Summary
A 28-year-old engineer employed by a defense contractor was denied a security clearance under Guideline H (Drug Involvement) due to extensive and prolonged illicit drug use. The applicant's drug involvement began around 1992/1993 in high school with marijuana, which he continued to use weekly to monthly from 1994 to 1997, and twice a month from 1998 to 2001. He also purchased marijuana for personal use on multiple occasions between 1997 and 2001.
Beyond marijuana, the applicant experimented with other illicit substances. He used psilocybin (mushrooms) twice, once in 1998 and again in 2000. Additionally, he used LSD once in 1999 and cocaine once in 1999.
Despite the applicant seeking counseling and expressing a desire to discontinue drug use, the judge found insufficient evidence of long-term behavioral change. The denial was based on the significant duration of drug use, the fact that the last marijuana use occurred less than a year prior to the decision, and the lack of sufficient evidence of rehabilitation or a favorable prognosis from a credentialed professional.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant's drug use spanned a significant period, undermining claims of isolated incidents.
- The applicant's last use of marijuana occurred less than a year prior to the decision, negating mitigating conditions.
- Insufficient evidence of rehabilitation or a favorable prognosis from a credentialed professional was presented.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A8.1.2.1raisedAny Drug Abuse
- E2.A8.1.2.2raisedIllegal Drug Possession
- E2.A8.1.3.1rejectedThe Drug Involvement Was Not RecentThe applicant's last use of marijuana was in July 2002, less than a year before the decision.
- E2.A8.1.3.2rejectedThe Drug Involvement Was an Isolated or Aberrational EventThe applicant's drug use was extensive and not isolated.
- E2.A8.1.3.4rejectedSatisfactory Completion of a Prescribed Drug Treatment ProgramThe record did not confirm whether the counseling was prescribed or voluntary, nor was there a professional prognosis.
Key Rule Quoted
“"[N]o one has a 'right' to a security clearance."”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedNov 15, 2002
- Answer filedDec 2, 2002Applicant requested determination on the record.
- Hearing held—No hearing; case determined on the record.
- Decision dateJun 9, 2003
Cite For
- Extensive Drug Involvement Under Guideline H
- Insufficient Evidence of Rehabilitation
- Recent Drug Use Negating Mitigating Conditions