BAZELON, Chief Judge
(concurring) :
I agree that the present record would not justify our summarily ordering appellant’s conditional release, and accordingly I join in the opinion of the court insofar as it remands this case to the District Court for the taking of further evidence and for proper findings of fact and conclusions of law. I cannot, however, join in the court’s silence regarding the conduct of the hearing below, and the issues that will arise upon remand. In my view, our responsibility for the administration of justice in the courts of this circuit constrains us to address ourselves more fully to these matters. Since the hearing in the District Court lasted only thirty minutes, and since a full understanding of the course of that hearing is important to an understanding of the issues in this case, I have set out below substantial portions of the transcript.
I.
The appellant here is a 61-year-old man who in March, 1968, was acquitted by reason of insanity of a charge of taking indecent liberties with a minor child. He was immediately committed to Saint Elizabeths Hospital for further examination and, in May of 1968, committed to the hospital for an indefinite period of treatment. Initially confined in John Howard Pavilion, the maximum security unit at the hospital, he was described as a “model patient” and shortly thereafter transferred to a less restrictive service. During intensive therapy there, his condition continued to improve ; except for “intermittent episodes of drinking,” he “continued in what was an exemplary behavior pattern.” In July of 1969, the hospital first considered recommending him for conditional release. After administering to him a battery of psychological tests, it concluded that release was not warranted at that time. The hospital did, however, transfer appellant to another ward where he participated in a “therapeutic community program and a kind of intense patient therapy group which meets every week day.” His “behavior, once again, was exemplary. He did all that was expected. He entered into various therapies, never caused any problems, except for intermittent episodes of alcohol intoxication.” Accordingly, appellant was urged by the hospital to accept “antabuse therapy,” which consists primarily of taking a drug — antabuse— “which tends to prevent alcohol intoxication by virtue of making the person ill *505who takes it while on antabuse.” At the time of the hearing, he had been on antabuse for several months.
Early in 1970, “because the decision about whether or not to recommend him for conditional release was very thorny,” appellant was “presented to * * * a grand rounds presentation, to the senior staff of forensic services.” They concluded that Mr. McNeil’s difficulties with the law stemmed from his drinking: “if Mr. McNeil didn’t drink, it was unlikely that his antisocial behavior would ever manifest itself.” Believing that this problem could be overcome, the hospital began to fashion a plan for his conditional release. Crucial to this plan was a mechanism whereby it could be assured that appellant would continue taking antabuse. Initially, appellant was to remain at the hospital but was to obtain outside employment; during that period, the hospital would “give [antabuse] to him and watch him swallow it.” When appellant returned to the community, the hospital would arrange “to have a community based clinic [or] physician administer it to him and watch him take it.”
Having devised a plan for appellant’s conditional release, the hospital notified the District Court and the United States Attorney. The United States Attorney chose not to oppose release; but after a brief hearing, the District Court denied appellant release on any conditions. On appellant’s motion, the court held a second hearing; at the conclusion of this hearing, the District Court once again denied appellant release on any conditions. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were ever filed.
II.
The second hearing before the District Court lasted only thirty minutes.
Al-though brief, it was confused. Appellant produced two witnesses to testify on his behalf. The first was Dr. John J. Maher, a clinical psychologist on the staff of Saint Elizabeths. Dr. Maher had administered a battery of psychological tests to appellant in June of 1969, and again in February of 1970; in addition, he was also familiar with the results of an earlier series of tests administered to appellant by someone else in 1968. It appears that the substance of Dr. Maher’s testimony, as he sought to present it, was that his opinion regarding appellant’s condition rested primarily upon Rorschach inkblot tests that Dr. Maher had administered. In 1969, appellant had exhibited “a number or rather crass sexual responses” to the blots, chiefly female genitalia. This, perhaps along with other of appellant’s responses to the tests administered by Dr. Maher,® indicated to the latter that appellant at that time was too much preoccupied “with his own sexual adequacy.” When the tests were again administered in 1970, however, these responses were no longer in evidence; although Dr. Maher still found “a type of sexual response on there,” he did not consider it inappropriate: it was “a *506nurturing kind of response, female breasts, things of this kind.”
Dr. Maher’s presentation of his testimony, however, was seriously hampered by the trial court’s constant intrusions:
The Court: What is the test you gave him, the Rorschach test?
The Witness: It is a standard psychological ink blot test.
The Court: I am very familiar with it.
How does it happen that anybody has sexual feelings in the Rorschach test?
The Witness: The cards themselves are not pictures of anything.
The Court: I know.
The Witness: They are ambiguous—
The Court: I have seen them. I can’t figure out what they are either.
The Court: What are his responses to the Rorschach test?
The Witness: In 1969 — no, in 1968, there were four — as I recall, four— responses which were explicitly related to female genitalia.
The Court: What are they ? I don’t know what they are. What were the responses from the Rorschach test? What were the four?
The Court: Are you telling me from the cards you showed him in the Rorschach test he said that it was a woman’s genitalia?
The Witness: Yes, sir. That was in 1968 and again in 1969.
The Court: Don’t you think he is a little mentally sick, then, if he picks out something from a Rorschach test like that? Do you think that is normal? Can you pick out a woman’s genitalia in the Rorschach test?
The Witness: * * *
I did not finish in regard to the Rorschach test in which I indicated that both in the original testing and again in the testing late last summer these female genitalia responses were there and he was making no effort to hide them.
Also, as well as these, there were also—
The Court: When you looked at the Rorschach test, did you get any idea it represented female genitalia?
The Court: You still think he is sick, don’t you?
The Witness: No. As I am trying to say, on the present testing there was no evidence of this type of response, although there was a type of sexual response on there. But it was a nurturing kind of response, female breasts, things of that kind.
The Court: Is there anything in the Rorschach test that would indicate to a normal person female breasts?
The Witness: Yes, there is.
The Court: Is there anything in the Rorschach test that will lead a normal person to determine that there was a female organ involved?
The Witness: Yes, Your Honor.
The Court: There is?
The Witness: Yes. Female breast is a good, plus response.
The Court: There is nothing about a female breast in the Rorschach test. You are a Clinical Psychologist and and you are telling me that as a result of looking at these ink spots there is a female breast in there?
The Witness: I didn’t say there was a female breast there. I said it is not abnormal to see a female breast.
The Court: There isn’t?
The Witness: Female breast by standard, statistical analysis has been shown to be a frequent response of normal people and it is a good, plus response.
The Court: A normal person looks at a Rorschach test and sees a female breast, right?
*507The Witness: Not every normal person, but it is not abnormal to do it. Many normal people do it.
The Court: That’s all. Step down.
[Transcript, at pages 8, 9, 9-10, 11, 11, 14-15.]
Immediately thereafter, appellant called his second witness, Dr. Charles Murkofsky, a psychiatrist on the staff of Saint Elizabeths. The trial court promptly returned to the same point:
Q Dr. Murkofsky, would you state your name and occupation, for the record, please?
A My name is Dr. Charles Murkofsky—
The Court: Do you agree with the Clinical Psychologist that as a result of the Rorschach test that a normal person gets the idea that there is some female organ there?
The Witness: I would agree that—
The Court: No. I didn’t ask you that.
Are you familiar with the Rorschach test?
The Witness: Yes, sir.
The Court: As I am.
Are you going to tell me that a normal person looking at that Rorschach test is going to find anything resembling a female organ?
The Witness: Your Honor, the only way I can answer is to say that some normal people will and some won’t.
The Court: You don’t know then. You are the psychiatrist and you don’t know. Right ?
The Witness: I can’t answer your question.
The Court: That is pretty good. You can’t answer the question.
[Transcript, at 15-16]. The trial court continued to return to this subject:
The Witness: May I elaborate an answer, Your Honor?
The Court: Certainly.
The Witness: I think what Dr. Ma-her was saying is that if you show a stimulus to a large number of people—
The Court: You are talking now about a stimulus. I am asking if you show the Rorschach cards—
The Witness: O.K.
The Court: They are ink spots, aren’t they?
The Witness: Yes, sir.
The Court: Is there anything in there that shows a stimulus?
The Witness: There are many stimulus. [sic]
The Court: Is there anything in those ink spots that shows a stimulus as to female genitalia?
The Witness: Your Honor, that depends on what is in the person’s head who is looking at them.
The Court: If a person’s head is looking at it and he concludes there is something like that, isn’t there something wrong with him?
The Court: The man was acquitted of taking indecent liberties with a female, because he was insane. Now you are testing him. And you give him the Rorschach test and he still sees a female organ.
That means nothing to you?
The Witness: Oh, yes, sir. It means something to me.
The Court: What does it mean?
The Witness: It makes me think that—
The Court: — he is sound?
[Transcript 17-18, 21].
Moreover, it appears from the transcript that, in disregard of an en banc decision oí this court, the trial judge determined that he would give no weight to the psychologist’s testimony because he believed psychologists incompetent to testify regarding an individual’s mental *508condition. Shortly after Dr. Murkofsky was sworn, the following took place:
Q Doctor, your occupation is what?
The Court [sic]: Psychiatrist.
By [appellant's counsel]
Q What do you do?
A I work at St. Elizabeths Hospital as part of the forensic—
The Court: I take it that you agree as a psychiatrist that a Clinical Psychologist is competent to give medical testimony as to a man’s insanity?
The Witness: I would agree.
The Court: Then you don’t agree with any of the else [sic] of your brothers.
[Appellant’s counsel]: The Court of Appeals agrees with that, Your Hon- or.
The Court: That doesn’t make any difference, what the Court of Appeals says. That doesn’t convince me.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Well, Your Honor, does the Jenkins opinion convince you in its proposing a man—
The Court: I don’t think a Clinical Psychologist has any competency to tell me what a man’s mental condition is. The Court of Appeals says he does.
[Transcript 16-17].
Finally, the proceedings closed as follows:
The Court: How do you know he won't drink, if I release him?
The Witness: Well, because, Your Honor, we have a plan devised to assure that he takes antabuse.
The Court: How?
The Witness: We plan to watch him.
The Court: How?
The Witness: Well, we watch him while he is in the hospital. We give it to him and watch him swallow it. Our plan would be to arrange, when and if he gets to the community, to have a community based clinic [or] physician administer it to him and watch him take it.
The Court: Where did you go to school ?
The Witness: University of Rochester.
The Court: Minnesota?
The Witness: Rochester, New York.
The Court: It is a good school.
The Witness: I was going to say.
The Court: You can’t convince me that you have a man charged with this type of crime—
I am not going to release him.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Judge [-]—
The Court: That is all.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Let me just ask the doctor one more question.
The Court: I am not going to release him.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Judge [-], when are you going to release him, may I ask ?
The Court: I may never release him.
By [appellant’s counsel]
Q Doctor, what is the prognosis for this man’s total recovery?
The Court: Prognosis?
[Appellant’s counsel]: Yes.
The Witness: I would say the prognosis—
The Court: — is bad.
The Witness: The prognosis for him ever being rid of his diagnosis [unspecified sexual deviation] is poor. The prognosis for not acting antisocially is very good, if he doesn’t ingest alcohol.
[Appellant’s counsel] : Your Honor, the statutory standards are a dual one—
The Court: Take it up to the Court of Appeals. I am not going to release him.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Very well, Your Honor. I would like to emphasize one other thing: This man is 61 years old. He has already served *509more than the minimum, if he had been convicted.
The Court: He is not serving time. He is at St. Elizabeths.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Your Hon- or, I am not sure he would make that distinction so clearly.
The Court: That could be. If I am wrong, the Court of Appeals can turn him loose. If they turn him loose, there is nothing I can do about it.
But I am not going to turn these people loose that are convicted of this type of a crime.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Your Hon- or, it is not just turning him loose. He would be closely supervised and take this antabuse every day.
The Court: All right. Motion denied.
[Appellant’s counsel]: Very well, Your Honor.
[Transcript 25-28].
III.
I fully agree with my colleagues that the present record would not justify our summarily ordering appellant’s conditional release. But on the basis of that record, no meaningful review of the merits of the trial court’s decision is possible. The record contains neither findings of fact nor conclusions of law. Appellant was denied an adequate opportunity to make the factual basis for his claims clear on the record. An en banc decision of this court was disregarded. Finally, at the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court announced its unwillingness to follow the statutory scheme which Congress has created for the treatment and release of those persons who have been acquitted of criminal charges by reason of insanity. We cannot remain silent in the face of such a record.
First. We have repeatedly emphasized that proceedings looking toward the release of patients in Saint Elizabeths Hospital are “not strictly adversary proceedings.” This fact places a unique responsibility upon the court to see that all the relevant evidence is marshalled towards decision, and that alternative dispositions short of total confinement are adequately explored. In the present case, the government did not oppose the hospital’s suggestion that appellant be afforded conditional release, and the government attorney’s participa*510tion in the hearing below was minimal. Accordingly, the trial court certainly had the right and perhaps had the duty to insure that any testimony which it found less than convincing was subjected to rigorous cross-examination. Had it done only this, it would deserve commendation. But regrettably, it appears that the court was more interested in providing answers than eliciting them. It regularly interrupted the witnesses, answered its own and counsel’s questions, and even sought to block answers that appeared contrary to its own evident views. It interrupted cross-examination of appellant’s first witness to return to a point covered several times before, and when the desired answers were still not forthcoming, the witness was dismissed forthwith. Neither appellant’s counsel nor counsel for the government was given an opportunity to state whether he desired further examination. Appellant’s second witness was answering his first question when the court interrupted, asked a question of its own, and immediately cut off the answer. Finally, at the close of the hearing, the court again interrupted appellant’s witness in the middle of an answer, asked a few questions itself, and immediately made its ruling and sought to end the taking of evidence.
Second. In Jenkins v. United States, 113 U.S.App.D.C. 300, 307 F.2d 637 (1962) (en banc), the same judge whose action we now review instructed the jury:
A psychologist is not competent to give a medical opinion as to a mental disease or defect. Therefore, you will not consider any evidence to the effect that the defendant was suffering from a mental disease or a mental defect on June 10, 1959, according to the testimony given by the psychologists.
We reversed and remanded for a new trial, holding inter alia that the “critical factor in respect to admissibility [of the testimony of a psychologist] is the actual experience of the witness and the probable probative value of his opinion.” In a separate concurring opin*511ion, Circuit Judge (now Chief Justice) Burger noted that
[t]he issue is not now and never was whether a psychologist’s testimony is admissible in litigation where “sanity” is in issue. Such testimony has long been admissible in the form of psychological tests and the analysis and explanation of such tests by a psychologist. No one doubts that such matter is admissible
Nevertheless, the trial judge in the middle of the hearing in this case announced that “That doesn’t make any difference, what the Court of Appeals says. That doesn’t convince me.” “I don’t think a Clinical Psychologist has any competency to tell me what a man’s mental condition is.”
I am dubious about the majority’s conclusion that the remarks just quoted may fairly be interpreted as “expressing only [the court’s] opinion as to the weight of the psychologist’s testimony” — that is, as indicating a considered judgment that the professional qualifications of this particular clinical psychologist were such as to divest his testimony of any substantial weight. It seems clear to me that refusal to believe that “a Clinical Psychologist has any competency” to testify on the pertinent issues is nothing less than a continuation of the position we rejected in Jenkins. The trial court was under a duty to follow our decision however much he may have disagreed with it. If he was unwilling or unable to do so, he should have removed himself from the case.
Third. Congress has enacted a comprehensive statutory scheme dealing with the involuntary treatment and confinement of the mentally ill. Broadly stated, one who is mentally ill and, because of that mental illness, likely to injure himself or others may be ordered to undertake a course of treatment for his illness. If nothing short of hospital confinement will protect the patient or the public from serious injury, that may be ordered as well. If confinement is ordered, the patient must be unconditionally released if either he recovers his mental health or, although remaining mentally ill, he is no longer likely to injure himself or other persons if given his freedom. Even if unconditional release would not be warranted, a patient is entitled to conditional release if alternatives less restrictive than total confinement may be fashioned that would adequately protect the patient or the public from serious injury.
With a possible exception not here pertinent, these principles are applicable to all commitments, be they labelled “civil” or those that occur following acquittal of crime by reason of insanity. Any person so committed is eligible for conditional release if conditions may be fashioned that will give adequate assurance that the patient and the public will not thereby suffer serious injury. The District Court, of course, is not bound merely to accept or reject the *512conditions proposed by the hospital or the patient; it may impose any lawful conditions on release that it finds necessary to protect the patient and the public from serious harm. At the close of the hearing below, however, the trial court stated flatly, “I am not going to turn those people loose that are convicted of this type of a crime.”
This is, in other words, a determination that notwithstanding the Congressional judgment that each application for release should be evaluated on the merits, no person committed to Saint Elizabeths Hospital following acquittal by reason of insanity on charges of taking indecent liberties with a minor — a charge carrying a maximum jail sentence of ten years — will ever be eligible for release. Such a general determination is beyond the lawful power of the trial court. In providing a maximum jail term of ten years for the offense, Congress rejected the proposition that every person found to have engaged in indecent liberties with a minor should be confined for life. An application for release is to be judged not according to the personal predilections of the trial court, but rather according to the applicable legal standards regarding the likelihood of future dangerous behavior by the patient and the evidence presented in each individual case. A flat refusal even to consider release for any particular class of patients is directly contrary to the statutory scheme.
IV.
In sum, I do not believe we may fairly remain silent with the present record before us. A judge may understandably have personal feelings of revulsion about certain kinds of deviant behavior. But all litigants in our courts are entitled to a fair hearing of their claims. The importance of such matters far transcends the interests of any individual litigant. “Our concern is with the fair administration of justice. The record discloses not a rare flare-up, not a show of evanescent irritation — a modicum of quick temper that must be allowed even judges,” Offut v. United States, 348 U.S. 11, 17, 75 S.Ct. 11, 15, 99 L.Ed. 11 (1945) (Frankfurter, J.), but an unwillingness to accept the very laws the court is bound to administer. If we are to concern ourselves with the conduct of litigants and their attorneys in the courtroom, we can hardly blind ourselves to the conduct of the most prominent participant in the proceedings.
In the last analysis, respect both for law and for courts cannot be commanded by sanctions, however severe. Respect must be earned. Plainly, it was not on the record before us.
V.
Since the present- case is to be- remanded for the taking of further evidence, I believe it important that we make clear the respective roles of the court and the expert witnesses in cases of this nature, in order to assure that the merits of appellant’s claim are properly considered without risking yet another appeal and remand. As I have said, under our statutes a person committed to Saint Elizabeths Hospital is to be released from the hospital when complete confinement is no longer necessary to protect the individual or the public- from serious in*513jury. For those persons who have been committed under the provisions of the Hospitalization of the Mentally 111 Act —so-called “civilly committed” persons —no judicial action is necessary once the hospital determines that the statutory standards for release have been met. In this regard, persons hospitalized following acquittal of criminal charges by reason of insanity stand in a somewhat different position. In such cases Congress, in order to insure the integrity of the hospital’s determination that the patient’s condition meets the statutory standard for release, has provided that release must be preceded by a judicial determination that the statutory standards for release have been met. In Bolton v. Harris, we expressly upheld this distinction between these two classes of patients committed to the hospital.
The role of the court in such proceedings is a complex and difficult one. It must first determine, as a matter of fact, the patient’s present mental condition; and, if the patient is presently suffering from a mental illness, what effect that illness is likely to have upon the patient’s future behavior. The court must then measure these facts against the statutory standard for compulsory treatment to determine if any restraint whatsoever is warranted. If so, the court must next examine possible conditions that may be placed upon the patient’s release, and the extent to which those conditions may be expected to alleviate any harm that otherwise might result from the patient’s unmodified behavior. If a combination of conditions may be found that would reduce the likelihood of dangerous behavior below the standard required for commitment, the court should order the patient’s release upon those conditions.
The trial court is, of course, responsible for making the findings of fact upon which the ultimate determination of the patient’s eligibility for release will rest. These findings, however, must invariably “be made on the basis of the *514record in the particular case before the court.” That the trial court is charged with the important duty of superintending the hospital’s application of the legal standards for release to the particular patient does not mean that the court may substitute its own opinions for uncontradicted expert testimony with regard to factual matters within the specialized competence of psychiatrists and psychologists.
It is often the case with the behavioral sciences that opinions of qualified experts will differ with regard to the mental condition or expected future behavior of an individual patient. In such cases, the trial court as trier of fact must ultimately resolve any relevant conflicts in the expert testimony. Such resolution may properly be based upon matters before the court in the case at hand, such as the relative experience of the experts whose opinions conflict, their opportunity for examination and observation of the patient, the internal consistency of the experts’ own testimony, and perhaps even their demeanor on the witness stand. Similarly, even where the expert testimony is uncontradicted, it might be possible to imagine a situation in which the experts’ opportunity for examination of the patient was so limited, or their experience with such eases so minimal, that the trial court would be justified in rejecting their testimony in toto. In such a case, the usual remedy would presumably be to order further examination of the patient, or to appoint other qualified experts to examine the patient and testify as to their conclusions. In no event would complete rejection of the expert testimony justify ordering the patient’s return to the hospital for an indefinite period. Instead, it would require the court to order the patient’s release: for since commitment *515must be based upon psychiatric testimony, complete rejection of that testimony would entirely remove the only lawful basis for commitment.
Where uncontradieted expert testimony is provided with an adequate foundation, the trier of fact may not simply pick and choose among the experts’ opinions, accepting some and rejecting others according to his own personal views. Our cases are “not authority for disregarding expert testimony. It must be considered with the other evidence, not arbitrarily rejected.” And the trial court’s opinions, however strongly held, are not evidence in the case. To begin with, judges are not experts in the behavioral sciences, trained in the diagnosis of mental diseases and defects and in predicting their effects upon human behavior. But even if they were, this fact would not justify decision on the basis of those opinions. The Supreme Court has recently reiterated the “elementary” requirement of due process that “the decision maker’s conclusion * * * must rest solely on the legal rules and evidence adduced at the hearing.” Decision on the basis of the trial court’s personal opinions, no matter how well founded, would deny the litigant this right, as well as the right to cross-examination and to an impartial decision maker.
In short, the point of requiring judicial supervision of the release of patients hospitalized following acquittal of crime by reason of insanity is to protect the patient and the public by insuring that statutory standards for release are not subverted by allowing the ultimate determination to be made according to the individual, subjective standards of the hospital staff. This judicial supervision, however, does not entitle the trial court to substitute its own opinions for uncontradieted expert testimony. Determination of the patient’s present mental condition, and of the behavior in which he may be expected to engage if released, must be made on the basis of the expert testimony in the record. Given the facts established by that testimony, including of course the necessary resolution of any relevant conflicts, the function of the trial court is to determine if these facts measure up to the statutory standards for release.