Clint Lorance


Clint Allen Lorance is a former United States Army officer. While serving as a first lieutenant in the War in Afghanistan with the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 82nd Airborne Division in 2012, Lorance was charged with two counts of second-degree murder after he ordered his soldiers to open fire on three Afghan men who were on a motorcycle. Lorance was found guilty by a court-martial in 2013 and sentenced to 19 years in prison after the sentence was reviewed by his commanding general.
He was confined in the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas for six years. He was pardoned by President Trump on November 15, 2019. Previously, Fox News personalities, in particular Sean Hannity, had advocated forcefully for Lorance's pardon.

Early life

Lorance was born and raised in the small town of Hobart, Oklahoma, and lived in Jackson County, Oklahoma. His father Tracy is a welder, and his mother Anna was a stay-at-home mom.
After a deployment in Iraq, he attended the University of North Texas, and graduated in 2010, becoming the first college graduate in his family. Lorance then lived in Celeste, Texas, and Merit, Texas, in Hunt County, Texas.

Military career

On his 18th birthday Lorance enlisted in the U.S. Army. He was deployed first in South Korea for two years as a traffic officer, and then in Iraq, where he served for 15 months guarding detainees. After graduating from college with his bachelor's degree, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 2010, and subsequently promoted to first lieutenant. In March 2012 he was deployed to a small outpost in southern Afghanistan with the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, of the 82nd Airborne Division.

Shooting

Another lieutenant in the 4th Brigade Combat Team was wounded in a roadside bombing by shrapnel; one of four injuries the platoon suffered in a matter of days. The 28-year-old Lorance—without any combat experience—was chosen as his replacement, and became the platoon leader of 1st Platoon, C Troop.
In his short command, Lorance engaged in tactics that drew scrutiny at his later court-martial. On June 30, 2012, Lorance threatened a farmer and a small boy by pointing a rifle at the boy. On July 1, 2012, Lorance ordered two of his soldiers to fire harassing fire at villagers and instructed one of his NCOs to provide a false report to the Troop TOC.
Early the next day, on July 2, 2012, Lorance and his patrol went on his second combat patrol, with most of his two dozen soldiers on foot. The patrol entered the same location in which they had been fired upon, in a dangerous valley in a Taliban-controlled volatile area of Zhari District in Kandahar Province in southern Afghanistan. The area was a hotbed of Taliban insurgent activity.
In a post-conviction legal filing, a U.S. government contractor, Kevin Huber, claimed to have observed the area through cameras on a stationary blimp. He wrote: "I saw three fighting-aged males shadowing the American patrol at a distance of about. In my experience, they had every indication of Taliban or insurgent fighters because they were armed with AK-47 assault rifles and using ICOM radios while moving along the back wall of the village toward the American position." According to the Army Times article reporting Huber's claim, "Court records do not indicate that those motorcyclists — if they were indeed the same ones who Lorance later ordered soldiers to shoot — were armed at the time of the shooting."
Daniel Gustafson, who served as the Battalion command sergeant major over Lorance's platoon, testified that he was 100 percent confident that Lorance's platoon was being scouted for an impending attack. He noted that:
"the three Taliban scouts riding the motorcycle approached Lorance’s platoon from the Northeast... several insurgents were using ICOM radios and maneuvering into fighting positions to the North, and... a motorcycle rider came down to the West who was stopped, detained, and was found to have on his hands".

Three unarmed Afghan men on a motorcycle were near the platoon. Lorance said that the motorcycle was just seconds away from his troops. His soldiers testified that the motorcycle was spotted approximately away, and several testified that the motorcycle could not have reached the platoon's position. Attorneys for Lorance attempted to cast doubt on four of the soldiers' accounts, arguing that they were granted immunity from prosecution in exchange for their testimony. The other five soldiers who testified against Lorance did not receive immunity.
One of Lorance's soldiers asked if it was acceptable to open fire on the men on the motorcycle, and Lorance, suspecting the approaching men were insurgents, responded "yes." Private David Shilo said: "I was given a lawful order." At trial, Private Skelton was attributed as spotting the motorcycle and he stated that "there was no reason to shoot at that moment in time that presented a clear, definitive hostile intent and hostile act."
The American soldier opened fire and missed. The three Afghans then dismounted and walked towards the Afghan National Army soldiers who were at the front of the mixed US-Afghan patrol, who gestured for the three men to leave. A second US soldier then opened fire and killed two of the Afghans. Lorance said later: "I made the best decision I could make, given the conditions on the ground. I would make the same exact decision again today if I was faced with that decision."

Court-martial proceedings

Lorance was investigated after the soldiers in his platoon reported the incident. Lorance was charged nine months later, though the soldiers who fired the shots were not themselves charged. He was tried in August 2013 in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Nine members of his platoon testified against him.
Lorance never testified in the court hearings, though he did take responsibility for his men's actions. Lorance's lawyer said Lorance's actions were justified by the threat level at the time, by the information conveyed to him by Army helicopter pilots that insurgents were loitering on three sides of the platoon, and by intelligence reports that men on motorcycles were presumed to be Taliban members, which led him to believe that the men on the motorcycle were Taliban suicide bombers and an imminent threat.
At the end of a three-day trial, in August 2013 the 28-year-old Lorance was found guilty by a military judge of two counts of second-degree murder, obstruction of justice, and other charges "related to a pattern of threatening and intimidating actions toward Afghans" as the platoon's leader. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison, forfeiture of all pay, and dismissal from the Army.

Appeals and post-conviction developments

In December 2014, an attorney for Lorance filed pleadings alleging that Lorance was the victim of prosecutorial misconduct. On January 5, 2015, the Commanding General of the 82nd Airborne Division, Major General Richard D. Clarke, completed a review, upheld Lorance's conviction, and directed one year off Lorance's original sentence of 20 years confinement due to post-trial delay.
United American Patriots, a non-profit group that defends U.S. soldiers accused of war crimes, assisted Lorance on his appeal. The group, led by retired Marine Corps lieutenant colonel David Gurfein, said it assists the accused personnel it believes might not be receiving due process. The publicity spurred by Lorance's case helped the UAP increase its fundraising by 150%.
In September 2015, defense attorneys filed a petition with the U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals for a new trial, arguing that evidence linking the two killed Afghans to terror networks was left out of Lorance's court-martial proceedings. They argued that biometric evidence showed that one of the men on the motorcycle was linked to an improvised explosive device incident prior to the shooting, a second rider was also involved in an insurgent attack, and the third rider was connected to a hostile action against U.S. troops. The U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals rejected Lorance's appeal in June 2017, ruling that the evidence would not have been admissible at trial, and even if it had, it would not have helped Lorance's case.
In 2019, Lorance's case was featured in the Starz documentary series Leavenworth.

Pardon

Campaign for pardon

Lorance became a cause célèbre among conservative commentators and activists. In January 2015, supporters of Lorance created a petition on the White House website asking President Barack Obama to grant a presidential pardon to Lorance. It received 124,966 signatures. In its response to the petition, the White House said that requests for executive clemency for federal offenses should be directed to the Office of the Pardon Attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice.
In 2017 the Republican Party of Louisiana passed a unanimous resolution in 2017 in support of Lorance's exoneration. One of Lorance's defense attorneys, lawyer and author Don Brown, published a book in 2019 entitled Travesty of Justice: The Shocking Prosecution of Lt. Clint Lorance. In it he argued that the Army did not permit the jury to consider evidence showing that Afghan National Army soldiers accompanying Lorance's patrol began firing at the motorcycle first, and that the Army kept biometric evidence from the jury that suggested that the motorcycle riders were Taliban bombmakers. Brown frequently urged on Fox News that President Donald Trump should free and exonerate Lorance.

Trump pardon

On November 15, 2019, President Donald Trump issued a full pardon to Lorance, and he was released from prison after serving six years. Fox News covered Lorance extensively prior to the pardon. Fox News host Sean Hannity reportedly played a leading role in persuading Trump to pardon Lorance. Many Republican members of Congress had urged Trump to grant executive clemency. Trump described Lorance as a hero operating in difficult circumstances.
Upon being released, Lorance said: "I'm so happy to be an American. A soldier or service member who knows that their commanders love them will go to the gates of Hell for their country and knock them down."