Summary
A 40-year-old woman seeking Common Access Card (CAC) eligibility was denied due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The Statement of Reasons detailed multiple past incidents, including an arrest for cruelty to animals on May 21, 2010, and charges on January 14, 2011, for giving a false name to a police officer, possession of marijuana, and drug paraphernalia.
Further allegations included an April 27, 2012 arrest for theft by deception involving bad checks under $50 and other bad checks under $10, for which she was found guilty on all counts. She was also charged with reckless driving on March 29, 2013. Earlier arrests on April 14, 2008, and April 30, 2008, were for harassing communications stemming from a dispute.
The denial was based on the applicant's admitted criminal offenses, including theft by deception and providing false information to law enforcement. The judge found her explanations for omissions on her employment application unconvincing and lacking candor, concluding that her history of minor violations and recent falsification undermined her trustworthiness.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant admitted to multiple criminal offenses, including theft by deception and providing false information to law enforcement.
- The judge found the applicant's explanation for omissions on her employment application to be unconvincing and lacking in candor.
- The applicant's history of minor violations and recent falsification of her application undermined her trustworthiness.
Conditions Referenced
- 2.araisedCriminal or Dishonest Conduct
- 3.braisedMaterial, Intentional False Statement
Key Rule Quoted
“The overriding factor for all of these conditions is unacceptable risk.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedNov 9, 2017
- Answer filedDec 13, 2017
- Hearing heldApr 12, 2018
- Decision dateJun 15, 2018
Cite For
- Denial of CAC Eligibility Due to a Pattern of Criminal Conduct
- Lack of Candor in Employment Applications
- Unacceptable Risk Standard in CAC Adjudications