Opinion of the Court
Quinn, Chief Judge:In 1964, the accused went on trial for premeditated murder, but was convicted of unpremeditated murder, and sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, confinement at hard labor for life, and accessory penalties. A board of review set aside the conviction and ordered a rehearing on the ground the defense had been improperly restricted in its effort to question, before trial, agents of the Office of Special Investigations who had investigated the offense. See United States v Enloe, 15 USCMA 256, 35 CMR 228. At the rehearing, the accused was again convicted; and, in addition to other punishments, the court-martial imposed confinement at hard labor for ten years. The findings of guilty and the sentence were affirmed on intermediate review. Alleging one hundred fifteen assignments of error, the accused appealed to this Court for further review.
On the morning of January 25, 1964, the dead body of Inge Bauss, a German national, was found in her room at the Hotel Wuerzburgerhof, Frankfurt, Germany. A doctor and the civilian police were called. The doctor examined the corpse, and concluded that death had resulted by manual strangulation. This opinion was confirmed by a pathologist, who performed an autopsy on the same day. Investigation by German police led to the accused, who was in Germany on temporary duty and had registered at the hotel. The evidence against the accused included his fingerprint on a beer bottle in the room of the dead girl. On January 31, the accused made a statement in which he admitted he met the girl at a bar and went with her to her room; the girl “seemed . . . in an angry mood,” so “I kept saying to her, not aloud, but to myself, ‘keep on, keep on nagging me, you’re going to get yours’ ”; finally, he “grabbed” her by the throat “until she quit moving.”
One of the principal evidentiary questions at trial was the admissibility of the accused’s pretrial statement. A number of assignments of error relate to the issue; they fall into two groups. The first group is concerned with both alleged coercion and threats and alleged promises of leniency during an interrogation by the German police on January 27. As to the alleged coercion and threats, the accused contends the conditions of his confinement by the German police and the manner of the interrogators were oppressive and frightening; he also testified they threatened to put him into a dungeon for up to two years. As to the alleged promises, he contends he was promised that if he confessed he would get a trial by a German court and “100% leniency.” Purportedly, these influences carried over into subsequent interrogations by Office of Special Investigations agents, and, particularly, infected the interrogation that resulted in' the pretrial statement admitted in evidence.
Testimony by Government witnesses contradicts that of the defense in every material respect; some of the accused’s testimony on the matter is inconsistent with other parts of his testimony. The board of review meticulously examined the record of trial, and concluded the prétrial statement was freely made, after full advice to the accused of his rights under Article 31, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 831. We have made an independent examination of the evidence and we are satisfied there is ample evidence to support the law officer’s decision to admit the statement and submit the factual issue as to voluntariness to the court members for their consideration. United States v Traweek, 16 USCMA 50, 54, 36 CMR 206.
The second group of errors dealing with the admissibility of the January 3lst statement alleges, in substance, that the accused was denied the right to counsel during various periods of interrogation by police officers. The *230testimony on this point is very extensive. For the purpose of decision, we need not recount all of it, or refer to the conflicts between the testimony on behalf of the accused and that of the Government witnesses. The salient evidence is set out below.
About 4:30 a.m., on Sunday, January 26, 1964, the accused was awakened in his room in the transient billets, Wies-baden Air Base, Wiesbaden, Germany, and escorted to the OSI office at the base. Among those present in the office were two German detectives and two OSI agents. One of the agents, Vartan Asdourian, advised the accused he was suspected of murdering a girl tentatively identified as Inge Bauss, and informed him of his rights under Article 31, Uniform Code of Military Justice. The accused said he had arrived in Wiesbaden on January 24, but he denied knowing the victim. He agreed to a search of his room for the purpose of obtaining the clothing he wore on the night of January- 24. Before going to his room for the search, the accused overheard an agent tell Asdourian that the German officers wanted to take the accused into custody and take him “downtown.” Whereupon, the accused told Asdourian he would like “to see a lawyer before the Germans took . . . [him] downtown.” Asdourian assured him he would try to have “some people from the Legal Office” talk to him before he went downtown. After the search, the accused reminded Asdourian of his earlier request. Asdourian informed the staff judge advocate, Lieutenant Colonel George L. Wenrich, of the accused’s request, and the latter assigned Captain David R. Ellison, a lawyer on his staff, to counsel the accused. He instructed Captain Ellison to answer every legal question raised by the accused, but he should not enter into the conventional attorney-client relationship with him.
Captain Ellison conferred with the accused before the German police took him away. He informed the accused he could not establish a regular confidential attorney-client relationship with him, but could advise him of his rights as a suspect; and he did so. Among other things, he said: “ When the Germans or the OSI or anyone else questions you, you can just sit there; you don’t even have to say Hello; you don’t have to say anything or talk to them about anything.’ ” After the conference, the accused departed the base in custody of the German police.
On January 27, 1964, the accused was questioned by the German police. The principal interrogator was Ger-hardt Knappik, Chief of the Frankfurt Criminal Division. At the beginning of the questioning, no mention was made as to what right, if any, the accused had to counsel. In the course of the interview, the accused was asked what he would say if he were informed his fingerprint was found in the girl’s room. He answered that he did not know, and he would rather have counsel before he answered the question. Knappik stopped the questioning and went to an adjoining room to confer with “American officers” as to whether, “on an international basis,” the Germans were required to furnish counsel to the accused; German law did not require appointment of counsel for police interrogations. The Americans advised Knappik they knew of no obligation under American law to provide counsel before charges were preferred. Knappik resumed the interrogation. He informed the accused that under German law he would not be furnished with counsel until formally charged. After considering his situation, the accused “agreed” to answer some questions. At the end of the interview, he made a handwritten statement in which he admitted he was with the girl. He maintained he awakened to find the girl dead, and he fled in panic.
On the afternoon of January -28, Asdourian was informed by the deputy district commander of the OSI that the accused had been turned over to the American authorities by the Germans and was confined at Lindsey Air Station, Wiesbaden, Germany. About two o’clock that day, he interrogated the accused. He testified, and the accused acknowledged in his own testi*231mony on the admissibility issue, that the accused was again fully informed of his rights under Article 31. The accused contended he told Asdourian he had nothing to say until he talked to his defense counsel, but Asdourian disputed the contention. At any rate, the accused admitted he “thought it over” and decided to give Asdourian an account of his presence in the girl’s room. It was essentially the same as the one he had given the German police, with the additional recital of past experiences involving dreams and blackouts.
On January 30, the accused was again seen by Asdourian. After advice as to his rights under Article 31, he was asked if he would submit to a lie detector test. He refused until he could talk to a doctor, because he did not “feel up to it mentally.” After some further conversation, however, he agreed to talk to Asdourian if the conversation was recorded for the benefit of a doctor. At no time during the interview did the accused ask for a lawyer, although he did mention the difficulties he had had with the German police in that regard. On returning to his cell, the accused told Master Sergeant Spero Mihilas, the confinement supervisor, that he had had some difficulty in obtaining a lawyer and he asked for help. Mihilas gave him the form to request counsel. The accused filled out the form. That evening, Captain Ellison came to see him in response to the request. The Captain repeated substantially the same advice he gave the accused on January 27.
On January 31, the accused was brought to the OSI office and introduced to Agent Osie C. Record, Jr., a lie detector operator. The accused refused to take a test until he could first consult a doctor. He was transported to the United States Air Force Hospital in Wiesbaden, where he was interviewed for about an hour by Colonel Dasil Smith, Chief of the Psychiatric Division. At the end of this interview, the accused was again advised of his rights under Article 31 by Asdourian. On this occasion he made the statement which was admitted into evidence at trial.
As brief as the summary of the evidence is, it is apparent that the advice given by the OSI agents to the accused, as to his right to counsel during interrogation as a suspect, is not sufficient by the standards promulgated by the Supreme Court of the United States in Miranda v Arizona, 384 US 436, 16 L ed 2d 694, 86 S Ct 1602 (1966). See also United States v Tempia, 16 USCMA 629, 37 CMR 249. However, the agents did procure a lawyer to advise the accused of his rights whenever they were requested to do so, and the lawyer gave the accused proper advice as to his right to do and say nothing. What the agents and the lawyer did, and what they said, fully complied with the law then in effect. United States v Wimberley, 16 USCMA 3, 36 CMR 159. The Supreme Court denied retroactive effect to Miranda; and in applying Miranda principles to military trials, we have also adopted its effective date. United States v Hardy, 17 USCMA 100, 37 CMR 364. We hold, therefore, that, so far as the interrogations conducted by the American authorities were concerned, there was no violation of constitutional command or any provision of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
What then of the interrogation by the German police? Indisputably, this interrogation did not satisfy the preliminary warning requirement of Article 31. An independent investigation by a foreign police officer is, however, not subject to the Uniform Code. United States v Grisham, 4 USCMA 694, 16 CMR 268. At trial', defense counsel contended that this principle did not apply because the investigation by the German police was a joint operation with the OSI, with the result that it produced the January 31st statement to Agent As-dourian. Since the accused was not advised of his right to remain silent at the beginning of the German interrogation, defense counsel contended the statement the accused gave to the German police was tainted, and this taint infected the statement to As-*232dourian. Knappik testified that the investigation by his office was to provide the factual background for a decision by the German district attorney whether to continue German control over the accused or to relinquish it to the American authorities under the Status of Forces Agreement. Special Agent Thomas Howard Whitman, who was called as a defense witness, testified he attended the first part of the interrogation by Knappik solely as “an observer.” He was in civilian clothes and was not introduced to the accused as a police officer. He maintained he left the interrogation room before any significant remark was made by the accused. There is also other evidence to indicate that, factually, the two police organizations proceeded independently and for their own purposes. On the record, we cannot conclude, as a matter of law, that the two investigations merged into an indivisible entity. In our opinion, the law officer correctly treated the matter as a question of fact; and he properly gave the court-martial appropriate instructions to decide the issue as a question of fact. United States v Murphy, 14 USCMA 535, 34 CMR 315; see also United States v King, 14 USCMA 227, 34 CMR 7. We are satisfied that the relationship between the two police investigations and the effect of one upon the other was properly presented to the court-martial.
Approaching the counsel issue from another standpoint, the accused contends he was subject to “[ajrbitrary” application of the “so-called Kuhfeld rule.” The Kuhfeld rule was apparently a memorandum promulgated by the then Judge Advocate General of the Air Force, who considered the opinion of this Court in United States v Gunnels, 8 USCMA 130, 23 CMR 354, and established a procedure by which the accused, faced with interrogation by law enforcement officers, could, on request, be advised of his'rights under Article 31 by the staff judge advocate or his representative. The memorandum set out the then military rule that military counsel need not be appointed to represent an accused at a police interrogation. The accused complains that he was prevented from showing the existence of a policy of disregarding the Kuhfeld rule as to white accused and enforcement of it as to Negro accused.
We have scrutinized the record and find no hint of any discriminatory practice in the command of granting counsel to white accused during the police investigative stage of the proceedings, while denying counsel to Negro accused. Neither do we discern any restriction upon the defense effort to show the existence of discrimination. In fact, defense counsel was allowed to show two instances of assignment of counsel to white accused before charges were formally signed— one occurred before knowledge of the Kuhfeld memorandum, the other, involving a white officer, occurred after the staff judge advocate learned of the rule. The record merely indicates proper rulings by the law officer on specific objections by trial counsel. For example, defense counsel wanted to inquire into the outcome of the officer’s ease, but the law officer sustained trial' counsel’s objection. The disposition of the charge was patently immaterial to the question of alleged discrimination in the appointment of counsel in the police investigative stage of the proceedings.
Before the accused entered his plea, defense counsel moved to dismiss the case, contending the accused had been denied due process of law. The immediate complaint was the denial of separate petitions addressed to the Secretary of the Air Force and to the Commanding General of the Seventeenth Air Force for three-fold relief: A change of venue; examination of the fingerprint evidence by the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and a “complete psychiatric examination to be conducted by a group of Board-certified, experienced psychiatrists at a military psychiatric center in the continental United States.” On this appeal, the accused contends the law officer erred to his prejudice by denying that part of the motion pertaining to the psychiatric examination, without submitting his ruling to objection by any member of the court-martial.
*233The petition to the Secretary of the Air Force was dated May 7, 1965. It was referred to the Commanding General, Seventeenth Air Force, as involving “matters ... in the nature of judicial acts” vested by law in the convening authority. This petition was denied on June 2, 1965. The denial noted that the prayer for psychiatric relief was “now moot” because the accused had been examined in the Department of Psychiatry, Wilford Hall, United States Air Force Hospital, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. A copy of that psychiatric report had been given to defense counsel. The petition to the Commanding General, Seventeenth Air Force, was dated June 1, 1965. In denying this petition, the Commanding General referred to the petition to the Secretary of the Air Force, and indicated his decision was “without prejudice” to renewal of the application at trial.
We need not examine the wide-ranging arguments by defense' counsel, which include an attack on the conditions of the accused’s incarceration during the period of psychiatric evaluation at Lackland. Looking past its label as a motion to dismiss the charges, and disregarding the irrelevancies, the motion evolves as one for a continuance to obtain a psychiatric evaluation of the accused in the United States by a specially composed board of psychiatrists. From some remarks by defense counsel, we are willing to assume the law officer was put on notice that this was the substance of the motion. See United States v Nichols, 8 USCMA 119, 124, 23 CMR 343.
The evidence and argument presented to the law officer indicated that, previous to the first trial, the accused had been examined by a board of medical officers constituted as provided in Chapter XXIV, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, and found to be unaffected by mental disease, defect, or derangement. Letters from civilian psychiatrists consulted by defense counsel indicated they did not diagnose the accused as suffering from any specific mental condition affecting his capacity to act responsibly in regard to the offense charged; two merely suggested that material submitted to them be reviewed by a psychiatrist experienced in forensic psychiatry; the third, from Dr. Joseph Satten, Director of the Division of Law and Psychiatry of The Menninger Foundation, observed that the previous psychiatric examinations should be “considered . . . preliminary,” and a “more extensive examination” of the accused was “indicated.” Dr. Satten further noted that The Menninger Foundation could not undertake the evaluation. His next comment, which apparently became the basis for the defense petition .to the Secretary-of the Air Force and to the Commanding General, Seventeenth Air Force, is as follows : ,
“On the basis of previous experience with such ease's, I would like to point out that it is unlikely that The Menninger Foundation- or other civilian psychiatric centers- would come up with medical findings strikingly different from those discovered by a group of experienced psychiatrists at a military psychiatric center.”
All the letters from the civilian psychiatrists were written before the psychiatric evaluation at Lackland. That evaluation was made by Colonel Martin V. Giffen, Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry. His qualifications included certification by the American Board'of Psychiatry; he was a Fellow in the American Psychiatric Association; he had lectured in forensic psychiatry; and he was the author of nineteen published .papers in the field of psychiatry. In lay terms, his evaluation established the accused as sane. It further appeared that, before the first trial, the accused had been examined by a German civilian psychiatrist, and his report was unfavorable to the accused. Finally, there was evidence that the accused’s return to Germany for the retrial had been several times deferred to enable' the defense to obtain an evaluation by civilian psychiatrists.
On the evidence before him, the law *234officer was fully justified in denying the defense motion. United States v Schick, 7 USCMA 419, 424, 22 CMR 209; see also United States v Frye, 8 USCMA 137, 23 CMR 361.
Appellate defense counsel insist that the real relief sought by the motion was further inquiry into the accused’s sanity, which is a matter for final decision by the court-martial, not the law officer. Manual for Courts-Martial, supra, paragraph 1226. This view misapprehends the core of defense counsel’s contentions at trial. He did not ask for an ordinary psychiatric evaluation in Germany. He wanted a medical board composed of officers differently qualified from the kind of medical board specified in the Manual, and he wanted the evaluation to be made within the United States rather than in the jurisdiction where the court-martial was convened, or in the nearest available facility.1 Thus, the relief sought was materially different from the standard “recommendation [by the court-martial] that the accused be examined as provided in 121.” (Emphasis supplied.) Id., page 203. The conditions sought to be imposed by defense counsel upon the inquiry could be effectuated by the law officer in his grant of a continuance. See United States v Nix, 15 USCMA 578, 36 CMR 76; United States v Knudson, 4 USCMA 587, 16 CMR 161. In our opinion, therefore, defense counsel intended to present only a question for the law officer’s consideration. We are confirmed in this opinion by a number of other circumstances.
The motion was presented in an out-of-court hearing. In the course of the hearing, many matters were raised which, we are certain, defense counsel would not have wanted the court members to know about. For example, we are certain he would not have wanted the court members to know Dr. Sat-ten’s opinion that it was “unlikely” that civilian psychiatrists, including those at The Menninger Foundation, would “come up with medical findings strikingly different” from those of experienced military psychiatrists; or that Dr. Giffen who examined the accused at Lackland was reputed to be one of the three “top” psychiatrists in the Air Force; or that a German civilian psychiatrist had examined the accused shortly after the offense, and his findings were unfavorable to the defense’s present contention. As we read the record, the defense intended the motion to be considered solely by the law officer. Consequently, we perceive no error in the law officer’s failure to submit his ruling to objection by any court member, as in the case of an ordinary motion for further inquiry into the accused’s sanity. See United States v Dicario, 8 USCMA 353, 24 CMR 163; United States v Goard, 13 USCMA 588, 33 CMR 120.
Turning to the selection of the law officer and the court members, the accused contends the Seventeenth Air Force deliberately discriminated against Negroes. He notes that in the period between 1963-1965, no Negro served as law officer of a general court-martial in the command, although there were Negro officers in the Air Force qualified for appointment. We are not, however, informed as to how many, if any, qualified Negro officers were in the command and available for appointment at any time relevant to this case. Be that is it may, we have carefully examined the statistics relied upon by the accused and we have carefully scrutinized the evidence, and we find no hint of unconstitutional discrimination in the selection of the law officer and court members. United States v Crawford, 15 USCMA 31, 35 CMR 3 (1964), motion for leave to file petition for writ of certiorari denied, 380 US 970, 14 L ed 2d 281, 85 S Ct 1349 (1965).
We have considered the other alleged errors, both individually and from the standpoint of their possible cumulative effect. Some of the contentions may perhaps be stretched into *235a conclusion of error. For example, some of the photographs of the victim offered into evidence by trial counsel might have been excluded. See United States v Wimberley, supra, page 13. None of the errors either singly, or in combination, however, present a fair risk of prejudice to the accused in any substantial right.
On the record, the accused received a fair and impartial trial, and was properly convicted and sentenced. Accordingly, the decision of the board of review is affirmed.
Judge Kilday concurs.There is evidence in the record indicating that the Air Force psychiatric facilities in Germany were substantial and of excellent quality.