Army sergeant gets 6 life terms in Fort Stewart shooting

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2–3 minutes

Summary

An Army sergeant was sentenced to six life terms for shooting five people and trying to shoot a sixth at Fort Stewart.

Why this matters

The case details the military justice outcome in a shooting inside an Army unit headquarters. It also documents the Army’s account of how soldiers stopped the attack and treated the wounded before emergency crews arrived.

A U.S. Army sergeant was sentenced to six consecutive life terms with the possibility of parole for shooting and wounding his fiance and four other soldiers at Fort Stewart in Georgia last August, the Army said Tuesday.

Sgt. Quornelius S. Radford, 29, was convicted by a military judge of attempting to murder six people during the Aug. 6, 2025, shooting at his unit headquarters, according to the Army Office of Special Trial Counsel. All five people who were shot survived after soldiers subdued Radford and provided first aid until emergency medical personnel arrived.

Radford was found guilty of two specifications of attempted premeditated murder and four specifications of attempted unpremeditated murder. In late March, he pleaded guilty to one specification of domestic violence, one specification of aggravated assault with a dangerous weapon, and four specifications of aggravated assault by inflicting grievous bodily harm.

The former automated logistics sergeant was assigned to A Company, 703rd Brigade Support Battalion, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division. He also was sentenced to reduction in rank, a dishonorable discharge, and forfeiture of all pay and allowances.

According to the Army, Radford argued with his fiance before driving to Fort Stewart with a loaded personal handgun. The Army said Radford’s fiance followed him onto the post because he feared Radford was suicidal.

When the fiance approached Radford in the unit parking lot, Radford shot him, then went into the unit offices and shot four soldiers, according to the Army. He also tried to shoot a sixth person, but missed.

Army Secretary Dan Driscoll presented the six soldiers who subdued Radford and gave first aid to the wounded with the Meritorious Service Medal.

“Sgt. Radford turned his weapon on his own unit, shooting fellow soldiers, including members of his leadership, shattering the trust that is essential to every military organization. His actions left victims with devastating physical injuries, emotional trauma and scars that will endure for a lifetime,” Maj. Matthew Fields, a prosecutor for the Army Office of Special Trial Counsel, said in a statement.

Radford confessed to the shootings and was confined at Naval Consolidated Brig Charleston at Joint Base Charleston, South Carolina. He will serve his sentence at the United States Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

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