OPINION OF THE COURT ON FURTHER REVIEW
PER CURIAM:
This case is before the court for mandatory review pursuant to Article 66, 10 U.S. C.A. § 866, Uniform Code of Military Justice, following completion of a new review and action ordered by the court. United States v. Whitaker, CM 445267 (ACMR 27 Feb.1985) (unpub.). Appellant was tried in the 3d Armored Division by a general court-martial convened by Major General (MG) Thurman E. Anderson.1 Pursuant to his pleas, appellant was convicted of various drug offenses, and was sentenced by the military judge to, inter alia, a bad-conduct discharge and confinement for two years. Major General Anderson approved the sentence, which was not affected by the pretrial agreement.
On further review, appellant renews the contentions that MG Anderson’s conduct over an extended period of time disqualified him from referring the case to trial as the convening authority, and that appellant was denied a fair sentencing proceeding as a result of the unlawful command influence or the perception of unlawful command influence by MG Anderson.2 Appellant requests we set aside the findings and sentence and dismiss the Charge and specifications or, alternatively, set aside the sentence and authorize a rehearing. We decline to do either.
Appellant’s assertion that MG Anderson was disqualified from referring the case to trial has already been decided against appellant by United States v. Treakle, 18 M.J. 646, 654-55 (A.C.M.R.1984) (en banc), pet. granted, 20 M.J. 131 (C.M.A.1985). See United States v. Yslava, 18 M.J. 670, 672 (A.C.M.R.1984), pet. granted, 19 M.J. 281 (C.M.A.1985). With respect to the effect MG Anderson’s actions may have had on the sentencing proceedings, the resolution of that issue is controlled by this court’s decision in United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. 873 (A.C.M.R.1985) (en banc). See United States v. Breininger, 20 M.J. 1006 (A.C.M.R.1985).
Although appellant was tried on 28 October 1983, well after the issue of MG Anderson’s activities had arisen among the defense counsel servicing the 3d Armored Division area,3 appellant made no motion at [569]*569trial for dismissal or any other relief based upon the alleged unlawful command influence by MG Anderson. On appeal, however, in an attempt to support his argument that the sentencing proceedings were affected by MG Anderson’s activities, appellant has presented us with the evidence which this court considered in its decisions in United States v. Treakle and United States v. Yslava.4 We have also considered additional circumstantial evidence in the form of affidavits from Colonel John R. Bozeman, Lieutenant Colonel Mark A. Mueller, and Major Michael A. Buchanan, which was not available at the time of the Treakle and Yslava decisions.5
When an appellant alleges for the first time at the appellate level that unlawful command influence affected his trial, he must show more than a possibility that his trial was adversely affected by such influence to shift to the government the burden of persuading this court to the contrary. United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. at 886. He must present evidence which would lead a reasonable person to conclude, under the totality of circumstances, that unlawful command influence affected his case. Id. The appellant has failed to sustain this burden. Sifting through the avalanche of affidavits filed in this case and others before this court, we find none from any members of appellant’s battery, battalion, or brigade.6 Thus, other than his general allegation that his sentencing proceedings were affected, appellant has offered no evidence that he was deprived of any witnesses. In cases involving potential witnesses, “there is a gap between the presumption flowing from a finding that unlawful pressure influenced the recipient and a finding of any prejudicial effect in the appellant’s case.” United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. at 888. “[Wjhat is needed to fill the gap is a showing that the witnesses would have affected the case or some decision regarding the case or would even have been called.” Id. As was the case in Cruz,
[Ajppellant has failed to provide us with even that evidence which is most readily available to him. He has failed to produce statements from his chain of command, or from the people to whom he would normally have gone in search of favorable testimony, stating how they interpreted the events in question, if they were affected, and if so how. What is more, he has failed to reveal the identities of the people he believes were in possession of relevant information which would have qualified them to testify in his behalf.
Id. We would add that, in the case at bar, appellant has failed to show that the individuals whose testimony he claims to have been denied had even heard of MG Anderson’s comments.
The extenuation and mitigation evidence in appellant’s case consisted of the testimony of three noncommissioned officers in appellant’s chain-of-supervision, appellant’s unsworn statement (both oral and written), and a congratulatory letter dated 14 February 1983 from the Major General then in command of the 32d Army Air Defense Command which praised appellant for scoring 96% on a recent Skill Qualification Test. The testimony of the three non-commissioned officer supervisors reflected that appellant’s job performance was good to excellent and that appellant showed initiative. Knowing of appellant’s conviction of drug offenses, one of the supervisors testified that appellant still had “rehabilitation potential.” Considering the quality of [570]*570evidence presented on appellant’s behalf, we are convinced that appellant was not prejudiced by any efforts, real or perceived, by MG Anderson to discourage favorable testimony. Moreover, we find the evidence as presented in the aforementioned affidavits6
7 insufficient to raise a justiciable issue that actual unlawful command influence affected the sentencing proceedings in appellant’s case as it only supports the general allegation that it was merely possible that his case was affected. Something more than a mere allegation of wrongdoing must be shown. For example, statements from members of appellant’s chain of command or from other prospective witnesses who would have testified on his behalf might be sufficient to require the government to show there was no actual harm to appellant.8
As to any effect that MG Anderson’s actions may have had on appellant’s plea decision, our examination of the evidence of record convinces us that the validity of appellant’s plea of guilty remains unaffected. As noted above, appellant has not yet raised the issue of a prejudicial denial of witnesses; this being the only means through which the validity of his plea could have been affected, it follows that we have no cause for concern on that score. Moreover, the record of trial reflects a potentially strong government case, a favorable plea bargain, and a searching inquiry by the military judge into appellant’s plea of guilty. We are satisfied that appellant’s plea of guilty was a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary act which was properly accepted by the military judge. See United States v. Care, 18 C.M.A. 535, 40 C.M.R. 247 (1969).
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OPINION OF THE COURT ON FURTHER REVIEW
PER CURIAM:
This case is before the court for mandatory review pursuant to Article 66, 10 U.S. C.A. § 866, Uniform Code of Military Justice, following completion of a new review and action ordered by the court. United States v. Whitaker, CM 445267 (ACMR 27 Feb.1985) (unpub.). Appellant was tried in the 3d Armored Division by a general court-martial convened by Major General (MG) Thurman E. Anderson.1 Pursuant to his pleas, appellant was convicted of various drug offenses, and was sentenced by the military judge to, inter alia, a bad-conduct discharge and confinement for two years. Major General Anderson approved the sentence, which was not affected by the pretrial agreement.
On further review, appellant renews the contentions that MG Anderson’s conduct over an extended period of time disqualified him from referring the case to trial as the convening authority, and that appellant was denied a fair sentencing proceeding as a result of the unlawful command influence or the perception of unlawful command influence by MG Anderson.2 Appellant requests we set aside the findings and sentence and dismiss the Charge and specifications or, alternatively, set aside the sentence and authorize a rehearing. We decline to do either.
Appellant’s assertion that MG Anderson was disqualified from referring the case to trial has already been decided against appellant by United States v. Treakle, 18 M.J. 646, 654-55 (A.C.M.R.1984) (en banc), pet. granted, 20 M.J. 131 (C.M.A.1985). See United States v. Yslava, 18 M.J. 670, 672 (A.C.M.R.1984), pet. granted, 19 M.J. 281 (C.M.A.1985). With respect to the effect MG Anderson’s actions may have had on the sentencing proceedings, the resolution of that issue is controlled by this court’s decision in United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. 873 (A.C.M.R.1985) (en banc). See United States v. Breininger, 20 M.J. 1006 (A.C.M.R.1985).
Although appellant was tried on 28 October 1983, well after the issue of MG Anderson’s activities had arisen among the defense counsel servicing the 3d Armored Division area,3 appellant made no motion at [569]*569trial for dismissal or any other relief based upon the alleged unlawful command influence by MG Anderson. On appeal, however, in an attempt to support his argument that the sentencing proceedings were affected by MG Anderson’s activities, appellant has presented us with the evidence which this court considered in its decisions in United States v. Treakle and United States v. Yslava.4 We have also considered additional circumstantial evidence in the form of affidavits from Colonel John R. Bozeman, Lieutenant Colonel Mark A. Mueller, and Major Michael A. Buchanan, which was not available at the time of the Treakle and Yslava decisions.5
When an appellant alleges for the first time at the appellate level that unlawful command influence affected his trial, he must show more than a possibility that his trial was adversely affected by such influence to shift to the government the burden of persuading this court to the contrary. United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. at 886. He must present evidence which would lead a reasonable person to conclude, under the totality of circumstances, that unlawful command influence affected his case. Id. The appellant has failed to sustain this burden. Sifting through the avalanche of affidavits filed in this case and others before this court, we find none from any members of appellant’s battery, battalion, or brigade.6 Thus, other than his general allegation that his sentencing proceedings were affected, appellant has offered no evidence that he was deprived of any witnesses. In cases involving potential witnesses, “there is a gap between the presumption flowing from a finding that unlawful pressure influenced the recipient and a finding of any prejudicial effect in the appellant’s case.” United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. at 888. “[Wjhat is needed to fill the gap is a showing that the witnesses would have affected the case or some decision regarding the case or would even have been called.” Id. As was the case in Cruz,
[Ajppellant has failed to provide us with even that evidence which is most readily available to him. He has failed to produce statements from his chain of command, or from the people to whom he would normally have gone in search of favorable testimony, stating how they interpreted the events in question, if they were affected, and if so how. What is more, he has failed to reveal the identities of the people he believes were in possession of relevant information which would have qualified them to testify in his behalf.
Id. We would add that, in the case at bar, appellant has failed to show that the individuals whose testimony he claims to have been denied had even heard of MG Anderson’s comments.
The extenuation and mitigation evidence in appellant’s case consisted of the testimony of three noncommissioned officers in appellant’s chain-of-supervision, appellant’s unsworn statement (both oral and written), and a congratulatory letter dated 14 February 1983 from the Major General then in command of the 32d Army Air Defense Command which praised appellant for scoring 96% on a recent Skill Qualification Test. The testimony of the three non-commissioned officer supervisors reflected that appellant’s job performance was good to excellent and that appellant showed initiative. Knowing of appellant’s conviction of drug offenses, one of the supervisors testified that appellant still had “rehabilitation potential.” Considering the quality of [570]*570evidence presented on appellant’s behalf, we are convinced that appellant was not prejudiced by any efforts, real or perceived, by MG Anderson to discourage favorable testimony. Moreover, we find the evidence as presented in the aforementioned affidavits6
7 insufficient to raise a justiciable issue that actual unlawful command influence affected the sentencing proceedings in appellant’s case as it only supports the general allegation that it was merely possible that his case was affected. Something more than a mere allegation of wrongdoing must be shown. For example, statements from members of appellant’s chain of command or from other prospective witnesses who would have testified on his behalf might be sufficient to require the government to show there was no actual harm to appellant.8
As to any effect that MG Anderson’s actions may have had on appellant’s plea decision, our examination of the evidence of record convinces us that the validity of appellant’s plea of guilty remains unaffected. As noted above, appellant has not yet raised the issue of a prejudicial denial of witnesses; this being the only means through which the validity of his plea could have been affected, it follows that we have no cause for concern on that score. Moreover, the record of trial reflects a potentially strong government case, a favorable plea bargain, and a searching inquiry by the military judge into appellant’s plea of guilty. We are satisfied that appellant’s plea of guilty was a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary act which was properly accepted by the military judge. See United States v. Care, 18 C.M.A. 535, 40 C.M.R. 247 (1969).
Our determination that appellant’s claim of actual unlawful command influence merits no relief does not end our responsibility, however, as we must also consider whether the appearance of unlawful command influence exists. “It is axiomatic that the best way to dispel the appearance of evil is to publish the truth about the situation.” United States v. Cruz, 20 M.J. at 890. “[T]he appearance of unlawful command influence will normally become relevant only in the absence of actual unlawful command influence because the process of publicly determining whether the appellant has been prejudiced by actual unlawful command influence, and remedying it if he has, will normally remove the appearance of unlawful command influence as well.” Id. at 891. In the case at bar, the information already in the trial record, supplemented by the great mass of evidence furnished by the parties at the appellate level, and this court’s judicial analysis of the circumstances, satisfies us that reasonable members of the public will conclude that no appearance of unlawful command influence affected the sentencing proceedings. Moreover, we believe that the result of our inquiry, which led us to conclude that appellant was not prejudiced by actual unlawful command influence, will likewise erase any public perception that the appearance of unlawful command influence affected appellant’s trial.
We have considered the remaining assignments of error and find them to be without merit.
The findings of guilty and the sentence are affirmed.