Summary
A 25-year-old defense contractor was denied a security clearance under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline H (Drug Involvement) due to recreational marijuana use and falsification of his application. The applicant had used marijuana recreationally from 1997 to April 2001.
The denial was based on several factors. The applicant falsified his Security Clearance Application (SF-86) by answering "no" to a question about illegal drug use within the last seven years. Furthermore, his recreational marijuana use continued even after he submitted his clearance application in April 2001.
The judge determined that the applicant's dishonesty undermined his trustworthiness, citing his lack of candor and the unconvincing nature of his explanations for his actions. Consequently, the security clearance was denied.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- Applicant used marijuana after applying for a security clearance in April 2001.
- Applicant falsified his clearance application by omitting his drug use.
- The applicant's explanations for his actions lacked credibility and demonstrated a lack of candor.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A5.1.2.2raisedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, or Falsification of Relevant and Material Facts
- E2.A8.1.2.1raisedAny Drug Abuse
- E2.A8.1.2.5raisedRecent Drug Involvement, Especially Following the Granting of a Security Clearance
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 issuedOct 29, 2002
- Answer filedDec 12, 2002
- Hearing held—Applicant requested an administrative decision on the record.
- Decision dateDec 31, 2003
Cite For
- Denial of Clearance Due to Recent Drug Use Under Guideline H
- Falsification of Security Clearance Application Under Guideline E
- Lack of Credibility in Applicant's Explanations for Drug Use and Application Omissions