Summary
A 32-year-old defense contractor employee was denied a security clearance under Guideline J (Criminal Conduct) due to a 1991 felony conviction for LSD possession. The applicant was initially charged with three felony counts related to the transfer and sale of LSD. Two counts were quickly abandoned, and the applicant negotiated a plea arrangement on the remaining charge of actual transfer. The state agreed to reduce this to simple possession and recommended a four-year prison sentence.
The applicant was sentenced to four years imprisonment, served approximately 90 days, and completed a drug rehabilitation program while incarcerated. While the judge acknowledged evidence of rehabilitation and that the criminal conduct was not recent, the denial was ultimately based on 10 U.S.C. § 986.
This statute precludes security clearance for individuals convicted of serious crimes resulting in imprisonment of more than one year. Despite the application of several mitigating conditions, the applicant's conviction fell under the disqualifying conditions of 10 U.S.C. § 986, which prohibits clearance regardless of other factors.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant's criminal conduct was serious, resulting in a four-year prison sentence, which was not mitigated by evidence of rehabilitation due to the applicability of 10 U.S.C. § 986.
- The applicant's conviction was for a crime that falls under the disqualifying conditions of 10 U.S.C. § 986, which prohibits clearance despite mitigating factors.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A10.1.2.3raisedConviction in a Federal or State Court, Including a Court-martial, of a Crime and Sentenced to Imprisonment for a Term Exceeding One Year.
- E2.A10.1.3.1appliedThe Criminal Behavior Was Not Recent.
- E2.A10.1.3.2appliedThe Crime Was an Isolated Incident.
- E2.A10.1.3.6appliedThere Is Clear Evidence of Successful Rehabilitation.
Key Rule Quoted
“"the clearly consistent standard indicates that security-clearance determinations should err, if they must, on the side of denials."”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedNov 20, 2001
- Answer filedDec 10, 2001
- Hearing heldMar 25, 2002rescheduled due to scheduling conflicts and a medical emergency
- Decision dateApr 22, 2002
Cite For
- Application of 10 U.S.C. § 986 in Security Clearance Cases
- Impact of Felony Convictions on Security Clearance Eligibility
- Consideration of Rehabilitation Evidence in the Context of Disqualifying Criminal Conduct