I've only followed LT Lorance's story a bit, but I would not be surprised if this was a staged photo.
https://www.lawyersdefendingwarriors.com/
His lawyers specialize in UCMJ cases.
https://www.lawyersdefendingwarriors.com/services
If you take a look at the packages of services, they advocate for their clients in multiple ways.
>We don't just draft, file, and argue your case, we also create a social media and public relations campaign on your behalf.
There have been two books that have come out of the Lorance case.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travesty_of_Justice
>Brown, a former United States Navy JAG officer, and one of four former JAG officers serving on the Lorance defense team, appeared on Fox & Friends on April 13, 2019 with Pete Hegseth and Ed Henry to discuss the book, and to urge President Donald Trump to sign an order to disallow the findings and sentencing from Lorance’s court-martial, to release him from prison and to return him to active duty in the Army. Between the release of Travesty of Justice on March 31, 2019 and Lorance’s pardon on November 15, 2019, Brown made numerous national television appearances and penned numerous national OPEDs arguing that President Trump should free and exonerate Lieutenant Lorance.
So there's two books about the same subject.
https://www.amazon.com/Stolen-Honor-Falsely-Accused-Imprisoned-ebook/dp/B084MDNTBH
>The captivating account of how Clint Lorance, a soldier who became a scapegoat for a corrupt military hierarchy, was falsely charged with war crimes, imprisoned, and eventually pardoned by President Trump. While out on patrol in Afghanistan, Clint Lorance learned that two men, both suspected suicide bombers, were speeding toward a crowded city on motorcycles. Lorance couldn't see them, but his men on the ground had clear shots. After a split second, he gave the order to shoot, killing both men. In the months that followed, Lorance was arrested by the military and put on trial for war crimes. Prosecutors claimed that the order he gave constituted an act of premeditated murder, and they sentenced him to twenty years in prison.
>In Stolen Honor, Lorance finally tells the story of this event and the trial it led to -- how the prosecutors declined to admit clear-cut evidence that would have exonerated him, how the men in his unit turned on him, and why he still believes he was right to give the order to shoot.
>It is a story that stretches from small-town America to the deserts of Afghanistan, from the White House to the tiny jail cell where Lorance spent six years waiting on his exoneration, which finally came when President Trump pardoned him in 2019. The book also discusses Lorance's plans to attend law school and help reform the broken military justice system.
They tell you what they do right on the site:
>The Federal Government doesn't like to lose. Bringing your case against it requires a strategic and comprehensive approach most attorneys simply aren't prepared for. We've spent years developing the kind of team it takes to argue today's most complicated cases.
https://www.lawyersdefendingwarriors.com/cases-we-ve-handled
If you have any doubt, check out the cases they've handled.