Every bit of this evidence had been hidden from the defense counsel, and even more seriously, had been hidden from the military jury. The Army’s railroad job against Lt. Clint Lorance had been borderline criminal. No prosecutor should ever, under any circumstances, hide and or conceal exonerating evidence from a jury in order to gain at conviction for the sake of political expediency. But John Maher knew at this point that this is exactly what had happened in the prosecution of Clint Lorance. The prosecution did not seek justice in Clint’s case, but only a symbolic head on a silver platter,
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