The case of literal stolen valor

| March 13, 2025 | 34 Comments

A fraudulent Medal of Honor was seized by the FBI in 1996 and is pictured on the right, next to a legitimate Medal of Honor. (Photo courtesy of the FBI)

Military.com reminds us of this literal stolen valor case from the 90s. In it, the only official supplier of the Medal of Honor (and a majority of other US military decorations) was selling illicit, unauthorized versions of the Medal of Honor. That’s a paddlin’.

From Military.com;

With each letter from a disgusted veteran, William Bassler grew more furious.

Then a federal district court judge in New Jersey, Bassler listened intently as those veterans described how a federal government contractor that sold 300 fraudulent Medals of Honor in the early 1990s had degraded their military service in an egregious example of stolen valor. When Bassler sentenced the defendants, he did not hold back.

“True Medal of Honor recipients and their families have the right to be outraged …,” Bassler said, according to a New York Times article. “My only regret is that I’m limited by the guidelines.”

In December 1996, Bassler imposed an $80,000 fine — the highest possible penalty — on H.L.I. Lordship Industries of Long Island, New York, which pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count in a plea deal. Lordship, which admitted to selling unauthorized versions of the United States’ highest military award for valor from 1991 to 1994, also was ordered to pay the government $22,500 in restitution, an amount that represented the cost of the fake Medals of Honor the company sold for $75 apiece. Finally, Bassler placed Lordship on probation for five years.

The fallout continued a few weeks later when the Pentagon announced it would stop doing business with the disgraced company, which was manufacturing roughly 60% of U.S. military medals and reaping $9 million per year in business from the government at the time. Ultimately, Lordship was barred from bidding on any government contracts for 15 years, resulting in a projected $155 million loss in earnings.

Some, both inside and outside the military community, insisted those penalties were not nearly enough.

“Most of these impostors are men who have never seen combat,” FBI special agent Tom Cottone Jr. told the Pueblo Chieftain, a newspaper in Colorado, in 2004. “They need to feel important, to be someone, and pretending to be a medal recipient is a way to do that. They like to claim it’s a victimless crime, but they are stealing the honor from men who gave their lives for this country and from any veteran who served.”

Cottone should know. In 1995, posing as collectors interested in pursuing nothing more than a good deal, he and another FBI agent followed a tip regarding illegal medals to a military memorabilia show in New Jersey. They purchased two Medals of Honor, an Army version for $510 and an Air Force version for $485, then arrested the seller, who described himself as a military veteran. (There are three versions of the Medal of Honor; the Navy medal is the other.)

The story continues at the source.

Category: Stolen Valor

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Toxic Deplorable Racist SAH Neanderthal

Hang him from his pubes, then beat him like a cheap pinata.

Marine0331

Then when the pubes pop out, hang him by one nut sack at a time!!! Only one….hanging him by both at one time provides him too much support! The creepy looking, lying slim ball. LOL

KoB

Smooth move, ex-lax! Piss away $155 million for a coupla $10K? Maff is hard. teh stoopid was strong…and it hurted…as it should.

Hack Stone

They can always sell outdated overpriced Red Hat Software to offset the losses.

Green Thumb

I can only imagine “Phony” Phil Monkress (CEO of All-Points Logistics) put in an order.

MIRanger

Are the real Medal Of Honor numbered and inscribed? It doesn’t look like there is much space to put someone’s name on them.
I know a family would want to keep it after their loved one dies (especially when it is awarded in absentia), but is there a process for turning it in to the government for safe keeping?

MIRanger

I can’t say that I have seen a real medal in person. I have seen the rose on the lapel when speaking with living recipients but not the medal itself.

SgtM

SgtMajor Kellog was my last SgtMajor. Never saw the medal but saluted that ribbon enough. He is a good and fair guy that stuck up for his troops.

Jimbojszz

I met two Medal of Honor receipients
Gary Wetzel, was handing out Vietnam Service commemorative coins at the Pearly Gates Bar.
And “Snake Shit” Bruce Crandel at EAA in Oshkosh.I went to the last one with one of the crew chiefs that was flying in and out of Idrang Valley. It was interesting that they knew each other.

Commissioner Wretched

I had the honor of meeting a Medal of Honor recipient on numerous occasions. Robert B. Nett was the shop teacher at my high school in Columbus, Ga. He was awarded the Medal for his action during WWII, and retired as a colonel at Ft. Benning. He was a wonderful teacher and advisor to my school’s ROTC department, and he wore the Medal to our annual ROTC Military Ball.

Mason

Maybe CDR D can chime in. It’s my understanding they are engraved on the reverse.

Families can keep them, but they cannot be sold. If the family doesn’t want it, museums take them for display.

Charles Liteky is the only one I know returned his medal. He just mailed it to the President as I recall, and it’s now on display in a D.C. museum.

FuzeVT
Last edited 7 days ago by FuzeVT
Mike B

Never got to see the back of the MOH Awarded posthumously to Lt Robert Edward Femoyer. But saw the medal several times a day as it was displayed right outside my office door, along with the KIA notification sent to his family.

Mike
USAF Retired

MarineDad61

Story BONUS (from 2004) –
Judge caught as a 2x Phony Medal of Honor.

(paste) [ Illinois District Judge Michael O’Brien must have intimidated many a lawyer and defendant with the two Medals of Honor that he had framed on his courtroom wall.

After all, men who receive the nation’s highest honor for bravery in combat deserve to be treated with respect. How much more does a man with two Medals deserve?

O’Brien probably would have continued to bask in the glow of that respect if he hadn’t made the mistake of applying for a special Medal of Honor license plate, explained FBI Special Agent Tom Cottone Jr.

But someone at the Illinois Department of Motor Vehicles knew a real Medal of Honor recipient and called him to converse about what a special guy Judge O’Brien was. “Who?” came the reply. And just like that, O’Brien was unmasked as one of the hundreds of men who have posed as Medal recipients over the years. ]

https://www.chieftain.com/story/news/2004/10/02/frauds-fakes-con-men-also/8891989007/

Amateur Historian

Burn the company down to the foundation, destroy that, and then salt the earth it stood on!

RCAF-CHAIRBORNE

Hammer a couple piss pipes into the ground and invite the local homeless to set up a Junkie Jungle on the spot

BennSue

I have made it a point as often as possible to attend gun shows (or such events) and purchase medals I feel could be used as a stolen valor tool. Basically anything Airman’s Medal on up. I then either destroy them or give them to Awards/Decs and let them handle it.

Dennis - not chevy

I saw a genuine antique Good Conduct Medal for sale at such an event. I asked how was it an antique when I could go to the BX and buy a brand new one. It was explained to me the antique ones were made of different and more valuable metal than the new ones are. At the same event, I saw metal MSgt rank pins like I used to wear; they were labelled WWII Sgt Stripes. I just walked away.

Hack Stone

Let Hack know if you come across any of the highly coveted and rarely awarded Precious Metals Recovery Expert Badge for sale. Hack Stone has his prominently mounted in his work cubicle at the world corporate headquarters of the proud but humble woman owned company, and in a bit of irony, Psul swiped it, along with all of the neighborhood mailbox doors, sell to Potomac Scrap Metal so he could put some minutes on his cellphone.

SgtM

I think we would all go broke if we decided to buy up the rare and valuable National Defense medals that are strewn about the junk drawers in America.

BennSue

Worth zero points on promotion, worth a free drink at any strip club.

A Proud Infidel®™

Especially the ones advertising free beer and jungle juice!

SFC D

Now that you mention it, I don’t think I ever received the hardware for the two I “earned”.

26Limabeans

Mine is proudly displayed in a wooden love me frame
that was hand made by a friends kid in shop class.
Originally intented as a tobaco products rolling tray for his dad.

Mike B
Mike B

Funny that his SF Certificate says Solider versus Soldier.

Mike
USAF Retired

Hack Stone

That’s because he did Phil Monkress a solid by going on line to protect his reputation.

Mike B

If he gets jail time there will be a line out the door to give him a solid……

Mike
USAF Retired

Berliner

2 lines… one for the front and one for the back 🙂

RCAF-CHAIRBORNE

I bet he jacks it to old issues of Solider of Fortune

Mike B

Ironic that the phoney fat turd that took over after a bridge collapse back in 2002 was also named Captain William J. Clark. Ages line up, and Iowa and Missouri are neighbors…..!

Mike
USAF Retired

Jimbojszz

It good to see the VFW taking charge of membership and vetting members. And referring shit head phonies to law enforcement.

Last edited 6 days ago by Jimbojszz
A Proud Infidel®™

JAIL the sunza-bitches and put the word out they’re not deserving of a reach-around once Bubba & Thor start pimping them out to the general pop.