| SULLIED | "A court martial, under orders, has just dared to acquit a certain Esterhazy, a supreme insult to all truth and justice. And now the image of France is ____ by this filth." (Émile Z |
| HAYDN | Esterhazy composer |
| CASHIER | Use a court martial to get rid of a bank teller (7) |
| COWARDICE | Officer to take a risk about fight, a court-martial offence |
| BREAKERMORANT | 1980 Bruce Beresford film about a court martial, starring Edward Woodward in the title role |
| DESERTION | Cause for a court martial |
| JUDGEADVOCATE | Barrister advising a court martial on legal points |
| GOESAWOL | Risks a court-martial, perhaps |
| AWOL | Facing a court-martial, maybe |
| FEWGOOD | Alan Sorkin's Broadway drama of a US court martial, later adapted into a screenplay, A ... Men (3,4) |
| ONEHUNDRED | Under orders to come in on what day? It may be Frimley Green's call (3,7) |
| PANTHEON | A Catholic church since the 7th century, this Roman structure was originally built as a temple to al |
| MONKFISH | One under orders to hunt for type of shark |
| DUO | A pair starting duties under orders |
| FURORLOQUENDI | With which one's driven to speak of liquor under orders (5,8) |
| TRAPPISTMONKS | They're under orders to keep quiet (8,5) |
| JOENAMATH | NFL star nicknamed "Broadway" who appeared in a Broadway production of "The Caine Mutiny Court Martial" in 1983: 2 wds. |
| CLEARASABELL | Perfectly sound to acquit gangster hiding sable production (5,2,1,4) |
| CLEAR | Fair to acquit |
| ABSOLVE | To acquit clear from blame, sin, punishment, obligation or responsibility |