DECISION
GRACE, Judge:The accused was charged with five violations totaling 319 specifications under the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). He was convicted by a court with members of four charges and 193 specifications. He was sentenced to a bad conduct discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement at hard labor for 17 months and reduction to the lowest pay grade. The convening authority approved the entire sentence.1
Seaman Calvin Howard was charged with taking a public record with the intent to alter it on 63 occasions and with altering a public record on one occasion (Charge I, violation of Art. 134, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 934); with making a false official statement on 64 different occasions by preparing and submitting a procurement request (brown sheet) that was false in that it was made out to procure materials not needed by the Coast Guard (Charge II, violation of Art. 107, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 907); with larceny by wrongfully obtaining cash from the possession of the United States on 64 different occasions (Charge III, violation of Art. 121, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 921); with forging SF 1165, cash subvouchers, on 64 different occasions, by signing the names of fictitious salesmen which would indicate that they had received cash from the United States (Charge IV, violation of Art. 123, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 923); and with presenting a false claim by presenting the forged SF 1165’s on 64 different occasions in order to close out the procurement file which in turn prevented the earlier larceny from being discovered (Charge V, violation of Art. 132, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 932).
Stated simply, it was alleged that the appellant pulled packing slips or other invoices from the files of the office where he worked and used them to make up brown sheets requesting procurement of the items listed on the packing slip. The brown sheet was then approved and used by the appellant as the documentation necessary to get an SF 1165, cash subvoucher. This form was used to obtain cash from the cashier which in the ordinary course of business would have been used to purchase, from a vendor, the items listed on the brown sheet. In this case, it was alleged that the appellant kept the cash and forged the name of a salesman on the SF 1165. Then by altering a copy of the original packing slip to show receipt of the items on that date, the appellant allegedly turned in the altered packing slip and the forged SF 1165 to close out the procurement action.
The appellant’s first two assignments of error will be discussed together.
*899I
IT WAS ERROR FOR THE MILITARY JUDGE TO RULE THAT THE CHARGES AND SPECIFICATIONS WERE NOT MULTIPLICIOUS FOR FINDINGS AND SENTENCING.
II
IT WAS ERROR FOR THE MILITARY JUDGE TO WAIT UNTIL AFTER FINDINGS TO RULE ON THE ISSUE OF MULTIPLICIOUS CHARGES AND SPECIFICATIONS
Multiplicity is a concept of law that has been long misunderstood. Even with the guidance provided by higher appellate courts, including the United States Supreme Court, the lower courts still have difficulty resolving issues of multiplicity. The leading military case addressing this issue is United States v. Baker, 14 M.J. 361 (C.M.A.1983). Baker analyzed and applied the leading Supreme Court case on this issue (Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 52 S.Ct. 180, 76 L.Ed. 306 (1932)), but also went on to apply the Manual for Courts-Martial, 1984 (MCM) provisions to the issue of multiplicity and establish certain tests to be applied when analyzing this issue.
There are three different stages of trial when the issue of multiplicity may be raised; at pleadings, findings, and sentencing.
A. PLEADINGS
The accused is entitled to know, with some specificity, what charges he is facing. Otherwise, he could face double jeopardy by being charged later with additional offenses based on the facts of the original charges.
Another “well-established limitation on the power of the prosecutor is that he cannot, for the purpose of influencing the jury, charge a single offense in several counts.” Baker, supra at 365. He must also avoid the situation where a single criminal offense is exaggerated “into many seemingly separate crimes [which] may, in a particular case, create the impression that the accused is a ‘bad character’ and thereby lead the court-martial to resolve against him doubt created by the evidence.” United States v. Middleton, 12 USCMA 54, 58, 59, 30 C.M.R. 54, 58, 59 (1960). “There are times, however, when sufficient doubt as to the facts or the law exists to warrant making one transaction the basis for charging two or more offenses.” Rules for Courts-Martial (RCM) 307(c)(4) (discussion following the rule).
When the defense moves, before pleadings, to dismiss certain charges and specifications due to multiplicity, the defense has the burden of persuasion. The military judge must decide the issue based on the charges and specifications as drafted, viewing them in the light most favorable to the prosecution since no evidence will have been presented on the factual allegations therein. The military judge must also carefully examine the charges and specifications for lesser-included offenses. The test to be applied is the one enunciated by the Supreme Court in Block-burger,
Each of the offenses created requires proof of a different element. The applicable rule is that, where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact which the other does not.
Blockburger, supra, 52 S.Ct. at 182.
The Court of Military Appeals in Baker further explained the tests to be applied when examining for lesser-included offenses.
First, where one offense contains only elements of, but not all the elements of the other offense; second, where one offense contains different elements as a matter of law from the other offense, but these different elements are fairly embraced in the factual allegations of the other offense and established by evidence introduced at trial.
Baker, supra, at 368.
In the case at hand, each and every charge has elements that the others do not *900have. None contains only the elements of, but not all of the elements of, one of the other charges. By the first test none of the charges stand in a greater-to-lesser offense relationship. The second test cannot be applied at pleadings, but must await application until all the evidence is in.
The test that this court must apply in reviewing the military judge’s ruling on the issue of multiplicity at the pleadings stage of the trial is one of abuse of discretion. “In those rare instances in which this discretion is abused to such a shocking extent that due process of law has been infringed, no test would stand in the way of remedial action.” Baker, supra, at 376 (Judge Cook’s dissent).
This was a case with a complicated fact pattern. The government had a heavy burden to overcome in presenting its case because of the number of witnesses and documents required to prove its case. Many exigencies of proof existed concerning the weight that the court members would give the government’s evidence and which elements of which offenses would be proven by the evidence introduced. The military judge did not abuse his discretion by not dismissing any of the charges or specifications before pleadings in this case.
B. FINDINGS
Over 40 witnesses were called and hundreds of documents were introduced into evidence. It is clear from the military judge's instructions to the court members on findings that he recognized that there were questions of fact that the court members had to resolve. The military judge instructed the members to determine whether the false official statements alleged under Charge II were the false pretenses upon which larcenies by false pretense were perpetrated. These instructions charged the members with two duties; to evaluate all of the evidence and determine if each and every element of each specification was proven beyond a reasonable doubt and then to look at the specifications sufficiently proven in relation to each other. If the members found that the false official statements were the means by which the appellant accomplished the larcenies by false pretenses they were instructed to make a finding of not guilty as to the specifications alleging false official statements (Charge II). This is exactly what the members did. They found the appellant not guilty of all 64 specifications under Charge II (false official statements) and guilty of 63 of the 64 specifications under Charge III (larceny). This shows that the members either found that the government had failed in its proof of false official statements or, more likely, that the false official statements were the means by which the appellant committed the larcenies.
As to Charges III and V, the military judge instructed the members that if they found the appellant guilty of larceny by false pretenses under a specification of Charge III and if they found that the false pretenses under Charge III to be the same false and fraudulent statements in a corresponding specification of Charge Y, presenting a false claim, they could not reach guilty findings as to both corresponding specifications. The offenses merged and they were to select the offense that most accurately reflected their findings. The members returned findings of guilty of specifications under Charges III and V. This indicates that the members found, as a matter of fact, that the false pretenses in the larcenies (Charge III) were not the false and fraudulent statements by which the offenses alleged in Charge V were committed. Because these were questions of what evidence the members believed and the weight that was given to that evidence, it was properly put before the members for findings.
If the military judge had dismissed Charge II or Charge III and the specifications thereunder prior to findings as requested by the defense, he would have invaded the province of the members’ fact finding responsibility. The judge’s recognition of the issue of multiplicity and his clear instructions to the court members adequately protected the appellant.
The appellant cites United States v. Rodriquez, 18 M.J. 363 (C.M.A.1984), United States v. Timberlake, 18 M.J. 371 (C.M.A.*9011984), and United States v. Sturdivant, 13 M.J. 323 (C.M.A.1982) for the proposition that the military judge should have dismissed some of the charges and specifications before findings. The appellant’s reliance on these cases is misplaced. In Rodriquez, the Court held that the offense laid under Charge I, a violation of Art. 134, UCMJ, was a lesser-included offense of the offense charged in Charge II, a violation of Art. 133, UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 933. That holding was based on an analysis of the evidence produced in the trial. The Court found that:
To convict appellant of the Article 134 offenses, the Government was required to show her conduct was under the circumstances prejudicial to good order and discipline in the armed forces or was of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces. To convict appellant of the Article 133 offenses, the Government was required to show that the same conduct was unbecoming an officer and gentlewoman. In view of the military judge’s instructions defining these elements of proof and the traditional relationship of these offenses as a matter of military law, we have little difficulty in concluding that the disorder or discredit element of Charge I is necessarily included within the element of disgrace required by Charge II. The fact that the same evidence was used to establish both types of offenses confirms our conclusion.
Rodriquez, supra, at 369 (footnote omitted).
Likewise, in Timberlake the Court found the forgery charge to be a lesser-included offense of the conduct unbecoming an officer.
The only substantial difference between these two offenses is that the Article 133 offense required the Government to show that appellant’s acts under the circumstances of this case constituted conduct unbecoming an officer____ The conduct must not only be shown to dishonor the individual but also seriously compromise his standing as an officer____ This element of proof is not required to be pleaded and proven under Article 123(2). However, this single element of proof is not sufficient to render these offenses separate under the aforementioned Blockburger test. On the contrary, the above analysis of the elements of these offenses in this case clearly establishes that the forgery offense here required no proof beyond that which was required for the offense of conduct unbecoming an officer by committing forgery____ In the absence of a clearly expressed legislative intent to the contrary, the lesser offense must be dismissed.
Timberlake, supra, at 375.
In both of these cases the military judge probably could have dismissed one of the charges during pleadings as a lesser-included offense of the other offense. But rather, the judge allowed the government to present proof on the merits on both charges. The Court of Military Appeals held that once the evidence was in, the proof clearly established that one offense was a lesser-included offense of the other and that the lesser-included offense should have been dismissed. We do not read these cases to require dismissal of a lesser-included offense before findings if there are reasonable exigencies of proof that must be resolved by the fact finders.
In Sturdivant, supra, one marijuana transaction was multiplied into ten different charges. The Court held that some leeway is allowed the draftsman of charges to deal with exigencies of proof. Normally multiplicity only affects sentence, not findings. In that case, there were no exigencies of proof and the charges were unreasonably multiplied which, the court found, led to a harsher sentence for what was one transaction.
Although the two pronged Baker test is met in this case, in that the specifications contain separate elements and the facts show that, except for Charge II and Charge III, separate transactions were involved, we must still consider whether, as argued by the appellant, the sheer number of the separate allegations of criminal conduct led the members to consider the accused a bad person and to resolve any *902doubts against him. United States v. Middleton, supra. In another case this might cause us grave concern; here, however, the findings of the members demonstrate that they carefully matched the evidence against the individual specifications and did not hesitate to modify their findings by exceptions and substitutions or to return findings of not guilty where the evidence was found lacking. We are convinced that their decision was not influenced by the number of charges and specifications and that any doubt was properly resolved in favor of the accused.
In the case before us, there were exigencies of proof that the military judge clearly recognized and on which he carefully instructed the court members. The members verdict demonstrates that they understood the judge’s instructions and followed them. Accordingly, appellant’s assignment of error II is rejected in its entirety as well as that portion of assignment I relating to multiplicity for findings.
C. SENTENCING
Once findings were returned by the members and the exigencies of proof faced by the prosecution had been resolved, the military judge then had to determine if the charges and specifications were multiplicious for sentencing purposes. At this point in the trial, the standard for determining multiplicity eases to the favor of the appellant. Before findings, a specification may be allowed to stand where there is a doubt whether or not the offenses are indivisible, as a matter of law or where the Government has convinced the judge that exigencies of proof exist. Baker, supra, at 367. In United States v. Hollimon, 16 M.J. 164 (C.M.A.1983) the appellant was convicted of rape and communicating a threat. The Court of Military Appeals held that “although this former offense [communicating a threat] could properly have been charged separately because of possible exigencies of proof, the separate finding of guilt rendered thereon should be set aside.” Id. at 167.
The judge must look again at the offenses remaining and apply the second part of the lesser-included offense test cited earlier from Baker: “[W]here one offense contains different elements as a matter of law from the other offense, but these different elements are fairly embraced in the factual allegations of the other offense and established by evidence introduced at trial.” Baker, supra, at 368.
In addition, the discussion following RCM 907(b)(3) states, “Ordinarily, a specification should not be dismissed for multiplicity before trial unless it clearly alleges the same offense, or one necessarily included therein, as is alleged in another specification. It may be appropriate to dismiss the less serious specification of any multiplicious specifications after findings have been reached.”
We will now examine the various ways in which the military judge could have approached sentencing in this case, including the one he actually used. To understand the nature of the appellant’s criminal activity an overview of the pattern of his behavior is helpful. He was convicted of committing offenses over a period from 7 June 1983 to 25 June 1984. He committed these offenses on multiple occasions during each month of that period, except for the months of October 1983 and January 1984 when he committed the offenses only once during each of those months. Based on this pattern of behavior, we discern five different ways in which the military judge could have instructed on sentencing in this case.
Option 1
The military judge could have ruled that, for purposes of sentencing, this was a single scheme or plan carried out over a period of months and instructed the court members to consider all of the charges and specifications remaining as a single charge of larceny with a single specification. The maximum sentence would have been five years confinement plus other authorized punishments.
Option 2
The proof revealed that the appellant engaged in a scheme to steal money from the United States and to prevent his crime from being detected. When we examine *903the evidence in the present case, it is clear that the appellant used his false brown sheets in Charge II to accomplish the larcenies in Charge III, and so the court members found when they made “Not Guilty” findings as to Charge II. Also, the evidence reveals that the appellant used the forgeries in Charge IV and the public records taken and altered in Charge I to close out the procurement action by submitting the false claim in Charge V. Therefore, the military judge could have dismissed Charges I and IV and the specifications thereunder, as multiplicious with Charge V for sentencing purposes. Then he could have considered the commission of the larceny over a period of months as a single punishable offense and the attempt to cover the crime also a single continuing transaction, which would have left two charges and a single specification under each charge for a maximum punishment of 10 years confinement. This is the approach urged by the appellant.
Option 3
Another option for handling this issue was the one applied by the military judge in this case. The military judge instructed the court members that for the purposes of sentencing, they were to consider all of the specifications under any charge as a single offense. Since the appellant had been found guilty of four charges and the specifications thereunder, the judge instructed the members that the maximum sentence of confinement they could adjudge was 18 years (three years for Charge I, Art. 134 and five each for violations of Articles 121, 123, and 132).
Option 4
Next the military judge could have consolidated all of the remaining charges into one charge of larceny with 63 specifications, finding that all of the charges represented a single plan, but that the plan was repeated over and over. The approach is logical, but would result in having an accused face over 300 years confinement as possible punishment for what amounted to the nonviolent theft of $13,000.
Option 5
The military judge could just as easily have ruled that each time the appellant obtained cash by false pretenses and each time he presented a false claim it was a separate offense. This would have left Charge III with 63 specifications thereunder and Charge V with 57 specifications thereunder. Applying the analysis, the accused would have faced a maximum period of confinement of over 600 years.
Although options 4 and 5 yield results which might be considered to be extremely harsh, they have support in case law. In United States v. Harrison, 4 M.J. 332 (C.M.A.1978) an agent cashier was convicted of wrongful appropriation of money from funds he was accountable for, and the signing of false balance sheets to prevent the detection of the shortage. The Court held that the military judge had not erred by rejecting a defense contention that the six specifications of signing false official records were multiplicious with each other and with the offense of wrongful appropriation. After a review of the various tests for multiplicity espoused in earlier cases the Court stated: “[I]t is clear that no one test can be applied to the exclusion of all others---- [E]ach case must be analyzed within its own factual context.” Id. at 334, citations omitted. The Court noted:
Each improper withdrawal of funds was complete upon the commission of the act with the requisite intent. Each false balance sheet enabled the appellant to avoid detection, but the false nature of the record was not a medium for the withdrawal of the funds. Thus, there were separate transactions which were clearly motivated by different impulses or intents. Under such circumstances, we are convinced that the fundamental principle of avoiding duplicate punishment for the same offense will not be violated by holding that the offense of wrongful appropriation is not multiplicious with the offense of signing a false official record to prevent discovery of the offense.
Id.
Turning to the six specifications of signing false balance sheets over a period of slightly less than a year, the Court stated:
*904Each report was single and complete for the cash on hand on the day of submission. That the same process of concealment was used on different days did not transmogrify the several transactions into a single wrong. In other words, a modus operandi does not integrate a series of crimes into one punishable offense.
Id.
These principles fit the case at hand and are not contrary to the analysis of Blockburger v. United States, or United States v. Baker, both supra. The larceny offenses were complete, in each instance, when the money was received from the agent cashier. At this point the taking of the packing slips was not necessary, since the information they contained, which was entered on the procurement requests and cash subvoucher, could have been obtained by simply viewing the files. The forging of salesmen’s signatures on the cash sub-voucher and presenting them to close out the file, along with altered packing slips and invoices, occurred after the larceny was complete and was done with the intent to conceal the larceny. Although demonstrating a modus operandi, each specification of each charge was a separate offense. Thus we could hold that, although the military judge erred in instructing the court that they were to consider four separate charges with a single specification for each charge, there was no prejudice to the accused since the court was advised that the maximum punishment included confinement for 18 years instead of the more than 600 years that the above analysis would support.
Options 1, 2, and 3 appear to offer more reasonable limitations on the maximum punishment that could be imposed. However, adopting the principle that, in cases where the same modus operandi is applied in repeated instances, all specifications alleging this conduct are to be merged into one for sentencing purposes, removes any deterrent for repeated criminal acts. Once a plan is formed and the offense committed, an accused would face the same maximum penalty no matter how many times he repeated the offense. Obviously, fairness and a sense of justice dictate that this result should not apply in those cases where there was a different victim in each instance, in cases involving acts of violence against the same victim, or in cases involving the destruction of property. Should a separate rule be crafted for non-violent white collar crimes against a single victim? If such a rule were adopted, should the appellate courts look to intermediate issues, such as the involvement of different innocent third parties, to create exceptions and maintain offenses separate for sentencing purposes? See United States v. Barnum, 24 M.J. 729 (A.C.M.R.1987).
The “fairly embraced” concept of United States v. Baker, supra, or the “integral means” of accomplishing the ultimate offense, as enunciated in United States v. Hollimon, supra, and United States v. Watson, 21 M.J. 96 (C.M.A.1985), as applied to these offenses, could require the consolidation of Charges I and IV with Charge V or all three into Charge III. The consolidation of Charges I, IV, and V is more compelling, since in order to successfully present a false claim in the manner alleged, the packing slips and invoices would have to be taken and altered and the SF 1165’s forged to show receipt of payment. We also find persuasive the reasoning of Judge Fletcher’s dissent in Harrison, supra, that, despite the fact that the taking of the packing slips occurred before obtaining the funds, and the altered documents were presented at a later time, they were integral parts of the larceny. However, we would be constrained to follow the majority decision in that case were we to attempt to so narrowly resolve the issue before us. We elect not to undertake this narrow approach.
Our review of the case law leaves us with no clear path to take to a determination, as a matter of law, of a single acceptable method of treating these offenses as multiplicious. We subscribe wholeheartedly to the observation of our brethren on the Army Court of Military Review:
Although military ‘legal purists’ may wince at the thought, it appears that our current military rules of multiplicity are *905a curious blend of military due process, equity, and policy considerations. Somehow, through this maze, our appellate courts, with the help of an overall enlightened ‘field’ legal practice, are basically reaching fundamentally fair dispositions of multiplicity issues.
United States v. Barnum, supra note 3, at 731.
The record of this case indicates that the military judge carefully considered the issue of multiplicity, carefully instructed the court members on multiplicity for sentencing, and that the results did not deny the appellant due process of law and in fact were fair and reasonable as applied to the appellant. We, therefore, find no merit to appellant’s asserted error relating to multiplicity for sentencing.
The appellant’s third assignment of error is as follows:
III
IT WAS ERROR F.OR THE MILITARY JUDGE NOT TO ADMIT EVIDENCE OF AN EXCULPATING [sic] POLYGRAPH
The Court of Military Appeals recently examined the question of the admissibility of polygraph evidence under the UCMJ after the 1984 changes. United States v. Gipson, 24 M.J. 246 (C.M.A.1987) involved the issue of whether the results of a polygraph examination were inadmissible in a court-martial as a matter of law. The appellant moved in limine to admit evidence of an exculpatory polygraph examination. The prosecution opposed any attempt by the defense to lay a foundation to show that polygraph examinations are or should be accepted as evidence in a trial by court-martial. The Court said:
A few courts have experimented with the notion that an accused has an independent, constitutional right to present favorable polygraph evidence. We do not subscribe to this theory of admissibility because there can be no right to present evidence — however much it purports to exonerate an accused — unless it is shown to be relevant and helpful. When evidence meets these criteria, no additional justification for admissibility is necessary.
Id. at 252 (footnote omitted).
The Court concluded that “[W]e do not suggest that all polygraph evidence is admissible or that this particular evidence should have been admitted. Appellant still bears the burden of establishing the foundational predicates outlined above. Our holding here is only that appellant was entitled to attempt to lay that foundation.” Id. at 253 (footnote omitted).
In the instant case the military judge did not rule that the evidence of the appellant’s polygraph examination was inadmissible as a matter of law, but rather he allowed the appellant to attempt to lay a foundation for the admission of the polygraph and then ruled on the admissibility of the polygraph evidence pursuant to the Military Rules of Evidence.
Military law no longer contains an absolute bar to evidence and expert testimony relating to a polygraph test, Rule 702, MRE, Analysis, MCM 1984. The explicit prohibition against polygraph evidence previously found in Paragraph 142(e), MCM (1969 Rev.) has been removed from the 1984 MCM. “The Rule’s sole explicit test is whether the evidence in question ‘will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.’ Whether any particular piece of evidence comes within the test is normally a matter within the military judge’s discretion.” Rule 702, MRE, Analysis, MCM 1984.
In stating his essential findings of fact, the military judge found that the proffered polygraph evidence did not meet threshold tests for admissibility, in that the helpfulness test under MRE 702 had not been met and that the danger of confusion and misleading the members tipped the MRE 403 balance toward exclusion of the evidence. The judge found that “there are at least eight variables in application of a proper polygraph examination technique. There were no controls or checks over the techniques used in this case.” Record of Trial (ROT) at 2324. Later he stated:
*906[T]he way the questions are phrased is important to the test and the question involving use of a receipt to obtain cash from the Cash Cage was ambiguous and could have affected the conclusions of Mr. Kaufman and Dr. Yankee in scoring the tests____ I am not satisfied as to the soundness and reliability of the polygraph process and I have concluded that admitting polygraph evidence would confuse or mislead the members.
ROT at 2325.
He also found “the great number of variables present in the methodology as testified to by Dr. Yankee and the lack of controls thereon, led me to conclude that a reliable scientific basis for polygraph evidence had not been established.” ROT at 2326. The judge reviewed MREs 401, 402, 403, 702, and 704 and concluded that “the helpfulness test under MRE 702 is not met and that under MRE 403 confusion would be created and the Members would be misled.” ROT at 2327.
We find that the judge’s ruling denying the admission of appellant’s polygraph examination, offered to support the accused’s testimony on the merits, was a legally sound ruling in accord with the Military Rules of Evidence. Moreover, it comports with Court of Military Appeals guidelines that were subsequently set out in U.S. v. Gipson, supra. Accordingly, assignment of error III is deemed to be without merit, as is the remaining assignment of error. We are convinced by the evidence of appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, despite appellant’s testimony denying guilt, which we find not credible.
In light of the foregoing discussion, the findings of guilty and sentence as approved below are affirmed.
Judges BRIDGMAN and BURGESS concur.. We note that Court-Martial Order 1-86, dated 13 June 1986, incorrectly states the date of sentencing as 14 December 1984. That incorrect date was also carried over on the referral of the case to this Court. Those errors should be corrected by appropriate authority.