A retired U.S. Navy official was sentenced Friday to six years in federal prison after he admitted taking more than $350,000 in bribes and favors from an Asian defense contractor.

Paul Simpkins, a former contracting supervisor based in Singapore, is the sixth Navy official so far to receive prison time in a massive corruption scandal that has rattled the maritime service since the first defendants were arrested in 2013. Another half-dozen current and former Navy officers have pleaded guilty but are still waiting to learn their sentences. More arrests are expected; prosecutors have said 200 people have been placed under investigation.

In exchange for the bribes, Simpkins, 61, of Haymarket, Va., steered multi-million-dollar Navy business deals to Leonard Glenn Francis (pictured above in center), a Singapore-based contractor known as “Fat Leonard,” according to court records. Francis’s company, Glenn Defense Marine Asia, held contracts for more than 25 years to resupply and refuel Navy ships and submarines at ports across Asia.

Court records show that Simpkins and Francis met in a Singapore hotel bar in 2006 to discuss how to rig the awarding of lucrative contracts to service Navy vessels in Thailand. Prosecutors have said Francis first gave the Navy official an envelope stuffed with $50,000 in cash. In subsequent months, according to the plea agreement in the case, Francis wired another $300,000 in bribes to a Japanese bank account controlled by Simpkins’ wife.

Prosecutors say that Simpkins received more money in bribes than any other Navy official charged in the scandal. “Simpkins valued and sold his office to Francis in the same manner as an automobile dealer sells used cars,” they wrote in a court filing.

Besides steering contracts to Glenn Defense, Simpkins acted as a secret enforcer of the company’s interests. According to the plea agreement, he ordered other Navy officials to stop reviewing fraudulent invoices from the firm, and blocked the installation of special equipment that would have detected a scheme by Francis to overcharge the Navy for pumping wastewater from its ships. On another occasion, he overruled a recommendation from a junior officer to cancel one of Glenn Defense’s contracts for poor performance.

In a letter sent to the court for his sentencing, Simpkins said he took “total responsibility and accountability for my actions and offer no excuse[s]. There are not enough words to accurately and sincerely express my apology to the United States and my family.” He did not make any reference to Francis — who has also pleaded guilty and is in jail awaiting sentencing — or shed any more light on their actions.

“Mr. Simpkins is sincerely remorseful and looks forward to putting this chapter of his life behind him,” his attorney, John Lemon of San Diego, said in an email.

In addition to his prison term, Simpkins must pay $450,000 in restitution to the U.S. government.

(c) 2016, The Washington Post · Craig Whitlock