The officer was also convicted of failure to discharge his duties but cleared of a third count of "cowardly behaviour", Femi Falana told AFP.
The attack on Baga, on the shores of Lake Chad, saw hundreds of Boko Haram fighters overrun and destroy the town and surrounding villages, including a military base.
Militants were later seen in a propaganda video picking through the armoury at the base, which was used by troops from Nigeria, Niger and Chad.
Hundreds of people were said to have been killed in what has been seen as the Islamists worst atrocity in the six-year insurgency, although even now there is no exact death toll.
Falana said
Ransome-Kuti had been in custody for six months and should be released
for time served but the conviction and sentence had to be confirmed
first by a military panel.
An
appeal would be lodged, he said, as it was "contradictory" to convict
his client of losing equipment but clear him of cowardly behaviour.
In September 2014, 12 Nigerian soldiers were sentenced to death for mutiny after shots were fired at their commanding officer in the northeastern city of Maiduguri.
The following December, 54 other soldiers were sentenced to death for refusing to deploy for an operation against Boko Haram.
In May this year, the military said 579 officers and soldiers were on trial over indiscipline linked to the conflict.
The cases, most of which have been heard behind closed doors, emerged after complaints of poor equipment and morale in the army against the better-equipped rebels.
Conditions are said to have improved since the start of this year, with new procurement and investment that has put Boko Haram on the back foot.
That has prompted calls for a review of soldiers facing charges.
Source: Yahoo News
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