Summary
A 45-year-old former Army Staff Sergeant was denied a security clearance under Guideline J (Criminal Conduct) due to a conviction for malicious destruction of property. This conviction resulted in a two-year sentence, of which the applicant served 60 days. The Statement of Reasons included allegations both for and against the applicant, and the disqualifying condition E2.A10.1.2.3 was raised.
While the judge acknowledged mitigating conditions E2.A10.1.3.1, E2.A10.1.3.2, and E2.A10.1.3.6, and found that the applicant demonstrated rehabilitation and that the conduct was not recent, the clearance was ultimately denied.
The denial was based on the mandatory provisions of 10 U.S.C. §986, which preclude granting a clearance to an individual convicted of a serious crime and sentenced to imprisonment for more than one year. The judge determined that the applicant's criminal conduct raised significant doubts about his judgment, reliability, and trustworthiness.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant was convicted of a serious crime and sentenced to imprisonment for more than one year, which is disqualifying under 10 U.S.C. §986.
- The judge determined that the applicant's criminal conduct raised doubts about his judgment, reliability, and trustworthiness.
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 issuedJul 3, 2002
- Answer filedJul 24, 2002
- Hearing heldSep 23, 2002
- Decision dateOct 2, 2002
Cite For
- Application of 10 U.S.C. §986 in Security Clearance Cases
- Impact of Criminal Conduct on Security Clearance Eligibility
- Consideration of Rehabilitation in the Context of Disqualifying Offenses