Summary
This case involved a 28-year-old defense contractor whose security clearance was challenged under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The allegations stemmed from a 1997 arrest for marijuana possession and an open container of alcohol. The applicant initially denied this arrest on a security clearance application, believing the matter had been dropped.
The Statement of Reasons detailed the 1997 arrest and the subsequent provision of false information on the security clearance application. Disqualifying conditions were raised under both Guideline E and Guideline J.
Ultimately, the security clearance was GRANTED. The judge found that the falsification was an isolated incident and not recent, with the applicant voluntarily providing correct information once the charge was discovered. Additionally, the applicant's duty performance exceeded expectations, demonstrating reliability and trustworthiness, and he took responsibility for his past conduct, showing significant personal growth since the incident.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The falsification was an isolated incident, not recent, and the Applicant provided correct information voluntarily after discovering the charge.
- The Applicant's duty performance exceeded expectations, demonstrating reliability and trustworthiness.
- The Applicant took responsibility for his past conduct and showed significant personal growth since the incident.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A5.1.2.2raisedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, or Falsification of Relevant and Material Facts
- J2.araisedAllegations or Admission of Criminal Conduct
- J2.braisedA Single Serious Crime or Multiple Lesser Offenses
- E2.A5.1.3.2appliedThe Falsification Was an Isolated Incident, Was Not Recent, and the Individual Has Subsequently Provided Correct Information Voluntarily
- J1.aappliedThe Criminal Behavior Was Not Recent
- J1.bappliedThe Crime Was an Isolated Incident
Key Rule Quoted
“The adjudication process is based on the whole person concept.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedMar 28, 2002
- Answer filedApr 2, 2002undated letter received by DOHA
- Hearing heldJun 25, 2002
- Decision dateDec 17, 2002
Cite For
- Mitigating Factors for Isolated Incidents of Falsification Under Guideline E
- Consideration of Personal Growth and Responsibility in Security Clearance Decisions
- Impact of Prior Criminal Conduct on Security Clearance Eligibility When Mitigated by Time and Behavior Change.