United States v. Best , 2005 CAAF LEXIS 952 ( 2005 )


Menu:
  •                         UNITED STATES, Appellee
    v.
    Jermain J. BEST, Private
    U.S. Army, Appellant
    No. 00-0679
    Crim. App. No. 9701222
    United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
    Argued January 25, 2005
    Decided September 1, 2005
    CRAWFORD, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
    GIERKE, C.J., and EFFRON and ERDMANN, JJ., joined. BAKER, J.,
    filed a separate opinion, concurring in the result.
    Counsel
    For Appellant: Captain Eric D. Noble (argued); Colonel Mark
    Cremin, Lieutenant Colonel Mark Tellitocci, and Major Allyson G.
    Lambert (on brief).
    For Appellee: Captain Edward E. Wiggers (argued); Colonel
    Steven T. Salata, Lieutenant Colonel Margaret B. Baines,
    Lieutenant Colonel Mark L. Johnson, and Major Natalie A. Kolb
    (on brief).
    Military Judge: Peter E. Brownback III
    THIS OPINION IS SUBJECT TO REVISION BEFORE FINAL PUBLICATION.
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    Judge CRAWFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Contrary to his pleas, Appellant was convicted by a general
    court-martial of officer and enlisted members of unpremeditated
    murder, assault with infliction of grievous bodily harm, and
    carrying a concealed weapon, in violation of Articles 118, 128,
    and 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) , 10 U.S.C. §§
    918, 928, 934 (2000).    The convening authority approved the
    sentence of twenty years of confinement, forfeiture of all pay
    and allowances, reduction to E-1, and a dishonorable discharge.
    The United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the
    findings and sentence.   United States v. Best, No. ARMY 9701222
    (A. Ct. Crim. App. Mar. 8, 2000) [hereinafter Best I].    After
    Appellant raised issues of mental competence and responsibility
    for the first time before this Court, we returned the record to
    the Army Judge Advocate General on November 21, 2000, for
    conduct of a mental examination under Rule for Courts-Martial
    (R.C.M.) 706.   United States v. Best, 
    54 M.J. 367
     (C.A.A.F.
    2000) (order granting additional inquiry into Appellant’s mental
    capacity).   That examination was conducted at Fort Leavenworth,
    Kansas, on March 12, 2001, by a board consisting of a
    psychiatrist and two psychologists, who agreed that:    in 1997,
    Appellant was not suffering from severe mental disease or
    defect, nor was he “unable to appreciate the nature and quality
    or wrongfulness of his conduct”; and at the time of the board,
    2
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    Appellant was suffering from “Schizophrenia, Catatonic Type
    Remission” and was able to “understand and cooperate in the
    appellate proceeding.”   After reviewing those proceedings, this
    Court again set aside the lower court’s decision on December 20,
    2001, questioning the reliability of the sanity board report on
    the basis of an alleged conflict of interest created by
    membership on the board of two psychotherapists who had
    previously assessed Appellant’s mental condition.   This Court
    ordered the Army Court of Criminal Appeals to determine:
    (1) Was there an actual conflict of interest
    [involving Drs. Galloway and Kirubakaran] sufficient
    to undermine the reliability of the sanity board’s
    findings?
    (2) Was appellant aware of the potential conflict of
    interest at the time of the sanity board?
    (3) If so, did appellant have an opportunity to raise
    the issue?
    (4) Did appellant waive [any] conflict of interest?
    That, if the court concludes that there was a conflict
    of interest that was not waived and further concludes
    that the findings of the sanity board are not reliable
    because of a conflict of interest, the court will
    order another sanity board; and
    That, after resolving the above issues, the court will
    determine whether appellant has the mental capacity to
    understand and to conduct or cooperate intelligently
    in the appellate proceedings. If so, the court will
    determine whether the evidence regarding appellant’s
    mental responsibility at the time of the offenses
    warrants setting aside the findings and sentence.
    3
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    United States v. Best, 
    56 M.J. 251
     (C.A.A.F. 2001) (order
    setting aside decision of Court of Criminal Appeals in Best I
    and returning record for further fact-finding) (citation
    omitted).After reviewing the findings of the hearing convened
    pursuant to United States v. DuBay, 
    17 C.M.A. 147
    , 
    37 C.M.R. 411
    (1967), the court below again affirmed the findings and
    sentence.   United States v. Best, 
    59 M.J. 886
     (A. Ct. Crim. App.
    2004)[hereinafter Best II].    On July 23, 2004, this Court
    granted review of the following issue:
    WHETHER THE UNITED STATES ARMY COURT OF CRIMINAL
    APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THERE WAS NO ACTUAL
    CONFLICT OF INTEREST INVOLVING MEMBERS ON APPELLANT’S
    SANITY BOARD SUFFICIENT TO UNDERMINE THE RELIABILITY
    OF THE SANITY BOARD’S FINDINGS.
    We conclude for the reasons set forth below, the court did
    not err.
    FACTS
    We accept the factual determinations of the court below,
    which we include here for clarity:
    At about midnight on 5 April 1997, appellant went to
    the Happy Night Disco in Idar-Oberstein, Germany, with
    Specialist (SPC) Fowlkes and SPC Wright. At
    approximately 0200 hrs, 6 April 1997, SPC Brown
    accidentally bumped into appellant. SPC Brown
    apologized and turned away from appellant. Appellant
    grabbed SPC Brown by the arm, turned him around, and
    struck him in the face with a tall, heavy, beer glass.
    The glass broke on impact and cut completely through
    SPC Brown’s cheek to his teeth. This injury required
    four stitches and left a permanent one-quarter to one-
    half inch scar on SPC Brown’s face.
    4
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    After appellant hit SPC Brown, several of the people
    near them attempted to restrain appellant. Appellant
    departed that area of the club and took off his easily
    recognizable, red and white stripe shirt and placed it
    under his white t-shirt. Shortly thereafter,
    appellant and SPC Fowlkes departed the club and waited
    for SPC Wright near the club entrance. A few minutes
    later, SPC Wright joined them and stated “a guy inside
    the club [] told three patrons to follow [appellant]
    and see where he was going, and hold him until they
    got out there[.]” Appellant asked to see SPC Fowlkes’
    “buck knife.” Specialist Fowlkes gave it to him and
    appellant placed it in his pocket.
    Appellant, SPC Fowlkes, and SPC Wright then proceeded
    toward SPC Wright’s automobile. Private First Class
    (PFC) Little, SPC Bos, and SPC Woods caught up with
    appellant and his friends. Private First Class Little
    grabbed appellant by the arm, turned him around, and
    said, “[Y]ou need to come back with us. You just
    busted a dude in the face and you need to come back
    with us, the MPs are on their way.” Appellant pulled
    away from PFC Little and said, “You need to back off
    me. Just get away,” and walked across the street to
    SPC Wright’s car. Appellant stated that he just
    wanted to leave. Private First Class Little again
    approached appellant and told him “[C]ome back; you
    got to be a man and live up to what you did.” Private
    First Class Little pushed appellant back a couple of
    feet and appellant came back at him. They started
    wrestling and punching. Private First Class Little
    dropped to his knees and said “Oh, you got to use a
    knife.” Appellant replied, “[Y]eah, mother[******].”
    Specialist Bos then came toward appellant. As SPC Bos
    did so, he put his hand behind his back and pretended
    to be holding a knife. Specialist Bos stated the
    following to appellant: “Oh, you gotta use a knife.
    I’m gonna show you a knife.” Appellant turned and ran
    to SPC Wright’s car and departed with his friends.
    Lieutenant Colonel Marzouk, a forensic pathologist,
    testified that he conducted an autopsy on PFC Little’s
    body. Private First Class Little was stabbed a total
    of twelve times -– in the heart, left lung, left arm,
    left armpit, and forearm. The fatal stab wound was to
    the left axilla, armpit, which lacerated a major vein
    5
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    and artery. Private First Class Little died as a
    result of blood loss.
    Best I, slip op. at 3-5.
    Similarly, we accept the additional factual determinations
    of the lower court in its April 12, 2004, decision that are
    pertinent to Appellant’s claim of a fatal conflict of interest:
    On or about 30 September 1997, appellant arrived
    at the USDB [United States Disciplinary Barracks],
    Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Upon his arrival, he, like
    all inmates, went through a three-week reception
    process. The reception process included a battery of
    tests to determine appellant’s current psychological
    state. All USDB inmates are assigned case providers.
    Because appellant’s test results did not indicate that
    his case provider needed to be a psychologist, he was
    assigned a mental health technician as his case
    provider.
    Sometime in the spring or summer of 1999,
    appellant began “speaking in tongues” and,
    infrequently, fell into trances. Appellant expressed
    a belief that he “would be delivered from confinement
    and received into heaven on the evening of the new
    millennium.” Appellant’s conduct was not disruptive
    until his belief was not confirmed and the millennium
    passed.
    In January 2000, appellant was on the “blotter”
    for two separate incidents of disobedience and he
    began “speaking in tongues” more frequently.
    Appellant’s case provider requested an assessment of
    appellant to determine whether appellant was suffering
    from some type of psychosis or a religious calling.
    Doctor Ellen Galloway3 was directed to assess
    appellant to determine the cause of his disruptive
    behavior. Before she met appellant, Dr. Galloway: 1)
    discussed his status with the head chaplain and three
    mental health technicians; 2) reviewed his mental
    health records; 3) reviewed the battery of
    psychological tests administered to him during the
    reception process;4 and 4) researched “speaking in
    tongues” on an Assemblies of God web page.
    6
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    On 26 January 2000, Dr. Galloway met with
    appellant while he was in his cell. The purpose of
    the meeting was to make initial contact with
    appellant, to gather preliminary data, and to advise
    appellant that she planned to spend extensive time the
    following day conducting a full assessment of him.
    Appellant refused to discuss his “speaking in
    tongues,” trances, or religious beliefs, and refused
    to cooperate with any psychological testing or with
    the clinical interview. Appellant smiled, stated God
    was taking care of him, and told Dr. Galloway that he
    did not need any mental health intervention. He
    turned his head sideways and muttered “nonsensical”
    syllables for approximately ten seconds. After
    approximately five to ten minutes, appellant told Dr.
    Galloway that he was uncomfortable and unwilling to
    talk to her. At that point, Dr. Galloway stopped the
    interview.
    On 28 January 2000, Dr. Galloway prepared a
    memorandum for the USDB Commandant regarding
    appellant’s mental status. In it, Dr. Galloway stated
    that without more cooperation, she could not determine
    the driving force behind appellant’s behavior. She
    decided that the most likely reasons for his
    disruptive behavior were the result of two combined
    factors, “traits of a personality disorder and
    malingering.” Doctor Galloway further concluded, as
    follows:
    The personality disorder would have been sub-
    clinical in nature and exacerbated by his
    confinement. This would have been intensified
    further when his expectation of deliverance
    was not realized. The rigidity inherent in
    personality disorders would explain why he
    persists with his behavior despite starting to
    experience adverse consequences. The
    malingering would explain why his behavior
    does not follow the pattern that [the head
    chaplain] stated he would have expected from
    an individual who speaks in tongues. It would
    also explain his refusal to cooperate with any
    form of assessment . . . .
    7
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    Doctor Galloway recommended, at that time, that
    any further disruptive or disobedient behavior should
    be treated as a custody and control issue rather than
    a mental health or religious issue. She stated that
    all inmates, regardless of their mental status, are
    expected to comply with the USDB regulations, but that
    a psychological issue could result in mitigating
    punitive action. Doctor Galloway even suggested that
    she be called as a witness at any board to explain the
    mental health circumstances.
    By 3 April 2000, appellant was non-communicative
    with the USDB non-commissioned officers, had been on
    the “blotter” for more disruptive behavior, and had
    “been refusing to eat or drink for . . . three or four
    days.” A physician’s assistant, who was appointed to
    treat appellant during his hunger strike, was alarmed
    with appellant’s behavior and refused to engage in the
    hunger strike protocol until appellant was
    psychiatrically cleared. Doctor Galloway called Dr.
    Kirubakaran5 and asked him to meet with appellant on an
    emergency consultation.
    Doctor Kirubakaran immediately met with appellant
    in his cell. Appellant refused to look at Dr.
    Kirubakaran, did not respond to any of his
    instructions, kept his face covered with a blanket,
    constantly talked to himself, and rocked his body.
    Because Dr. Kirubakaran was unable to fully assess
    appellant’s mental or physical condition, he
    recommended appellant be sent to the nearest emergency
    room for a complete examination. Later, Dr.
    Kirubakaran diagnosed appellant with a “psychotic
    disorder [not otherwise specified] and concerns about
    catatonia.” He had appellant admitted to the
    psychiatric services section of the Leavenworth
    Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital.
    The VA hospital staff initially determined that
    appellant was depressed and was, perhaps, “playing
    games” with them. The VA put appellant on anti-
    psychotic and mood stabilizing drugs. Appellant
    seemed aware of his surroundings because he shook his
    head “no” when asked about taking his medication and
    allowed the nursing staff to take his vital signs and
    blood. Between 5 and 6 April 2000, Dr. Galloway made
    more than ten phone calls to the VA doctors and
    8
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    nurses, and Dr. Kirubakaran, discussing appellant’s
    physical and mental condition. The VA nurse working
    with appellant raised, with Dr. Galloway, the issue of
    appellant’s actions as malingering. On 6 April 2000,
    the VA discharged appellant and he returned to the
    USDB. The VA’s chief of psychiatric services stated
    that “1) Inmate Best was not catatonic[;] 2) Inmate
    Best was not in the middle of an acute psychotic
    episode[;] and 3) that he was filling an isolation
    room that another patient might need.”
    By 17 April 2000, appellant was again non-
    communicative, frequently shaking and covering his
    head with a blanket, and most of the time refusing to
    eat or drink. Doctor Galloway once more requested
    that Dr. Kirubakaran assess appellant. Doctor
    Kirubakaran met with appellant at appellant’s cell for
    approximately fifteen to twenty minutes. Appellant
    appeared to be psychotic and agitated. Doctor
    Kirubakaran did not develop a treatment plan for
    appellant, however, because he was told that appellant
    was to be transferred to the United States Medical
    Center for Federal Prisons (Federal Medical Center) in
    Springfield, Missouri, because of his refusal to eat
    or drink.
    On 26 April 2000, appellant was transferred to
    the Federal Medical Center. Initially, Dr. Robert
    Denny, a staff psychologist, assessed appellant and
    concluded that he probably had a serious psychotic
    disorder. Doctor Denny transferred him to the
    psychiatric hospital for closer observation to
    accurately diagnose appellant.
    On 28 April 2000, appellant met Dr. Richard
    Frederick, a staff psychologist board certified in
    forensic psychology. Doctor Frederick was appellant’s
    primary clinician -- responsible for conducting
    assessments and determining appellant’s mental health
    status -- for approximately four months. Doctor Tom
    Mallory, Chief of Psychiatry, assisted in assessing
    and medicating appellant. Initially, they
    hypothesized that appellant may have been faking his
    illness. After weeks of observation, however, they
    determined that their hypothesis was illogical. “His
    condition was very, very serious. He was not eating.
    He was not responding rationally or even at all, at
    9
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    times. He was demonstrating very strange postural
    changes and mannerisms that were indicative of
    probably the most severe psychotic disorder.”
    In early May 2000, Drs. Mallory and Frederick
    started appellant on an involuntary, non-consensual
    medication regimen because they considered appellant
    gravely disabled and without it, at risk of death.
    They began medicating appellant with very large doses
    of extremely powerful anti-psychotic drugs. Even with
    the medication, it took appellant approximately one
    month to respond to staff interactions in any
    consistent fashion. On 18 May 2000, Dr. Frederick
    diagnosed appellant as having “Schizophrenia,
    catatonic type, in acute exacerbation[.]” In early
    June, Drs. Mallory and Frederick augmented the anti-
    psychotic medication with anti-depressant medication.
    Doctor Frederick advised Dr. Galloway that he
    thought it would be in appellant’s best interest to
    continue his treatment at the Federal Medical Center.
    On 15 September 2000, a Vitek hearing6 was conducted at
    Fort Leavenworth. Doctor Frederick testified that
    appellant suffered from catatonic schizophrenia. He
    added that many of the symptoms of the mental disorder
    were currently in remission because of appellant’s
    medication regimen. Because Dr. Galloway had not had
    any personal contact with appellant since April 2000,
    she testified that she did not have a professional
    opinion as to appellant’s current mental condition.
    After hearing all of the evidence, the military judge
    recommended that appellant remain at the Federal
    Medical Center for as long as the staff at the center
    determined it necessary.
    Appellant continued his treatment at the Federal
    Medical Center from September 2000 until his transfer
    back to the USDB on 8 June 2001. Once he returned to
    the USDB, Dr. Kirubakaran began seeing him on a
    monthly basis. Appellant did “extremely well,” his
    medication was reduced, and he did not exhibit any of
    the symptoms he had before. Appellant was called to
    testify, by the defense, at the DuBay hearing. He
    discussed his relationships with Drs. Galloway and
    Kirubakaran, the Vitek hearing, and the sanity board.
    He answered all of the questions of the defense
    10
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    counsel, trial counsel, and military judge in a
    logical, coherent manner.
    _______________
    3
    Doctor Galloway, Chief of the Mental Health Division
    at the Directorate of Treatment Programs at the USDB,
    is a Doctor of Psychology. At the time of the DuBay
    hearing, Dr. Galloway had held her position for
    approximately two years as an active duty officer,
    captain, and for approximately one and one-half years
    as a civilian.
    4
    Doctor Galloway determined these test results were
    invalid because of appellant’s “need to present
    himself in an unrealistically socially desirable
    light. He was unwilling to admit to even minor flaws
    which are considered within normal limits.”
    5
    Doctor Kirubakaran, the psychiatry medical officer
    for Community Mental Health, which is part of the
    Munson Health Center on Fort Leavenworth, is board
    certified in Psychiatry, and is a consulting
    psychiatrist for the USDB. At the time of the DuBay
    hearing, Dr. Kirubakaran had been a psychiatrist for
    thirty-three years.
    6
    Because the military does not have adequate
    facilities to provide long-term, inpatient psychiatric
    treatment for its prisoners, those prisoners requiring
    such treatment are typically transferred to the
    custody of the Federal Bureau of Prisons under the
    provisions of Article 58(a), UCMJ. Before a prisoner
    can be involuntarily transferred from a prison to a
    psychiatric treatment facility, he is entitled to
    certain procedural safeguards, including notice,
    counsel, and a hearing before an independent decision-
    maker. Vitek v. Jones, 
    445 U.S. 480
    , 
    63 L. Ed. 2d 552
    , 
    100 S. Ct. 1254
     (1980); Army Reg. 190-47, The
    Army Corrections Systems, para. 3-3 (15 Aug. 1996).
    59 M.J. 888-91 (footnotes in original).
    11
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    DISCUSSION
    Appellant argues that R.C.M. 706 contains an implicit, per
    se prohibition of membership on a so-called “sanity board” by
    any physician or psychologist who has previously “diagnosed
    and/or treated” the subject of that board.   In the alternative,
    we are urged to conclude that the results of the board convened
    under R.C.M. 706 to examine Appellant are fatally unreliable
    because of an actual or apparent conflict of interest on behalf
    of one or more members of that board.
    At the outset, we decline the Government’s invitation to
    view both the question of whether a conflict of interest existed
    and the effect of any such conflict as questions solely of fact,
    and thus limit our review to a determination of whether the Army
    Court of Criminal Appeals abused its discretion in denying
    relief.   While there are factual questions in issue, the lower
    court’s interpretation of R.C.M. 706 and assessment of the
    reliability of trial proceedings are matters of law that we
    review de novo, not only because the lower court’s decision
    constitutes the recognition and formulation of legal standards,
    but because “the reasoning upon which it is based shows it to be
    a matter of law.”   United States v. Benson, 
    3 C.M.A. 351
    , 354,
    
    12 C.M.R. 107
    , 110 (1953).   Consistent with other mixed
    questions of fact and law, the findings of fact made by the
    12
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    court below are accepted unless clearly erroneous.   United
    States v. Sullivan, 
    42 M.J. 360
    , 363 (C.A.A.F. 1995).
    A.   NATURE OF AN R.C.M. 706 BOARD IN THE POST-TRIAL ARENA
    A sanity board is a creature not of statute, but of
    executive order and long-standing military practice, dating to
    at least 1917.   See Captain Charles E. Trant, The American
    Military Insanity Defense:   A Moral, Philosophical, and Legal
    Dilemma, 99 Mil. L. Rev. 1, 66 n.349 (1983).   Referring to
    sanity inquiries based on the Manual for Courts-Martial, United
    States (MCM)(1951 ed.), para. 121, this Court has held that
    “[m]edical board proceedings, of course, are not judicial in
    nature, purpose, or effect; they are entirely administrative.”
    United States v. Erb, 
    12 C.M.A. 524
    , 529-30, 
    31 C.M.R. 110
    , 115-
    6 (1961).   By comparing the participation of Drs. Galloway and
    Kirubakaran in Appellant’s R.C.M. 706 board to a trial judge who
    reviews his own rulings, Appellant fails to recognize the
    distinction between administrative and judicial bodies.     As an
    administrative board, whose members are typically appointed by a
    medical commander and not by the convening authority, and whose
    findings do not bind the court-martial in its determination of
    either competence (R.C.M. 909(e)) or mental responsibility
    (R.C.M. 916(k)(3)(C) and 921(c)(4)), a board convened under
    R.C.M. 706 cannot be analogized to a court of members.    For
    example, doctors serving on an R.C.M. 706 board would not only
    13
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    be granted access to an appellant’s prior medical records,
    including previous diagnoses by other doctors, but would be
    encouraged to read those prior records to develop a full picture
    of an appellant’s mental history.   Thus, in this case, Drs.
    Galloway and Kirubakaran would have access to previous diagnoses
    of Appellant regardless of whether they made those diagnoses.
    Nonetheless, we have frequently recognized the important
    protections afforded by R.C.M. 706 and its predecessors to
    servicemembers facing the court-martial process.   We have
    emphasized the responsibility of the convening authority and the
    military judge to order a sanity board when required, as well as
    the duty of all participants in the process to bring to the
    attention of the convening authority or military judge any
    condition or behavior that may reasonably call into question the
    mental responsibility or competence of an accused.   United
    States v. Collins, 
    60 M.J. 261
     (C.A.A.F. 2004).
    Although post-trial R.C.M. 706 boards are not expressly
    sanctioned by the rule (or by its predecessors, MCM (1951 ed.),
    para. 121, and MCM (1969 ed.), para. 121), this Court has
    historically addressed issues associated with such boards:
    In the Uniform Code of Military Justice, sanity is
    mentioned directly only with respect to trial
    proceedings, and not at all in connection with post-
    trial review. See Articles 51 and 52, 50 USC §§ 626
    and 627. Paragraph 121 of the 1951 Manual is entitled
    “Inquiry before Trial” -- and therefore, on its face,
    would appear to be inapplicable to mental disease
    14
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    first appearing during the appellate process, and not
    present either at the time of the crime or that of the
    trial. However, this same Manual division is
    referenced in paragraph 124, which is concerned with
    the post-trial action of the convening, or of higher,
    authority. This mention we construe to be directed to
    insuring that, in a proper case, the convening
    authority will direct the convention of a medical
    board of inquiry -- as provided in paragraph 121 --
    for the purpose of answering three questions
    concerning the accused’s mental condition. The first
    two of these have to do with mental responsibility for
    the crime; the third concerns mental capacity and is
    phrased as follows: “Does the accused possess
    sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature of
    the proceedings against him and intelligently to
    conduct or cooperate in his defense (120c)?”
    United States v. Washington, 
    6 C.M.A. 114
    , 118, 
    19 C.M.R. 240
    ,
    244 (1955).
    Further, “when not restrained by the 2-year limitation of
    Article 73, [UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 873] we have given preferential
    treatment to the question of mental responsibility when raised
    for the first time on appeal.”   United States v. Murphy, 
    50 M.J. 4
    , 15 (C.A.A.F. 1998) .   In so doing, however, this Court has
    made plain that to constitute reversible error, the existence or
    outcome of a sanity board must have had a substantive effect on
    the trial:
    It is true that, historically, sanity has occupied a
    special status in military law. However, to prevail
    on appeal an accused must convince an appellate court
    that a “different verdict might reasonably result” if
    the trier of fact had evidence of a lack of mental
    responsibility that was not available for
    consideration at trial.
    United States v. Breese, 
    47 M.J. 5
    , 6 (C.A.A.F. 1997).
    15
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    See also United States v. Young, 
    43 M.J. 196
    , 197 (C.A.A.F.
    1995); United States v. Dock, 
    28 M.J. 117
    , 119, 120 (C.M.A.
    1989).
    B. QUALIFICATION AND DISQUALIFICATION OF SANITY BOARD MEMBERS
    1.   Federal Civilian References
    Although applicable only by analogy, we note that 18 U.S.C.
    § 4247(b)(2000), provides, in part:
    A psychiatric or psychological examination ordered
    pursuant to this chapter shall be conducted by a
    licensed or certified psychiatrist or psychologist,
    or, if the court finds it appropriate, by more than
    one such examiner. Each examiner shall be designated
    by the court, except that if the examination is
    ordered under section 4245 [commitment of those
    already imprisoned] or 4246 [commitment of prisoners
    due for release], upon the request of the defendant an
    additional examiner may be selected by the defendant .
    . . Unless impracticable, the psychiatric or
    psychological examination shall be conducted in the
    suitable facility closest to the court.
    Neither this section nor Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure
    12.2, on the same subject, precludes examination of a defendant
    by a psychotherapist who has previously assessed, examined,
    diagnosed, or treated that defendant.   In fact, by allowing the
    defendant to pick his own additional examiner in certain
    situations, the statute appears to invite participation in the
    process by a treating psychotherapist, though not in the
    specific context of a pretrial sanity inquiry.
    Few cases in the federal circuits have examined conflicts
    of interest involving psychotherapists, and none has considered
    16
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    the precise question of whether a psychotherapist who has
    entered even a limited practitioner-patient relationship should
    be excluded from participation in future, unbiased evaluations
    of that patient.    Even so, we are aided by the logic of the
    Third and Seventh Circuits on related topics.
    Addressing whether a treating physician should be allowed
    to testify as an expert witness for the patient he had treated,
    the Third Circuit said:
    Opinions by physicians who have neither examined nor
    treated a patient “have less probative force, as a
    general matter, then they would have if they had
    treated or examined him.” Wier ex rel. Wier v.
    Heckler, 
    734 F.2d 955
    , 963 (3d Cir. 1984). In the
    context of social security disability cases, in fact,
    we afford greater weight to a treating physician’s
    opinion. See Dorf v. Bowen, 
    794 F.2d 896
     (3d Cir.
    1986); Brewster v. Heckler, 
    786 F.2d 581
     (3d Cir.
    1986). “The rationale for giving greater weight to a
    treating physician’s opinion is that he is employed to
    cure and has a greater opportunity to know and observe
    his patient. . . .” Sprague v. Bowen, 
    812 F.2d 1226
    ,
    1230 (9th Cir. 1987).
    Holbrook v. Lykes Bros. S.S. Co., Inc., 
    80 F.3d 777
    , 782-783 (3d
    Cir. 1996).
    In Silagy v. Peters, when invited to find a due process
    violation in the alleged incompetence of one or more of the
    psychiatrists appointed to examine that appellant, the Seventh
    Circuit observed:
    [W]e would be reluctant to open up this type of [Ake
    v. Oklahoma, 
    470 U.S. 68
     (1985)] claim to a battle of
    the experts in a “competence” review. Every aspect of
    a criminal case which involves the testimony of
    17
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    experts could conceivably be subject to such a review
    -- a never[-]ending process. In this case, as the
    district court noted, three experienced, board-
    certified, independent practicing psychiatrists were
    appointed to examine the Petitioner. Each
    psychiatrist conducted a thorough examination and
    submitted his diagnosis to the court . . . Without
    regard to their ultimate diagnoses, we believe that
    this meets the requirements set forth in Ake. A
    conclusion to the contrary would require this court
    and other federal courts to engage in a form of
    “psychiatric medical malpractice” review as part-and-
    parcel of its collateral review of state court
    judgments. The ultimate result would be a never-
    ending battle of psychiatrists appointed as experts
    for the sole purpose of discrediting a prior
    psychiatrist’s diagnosis. We do not believe this was
    the intent of the Court in Ake when it held that
    indigent defendants who raise a defense of insanity
    are entitled to psychiatric assistance in the
    preparation of their defense. Accordingly, we reject
    Petitioner’s fourteenth amendment due process claim
    concerning the competence of the psychiatrists at his
    trial.
    
    905 F.2d 986
    , 1012-13 (7th Cir. 1990).
    While the Seventh Circuit specifically noted that each of
    these psychiatrists was “independent” –- the quality Appellant
    claims is missing in his case –- we believe that reference was
    to the right to an expert independent of the prosecution
    established by Ake:   “In the cases, ‘independent’ as opposed to
    ‘neutral’ means that the expert must be additional to, and
    separate from, court-appointed experts or experts engaged by the
    prosecution.”   Orbe v. True, 
    233 F. Supp. 2d 749
    , 776 (E.D. Va.
    2002) (discussing a mental health expert in a capital case).
    18
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    2.    Military References
    The UCMJ specifies numerous qualifications for participants
    in the military justice process.      Congress has established
    statutory qualifications for convening authorities (Articles 22,
    23, 24, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. §§ 822, 823, 824 (2000)), court members
    (Article 25, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 825 (2000)), military judges
    (Article 26, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 826 (2000)), trial and defense
    counsel (Article 27, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 827 (2000)), and
    investigating officers (Article 32, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 832
    (2000)).   Congress provided for court reporters and interpreters
    (Article 28, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 828 (2000)) but left their
    qualifications to the service secretaries.
    Likewise, pursuant to his authority under Article 36, UCMJ,
    10 U.S.C. § 836 (2000), the President has promulgated the Manual
    for Courts-Martial establishing or embellishing qualifications
    for convening authorities, court members, military judges,
    counsel, court reporters, bailiffs, interpreters, escorts,
    clerks, and guards. See generally R.C.M., ch. V.
    R.C.M. 706 establishes requirements for sanity boards,
    including membership qualifications:
    By whom conducted. When a mental examination is
    ordered under subsection (b) of this rule, the matter
    shall be referred to a board consisting of one or more
    persons. Each member of the board shall be either a
    physician or a clinical psychologist. Normally, at
    least one member of the board shall be either a
    psychiatrist or a clinical psychologist. The board
    19
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    shall report as to the mental capacity or mental
    responsibility or both of the accused.
    R.C.M. 706(c)(1).
    R.C.M. 706 does not address professional conflicts of
    interest for sanity board members.    Both the discussion and
    the drafter’s analysis are silent on the issue.    Neither
    the 1951 Manual for Courts-Martial, nor the May 1953
    edition of the Department of the Army’s Technical Manual
    (TM) 8-240, Psychiatry in Military Law, addressed conflicts
    of interest for sanity board members or prohibited
    appointment to such boards of mental health practitioners
    who may have previously diagnosed or treated an accused.1
    However, in 1961, this Court noted, without comment, the
    appointment of a treating psychiatrist to a “competency
    board” (predecessor of the R.C.M. 706 board) pursuant to a
    local requirement that the doctor “personally responsible”
    for the accused be a member of the board.    Erb, 12 C.M.A.
    at 529, 31 C.M.R. at 115.    In fact, in Erb, the accused’s
    psychiatrist was appointed as a member of the second
    competency board, notwithstanding his participation in the
    first board as the psychiatrist who “presented the case to
    the board.”    Erb, 12 C.M.A. at 529, 
    31 C.M.R. 115
    .   This
    second board found that Sergeant Erb was a chronic
    1
    Subsequent editions of these references are similarly silent.
    20
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    schizophrenic, but could distinguish right from wrong and
    had an impaired ability to form the specific intent for
    “homicide.”   Id.   This Court’s silence on the issue of
    board membership is noteworthy because, on appeal, one
    claim raised by Sergeant Erb was that improper command
    influence had affected the result of the second board
    appointed to inquire into his sanity.   The defense
    contended that the board results had been manipulated
    “without regard to their reliability or trustworthiness” to
    ensure the trial and conviction of Sergeant Erb.   Erb, 12
    C.M.A. at 530, 
    31 C.M.R. 116
     (emphasis added).   This
    Court’s opinion did not question participation on the board
    by Sergeant Erb’s treating psychiatrist.   Finally, Erb
    cautions against looking for a “correct” diagnosis:
    “Psychiatry is not an exact science; and individual
    psychiatrists may differ strongly in their findings
    regarding an accused.”   Erb, 12 C.M.A. at 529, 31 C.M.R. at
    115 (citing United States v. Carey, 
    11 C.M.A. 443
    , 
    29 C.M.R. 259
     (1960); United States v Kunak, 
    5 C.M.A. 346
    ,
    369; 
    17 C.M.R. 346
     369 (1954) (Quinn, C.J., dissenting)).
    Responding to one appellant’s broad challenge to the
    neutrality of military psychotherapists appointed to sanity
    boards, this Court said:
    21
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    [i]n the many records that have passed through this
    Court, we have observed no tendency on the part of
    military psychiatrists to favor either the prosecution
    or the defense. We are satisfied that their
    determinations are impartial and that they seek not to
    uncover evidence for the Government but truly to
    determine the mental condition of the accused. . . .
    Military psychiatrists are paid by the Government, but
    so are defense counsel. We are certain that neither
    group shirks its professional responsibilities because
    they are employees of the United States.
    United States v. Johnson, 
    22 C.M.A. 424
    , 427, 
    47 C.M.R. 402
    , 405 (1973).
    In United States v. Loving, this Court declined to expand
    the membership requirements of R.C.M. 706:
    The next question is whether the requirements of
    RCM 706 (Change 3) have been met. RCM 706(c)(1)
    provides that an inquiry into mental capacity or
    mental responsibility “shall be referred to a board
    consisting of one or more persons. Each member of the
    board shall be either a physician or a clinical
    psychologist.”
    We hold that the requirements of RCM 706(c)(1)
    have been met in appellant’s case. A board consisting
    of a single psychiatrist would have satisfied the
    rule. Furthermore, even assuming arguendo that CPT
    Coleman had not received his Ph.D. degree at the time
    he participated in the board, there is nothing in the
    rule requiring that a “clinical psychologist” possess
    a Ph.D. The record before us reflects that CPT
    Coleman was a trained psychologist, was credentialed
    by Army medical authorities as a clinical
    psychologist, and was assigned to duties as a clinical
    psychologist. RCM 706 was amended in 1986 to parallel
    prevailing federal practice of allowing use of
    clinical psychologists in mental status evaluations.
    Drafters’ Analysis of RCM 706(c)(1), Manual, supra at
    A21-36 (Change 3). Unlike 18 USC § 4247(b), RCM
    706(c)(1) does not specify that the psychiatrist or
    psychologist performing the evaluation be “licensed or
    certified.” Nevertheless, in the absence of evidence
    22
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    to the contrary, the fact that CPT Coleman was
    credentialed by military medical authorities to
    perform duties as a clinical psychologist raises a
    presumption that he was qualified to do so. See
    United States v. Masusock, 1 U.S.C.M.A. 32, 35, 
    1 C.M.R. 32
    , 35 (1951) (“presumption of regularity in
    the conduct of governmental affairs”). That
    presumption has not been rebutted in this case.
    
    41 M.J. 213
    , 241 (C.A.A.F. 1994).
    3.   Medical and Analogous References
    Although there are no readily applicable ethical guidelines
    for psychiatrists,2 the American Psychological Association’s
    (APA) Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct,
    which became effective in 1992, contains at least two applicable
    standards:
    1.17 Multiple Relationships.
    (a) . . . Psychologists must always be sensitive to
    the potential harmful effects of other contacts on
    their work and on those persons with whom they deal.
    A psychologist refrains from entering into or
    promising another personal, scientific, professional,
    financial, or other relationship with such persons if
    it appears likely that such a relationship reasonably
    might impair the psychologist’s objectivity or
    otherwise interfere with the psychologist’s
    effectively performing his or her functions as a
    psychologist, or might harm or exploit the other
    party.
    (b) Likewise, whenever feasible, a psychologist
    refrains from taking on professional or scientific
    2
    See 3 Jay Ziskin & David Faust, Coping with Psychiatric and
    Psychological Testimony 17 (5th ed. 1995). See also American
    Academy of Psychiatry & the Law Ethical Guidelines for the
    Practice of Forensic Psychiatry (adopted 1987, revised 1995).
    23
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    obligations when pre-existing relationships would
    create a risk of such harm.
    (c) If a psychologist finds that, due to unforeseen
    factors, a potentially harmful multiple relationship
    has arisen, the psychologist attempts to resolve it
    with due regard for the best interests of the affected
    person and maximal compliance with the Ethics Code.
    . . . .
    7.02 Forensic Assessments.
    (b) . . . psychologists provide written or oral
    forensic reports or testimony of the psychological
    characteristics of an individual only after they have
    conducted an examination of the individual adequate to
    support their statements or conclusions.
    Both Drs. Galloway and Kirubakaran testified that they were
    aware of these guidelines, had considered them, and had
    concluded that no conflict of interest existed.   No case law,
    commentary, or analysis is available to enlighten our
    consideration of their conclusions.
    While not in force at the time of Appellant’s sanity board,
    the 2003 revision of the APA ethical standard for multiple
    relationships is enlightening:
    3.05 Multiple relationships.
    (a) A multiple relationship occurs when a psychologist
    is in a professional role with a person and (1) at the
    same time is in another role with the same person . .
    . . A psychologist refrains from entering into a
    multiple relationship if the multiple relationship
    could reasonably be expected to impair the
    psychologist’s objectivity, competence, or effective-
    ness in performing his or her function as a
    psychologist, or otherwise risks exploitation or harm
    24
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    to the person with whom the professional relationship
    exists.
    Multiple relationships that would not reasonably be
    expected to cause impairment or risk exploitation or
    harm are not unethical.
    . . . .
    3.06 Conflict of Interest.
    Psychologists refrain from taking on a professional
    role when personal, scientific, professional, legal,
    financial, or other interests or relationships could
    reasonably be expected to 1) impair their objectivity,
    competence, or effectiveness in performing their
    function as psychologists or 2) expose the person or
    organization with whom the professional relationship
    exists to harm or exploitation.
    APA Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct
    §§ 3.05, 3.06 (2003).
    Neither the Office of Government Ethics’ Standards of
    Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch, 5
    C.F.R. pt. 2635 (2005), nor the Department of Defense
    supplement thereto, provides any directly pertinent
    provision, as the conflict of interest rules therein are
    primarily aimed at financial or employment conflicts.
    Finally, we note that this case does not require us to
    decide whether, or in what circumstances, a practitioner
    who receives a privileged communication under M.R.E. 513
    may be ineligible to serve as a member of a board appointed
    under R.C.M. 706.
    25
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    C.   TEST FOR EVALUATION OF POTENTIAL CONFLICTS
    Because we are neither a legislative nor executive body,
    and because even an expansive interpretation of R.C.M. 706 does
    not suggest such an intent by the drafters, we decline to read
    that rule so as to contain a per se exclusion from participation
    in examining boards of practitioners who have either treated or
    diagnosed the subject of such a board.
    After reviewing historical practice, our own precedent, and
    the legal reasoning of the court below, we agree that “an actual
    conflict of interest exists if a psychotherapist’s prior
    participation materially limits his or her ability to
    objectively participate in and evaluate the subject of an R.C.M.
    706 sanity board.”   Best II, 59 M.J. at 892.
    D.   APPLYING THE NEW TEST
    1.   Dr. Galloway’s prior involvement
    As Chief, Mental Health Division, USDB, Dr. Galloway was
    directed in January 2000 to assess Appellant to determine
    whether he was suffering from a psychosis and to determine the
    cause of his disruptive behavior.     When Dr. Galloway attempted
    to interview Appellant, he resisted and then declined, saying
    that God was taking care of him and he needed no mental
    treatment.   Best II, 59 M.J. at 889.    Dr. Galloway then reported
    to the commandant that she was unable to “determine the driving
    force behind Appellant’s behavior,” and posited a combination of
    26
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    personality disorders and malingering as the most likely causes.
    She further recommended that Appellant’s disruptions be treated
    as misconduct rather than medical issues.    Id.   About nine weeks
    later, when Appellant’s behavior worsened and he began a hunger
    strike, Dr. Galloway asked Dr. Kirubakaran to effect an
    emergency consultation.    Id. at 890.   During the two days after
    Appellant’s admission to the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
    hospital, Dr. Galloway made “more than ten phone calls to the VA
    doctors and nurses, and Dr. Kirubakaran, discussing appellant’s
    mental and physical condition.”    Id.   Amid questions of
    potential malingering, Appellant was released from the VA on
    April 6, 2000, by order of the VA’s chief of psychiatric
    services.   On April 17, Dr. Galloway again asked Dr. Kirubakaran
    to assess Appellant’s symptomatic behavior in his cell.      Id.   At
    a hearing pursuant to Vitek v. Jones, 
    445 U.S. 480
     (1980), on
    September 17, Dr. Galloway testified that, because she had not
    seen Appellant since April 2000, she had no current opinion of
    his condition.   Best II, 59 M.J. at 891.   Dr. Galloway did not
    treat or diagnose Appellant during their initial visit; she did
    only a brief assessment.   Appellant was not one of her patients.
    Dr. Galloway is usually involved in sanity boards on prisoners
    because she works “behind the walls” and can gather necessary
    documents and information.   Dr. Galloway does not believe she
    had any conflicts in her dealings with Appellant because she was
    27
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    wearing the same hat –- performing assessments on someone who
    was not her patient.   She also was not “protecting” her earlier
    diagnosis.
    Q. You talked about the questions that the board had
    prior to it’s [sic] meeting. Did you know the answers
    to those questions before the board met on the 21st of
    March?
    A. I knew that Springfield had diagnosed him as
    schizophrenia. It’s my job to make my own diagnosis,
    but in terms of the earlier questions like can he
    assist counsel right now, or whatever that – let me
    look at what the questions were.
    Q.   No, no, just testify from your recollection.
    A. Okay. Okay, from my recollection, sir, I had
    Springfield’s diagnosis, but my responsibility to make
    my own, and frankly theirs and mine didn’t match, so
    it was my job to figure out what was going on, and who
    in my opinion was right. In terms of whether or not
    he was competent to assist counsel, I had no clue,
    because I hadn’t seen him, and in terms of his --
    Q. So the short answer is you didn’t know before the
    board met?
    A.   No.
    Q.   You didn’t know the answers to the questions?
    A. Well, except that I did know their opinion on the
    diagnostic piece. I didn’t know the rest at all.
    Q.   And you knew theirs disagreed with yours?
    A.   Right.
    Q. Okay, now after the board met though, and after
    you –- I take it you were able to answer the four
    questions, as a member of the board, and your answer
    as to the diagnosis agreed with that of Springfield,
    did it not, after the board?
    28
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    A. Um-hum.      In essence, sir, they were right and I
    was wrong.
    Q.   I see.
    A.   Or at least my earlier one was wrong.
    Q. And you said it was your responsibility to reach a
    diagnosis. How exactly do you do that at this board?
    How did you reach the diagnosis that agreed with
    Springfield’s?
    A. The same way you reach a diagnosis of anybody.
    You ask them a whole lot of questions, because I know
    what symptoms are associated with what illnesses.
    2.   Dr. Kirubakaran’s prior involvement
    When called by Dr. Galloway, Dr. Kirubakaran (the
    psychiatry medical officer at the Fort Leavenworth hospital)
    “immediately met with appellant in his cell.”       Because Appellant
    was uncommunicative and appeared abnormal, Dr. Kirubakaran
    referred Appellant to the nearest emergency room for a complete
    examination.    He “diagnosed appellant “with a ‘psychotic
    disorder [not otherwise specified] and concerns about
    catatonia’” and had Appellant admitted to the psychiatry ward of
    the Leavenworth VA hospital on April 3.       Best II, 59 M.J. at
    890.   On April 17, when requested by Dr. Galloway, Dr.
    Kirubakaran met with Appellant in his cell for about fifteen to
    twenty minutes, observed that Appellant was “psychotic and
    agitated,” but didn’t make a treatment plan because Appellant
    was being transferred to federal prison because of Appellant’s
    hunger strike.       Id.   After more than thirteen months at the
    29
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    federal medical center, Appellant returned to the USDB, where
    Dr. Kirubakaran “began seeing him on a monthly basis.”   Id.
    Prior to the sanity board, Dr. Kirubakaran saw Appellant twice,
    both for brief assessments, not amounting to evaluations and not
    amounting to treatment.   Because Dr. Kirubakaran’s contacts with
    Appellant, prior to the sanity board, had been brief
    assessments, Dr. Kirubakaran did not believe that, clinically,
    he had a conflict of interest; however, once he became
    Appellant’s treating psychiatrist, that analysis would be
    different.
    CONCLUSION
    Adopting and applying the test formulated by the court
    below, we conclude that even if there exists some evidence of
    conflict, that evidence is insufficient to comprise an “actual
    conflict of interest.”    There was no material limitation of
    either Dr. Galloway’s or Dr. Kirubakaran’s ability to
    participate objectively in the board or evaluate Appellant.
    Although there are conflict of interest rules for psychologists
    and commentary to the ethical guidelines for the practice of
    forensic psychiatry suggesting that psychiatrists “should
    generally avoid agreeing to be an expert witness or to perform
    evaluations of their patients for legal purposes,” American
    Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Ethical Guidelines for the
    Practice of Forensic Psychiatry (adopted 1987, revised 1995),
    30
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    those conflict rules do not apply to these facts.   As Dr.
    Galloway put it, at least through the time of Appellant’s sanity
    board, both Dr. Galloway and Dr. Kirubakaran were each wearing
    only “one hat.”   Neither was Appellant’s psychotherapist.
    Neither did more than a brief assessment, followed in some cases
    by referral to those who could diagnose Appellant and offer him
    treatment.   Consequently, there is no reason to question whether
    the board’s membership complied with R.C.M. 706 or question the
    reliability of the trial results.
    The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal
    Appeals is affirmed.
    31
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    BAKER, Judge (concurring in the result):
    Dr. Galloway and Dr. Kirubakaran assessed Appellant’s
    mental condition while Appellant was an inmate at the
    Disciplinary Barracks, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.    As recounted
    in the majority opinion, neither doctor assessed Appellant as
    suffering from a severe mental disease or defect.   As a result,
    neither doctor treated Appellant for such a disease or defect.
    Dr. Galloway indicated in her assessment a suspicion that
    Appellant was malingering and that abnormalities in his behavior
    should be treated in the framework of custodial discipline and
    not as medical problems.   However, there came a time when
    Appellant’s behavior required medical treatment, and he was
    subsequently diagnosed with acute schizophrenia.    Appellant was
    eventually referred to a board convened pursuant to Rule for
    Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 706 by order of this Court.   United
    States v. Best, 
    54 M.J. 367
     (C.A.A.F. 2000).    The board
    concluded that Appellant was not suffering from a severe mental
    disease or defect at the time of his original offense.      Dr.
    Galloway and Dr. Kirubakaran served as two of the three members
    of Appellant’s R.C.M. 706 board.
    The question on appeal is whether Dr. Galloway or
    Dr.Kirubakaran had a conflict of interest that should have
    disqualified them from serving on Appellant’s R.C.M. 706 board.
    Put into factual context, in light of their prior assessments,
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    which did not identify the severity of Appellant’s condition,
    were they capable of impartially serving on Appellant’s board
    without in some manner trying to validate or justify their prior
    judgments regarding Appellant?
    Like this Court, the Court of Criminal Appeals found this
    to be a question of first impression.    The lower court
    analogized to both the American Psychological Association’s Code
    of Conduct (applicable to psychologists) and the American
    Medical Association’s Principles of Medical Ethics (applicable
    to psychiatrists), as well as the conflict of interest standard
    for legal counsel articulated by the Supreme Court in Mickens v.
    Taylor, 
    535 U.S. 162
    , 172 n.5 (2002), to develop its standard
    for psychotherapist conflict of interest review.   The Court of
    Criminal Appeals “conclude[d] that an actual conflict of
    interest exists if a psychotherapist’s prior participation
    materially limits his or her ability to objectively participate
    in and evaluate the subject of an R.C.M. 706 sanity board.”
    United States v. Best, 
    59 M.J. 886
    , 892 (A. Ct. Crim. App.
    2004).   However, the lower court, this Court, and the parties
    have struggled to place this issue in broader legal context.
    The majority, for example, concludes that the process associated
    with R.C.M. 706 boards is entirely a function of administrative
    law and executive discretion, and fails to place the issue
    presented into constitutional context.
    2
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    While I agree with the majority’s conclusion that Dr.
    Galloway and Dr. Kirubakaran did not bear a disqualifying
    conflict in this case, I believe the question presented finds
    its root in constitutional due process.   The Fifth and
    Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution restrain
    government from depriving any person of life, liberty, or
    property without due process of law, and “protect[] the
    individual against the arbitrary action of government.”
    Kentucky Dep’t of Corrections v. Thompson, 
    490 U.S. 454
    , 459-60
    (1989); Ex parte Wilson, 
    114 U.S. 417
    , 426 (1885) (“The purpose
    of the [Fifth] Amendment was to limit the powers of the
    legislature, as well as of the prosecuting officers, of the
    United States.”).   A protected liberty interest may arise from
    either the text of the Due Process Clause itself, or as a result
    of a statute or regulation that places substantive limitations
    on official discretion.   See Thompson, 490 U.S. at 462; Vitek v.
    Jones, 
    445 U.S. 480
    , 488 (1980); see also Ford v. Wainwright,
    
    477 U.S. 399
    , 428 (1986) (O’Connor, J., concurring in part and
    dissenting in part) (“Our cases leave no doubt that where a
    statute indicates with ‘language of an unmistakable mandatory
    character,’ that state conduct injurious to an individual will
    not occur ‘absent specified substantive predicates,’ the statute
    creates an expectation protected by the Due Process Clause.”)
    (quoting Hewitt v. Helms, 
    459 U.S. 460
    , 471-72 (1983)).
    3
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    Under R.C.M. 706, once a mental examination is ordered, the
    matter shall be submitted to a sanity board charged to report on
    the mental responsibility or capacity of the accused.    The rule
    includes specific, discretion-narrowing directives for both the
    order authorizing the board and for the conduct of the board
    itself.    R.C.M. 706(c).   While Appellant may have had no
    independent constitutional right to an R.C.M. 706 board, once
    such a board was ordered, its evaluation must have been
    conducted in a manner consistent with the requirements
    of procedural due process.    See Wainwright, 477 U.S. at 428-29;
    see also Diaz v. Judge Advocate General of the Navy, 
    59 M.J. 34
    ,
    38 (C.A.A.F. 2003) (where statute has created appellate process
    as integral part of criminal justice system, procedures used in
    deciding appeal must comport with demands of due process and
    equal protection).
    Such due process includes the right to a fair and impartial
    adjudicator.   Concrete Pipe & Prods. v. Constr. Laborers Pension
    Trust, 
    508 U.S. 602
    , 617 (1993) (“That officers acting in a
    judicial or quasi-judicial capacity are disqualified by their
    interest in the controversy to be decided is, of course, the
    general rule.”) (quoting Tumey v. Ohio, 
    273 U.S. 510
    , 522
    (1927)).    Cf. United States v. Dowty, 
    60 M.J. 163
    , 169 (C.A.A.F.
    2004) (“This right [to an impartial jury] ‘is the cornerstone of
    the military justice system.’”) (quoting United States v. Hilow,
    4
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    
    32 M.J. 439
    , 442 (C.M.A. 1991)); Article 37, Uniform Code of
    Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 837 (statute prohibiting any
    attempt to improperly influence the determinations of a court-
    martial or reviewing authority).       In the context presented at
    bar, the Court of Criminal Appeals adopted by analogy the
    conflict standards for psychotherapeutic professionals and for
    legal counsel to determine if the members of Appellant’s R.C.M.
    706 board were indeed impartial.       While I defer on whether this
    is the correct standard to apply in all R.C.M. 706 conflict of
    interest contexts (i.e., for both psychologists and
    psychiatrists), I am satisfied that this standard appropriately
    tested whether Dr. Galloway and Dr. Kirubakaran were
    “impartial.”
    I believe the facts as applied against this standard
    indicate that both were capable of impartial judgment.      Among
    other things, Dr. Galloway acknowledged under direct examination
    and cross-examination that she was incorrect in her initial
    assessment of Appellant.   Further, she demonstrated a
    willingness to reassess her judgment and to do so without
    apparent defensiveness or protection of her prior judgment.      As
    judges are asked on occasion to reconsider their judgments on
    appeal, based on perceived errors in law or fact, See, e.g.,
    C.A.A.F. R. 31, I do not believe doctors as professionals are
    inherently incapable of doing the same absent a showing of
    5
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    actual conflict.   In the context of the liberty interest
    associated with this particular R.C.M. 706 board, there was
    added protection in that the integrity and impartiality of the
    doctors’ evaluation was subject to the crucible of cross-
    examination.
    This would appear to leave Appellant in the position of
    arguing for a per se disqualification where an assessing
    psychotherapist subsequently serves on a R.C.M. 706 board.
    However, such a position is not required as a matter of
    statutory law or constitutional due process, where as here,
    Appellant has had the opportunity to test for impartiality.
    Moreover, in the military context, there may be good operational
    reasons why an assessing or treating physician may also be
    required to serve on an R.C.M. 706 board.
    That being said, while the Government may be satisfied that
    a doctor can appropriately function as both a treating physician
    and subsequent board member in specific situations, that does
    not mean that a treating physician should always do so.     The
    Government might choose as a prudential matter to eliminate any
    possible appearance of a conflict of interest, and related
    litigation, by affirmatively selecting qualified R.C.M. 706
    board members with no prior connection to the subject of the
    review.   Such an approach is consistent with the admonition in
    both the psychologists’ Code of Conduct and the psychiatrists’
    6
    United States v. Best, No. 00-0679/AR
    Principles of Medial Ethics, which disfavor, and in some cases
    bar, a treating psychotherapist’s performance of multiple roles.
    7