Summary
A 47-year-old Financial Control Analyst was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct), Guideline F (Financial Considerations), and Guideline H (Drug Involvement). The applicant had a history of marijuana use spanning from 1974, when he was nineteen, until February 1998. This included using illegal drugs after being granted a security clearance in 1981.
Additionally, the applicant was found to have intentionally falsified material information on his security clearance application. While he had an outstanding debt of $1,878.00 to a mortgage company, which was still reflected on his credit reports, he had since paid off this obligation, demonstrating good financial judgment.
Despite resolving the financial debt, the applicant failed to provide sufficient evidence of rehabilitation or reform regarding his prolonged drug use and the intentional dishonesty on his application. The denial was based on his long history of drug abuse, which extended over 28 years and included use after being granted a prior clearance, and his intentional falsification of material information, indicating poor judgment and unreliability.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant had a long history of drug abuse, which extended over 28 years and included use after being granted a security clearance.
- The applicant intentionally falsified material information on his security clearance application, demonstrating poor judgment and unreliability.
Conditions Referenced
- H1raisedDrug Abuse
- E2raisedFalsification of Information
- F6appliedGood-faith Effort to Repay Debts
Key Rule Quoted
“The adjudicative process is an examination of a sufficient period of a person's life to make an affirmative determination that the person is an acceptable security risk.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedJun 7, 2002
- Answer filedAug 9, 2002
- Hearing heldDec 17, 2002
- Decision dateFeb 12, 2003
Cite For
- Long History of Drug Abuse Impacting Security Clearance Eligibility
- Material Falsification on Security Clearance Applications as a Disqualifying Factor
- Good Financial Management as a Mitigating Condition Under Guideline F