Summary
A 42-year-old electronic technician was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline H (Drug Involvement). The applicant had a history of drug use, including marijuana from approximately 1979 to 1986 and cocaine use at least twice during the same period. He was arrested in July 1992 for cocaine possession, leading to a diversionary program, a fine, and a conditional discharge, and tested positive for cocaine in November 1992.
Significant issues arose from the applicant's personal conduct, specifically regarding falsifications on his security clearance application (SF 86) dated October 27, 1999, and in a sworn statement to the Defense Security Service. He intentionally failed to disclose his cocaine involvement and an arrest for Operating Under the Influence of Liquor/Drugs in December 1999.
Despite admitting to past drug use, the applicant's recent dishonesty about his drug history and the DUI arrest raised serious doubts about his reliability and trustworthiness. The judge found no evidence of rehabilitation or other mitigating circumstances to overcome these concerns, leading to the denial of his security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant admitted to past drug use and falsifications in his security clearance application.
- Recent dishonesty regarding drug use and a DUI arrest undermined trustworthiness.
- No evidence of rehabilitation or mitigating circumstances was presented.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1appliedAny Drug Abuse
- DC 2appliedIllegal Drug Possession
- DC 2appliedDeliberate Omission of Relevant and Material Facts From the SF 86
- DC 3appliedDeliberate Omission of Material Facts From Statement Given to DSS
- DC 5appliedA Pattern of Dishonesty or Rule Violation
- MC 1appliedThe Drug Involvement Was Not Recent
- MC 2rejectedThe Drug Involvement Was Not Infrequent or Isolated
- MC 5rejectedDemonstrated Intent Not to Abuse Drugs in the Future
Key Rule Quoted
“any doubt as to whether access to classified information is clearly consistent with the interests of national security will be resolved in favor of the nation's security.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedJul 17, 2003
- Answer filedAug 10, 2003
- Hearing held—Decision made on the written record without a hearing.
- Decision dateDec 9, 2004
Cite For
- Denial of Clearance Due to Past Drug Involvement Under Guideline H
- Falsification of Material Facts in Security Clearance Applications Under Guideline E
- Lack of Demonstrated Rehabilitation or Mitigating Circumstances in Security Clearance Cases.