connection.
Goh Jin Hian
Cecilia Ng Sor Hong was born in 1958, studied at Dunman Secondary School and Hwa Chong Junior College. She is the third daughter of Mr Ng Ah Khoon and Madam Hong Or Tew Chua, residents in Jansen Road, Singapore.
Ms Ng originally married her college sweetheart, now a second-hand car dealer, and had three children by him. She divorced him and married Mr Law in 1995.
Ms Ng has condominium apartment off Alexandra Road in Singapore - she is rarely there.
The following diagram is official and has been produced by the U.S. Treasury Department. 

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