Summary
This case concerns a 23-year-old single computer technician whose security clearance was granted despite a history of drug involvement under Guideline H. The Statement of Reasons alleged two instances of ecstasy use in July 1999 and one instance of marijuana use in either April 1997 or April 1998. These allegations raised Disqualifying Condition 1.
However, the judge found that the applicant successfully mitigated these security concerns. Key factors included the applicant's cessation of illegal drug use since July 1999, demonstrating a significant period of abstinence. He also provided candid and complete disclosure of his past drug use in his security clearance application and subsequent statements, which applied Mitigating Conditions 1 and 3.
Crucially, there was no evidence suggesting drug dependency or any additional misconduct beyond the disclosed past use. Based on these mitigating factors, the judge determined that the security concerns related to his past drug involvement were resolved, and the applicant's security clearance was granted.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The applicant had not used illegal drugs since July 1999.
- He candidly disclosed his past drug use in his security clearance application and subsequent statements.
- There was no evidence of drug dependency or additional misconduct.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1raisedAny Drug Abuse
- MC 1appliedThe Drug Involvement Was Not Recent
- MC 3appliedA Demonstrated Intent Not to Abuse Any Drugs in the Future
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 issuedJan 2, 2003
- Answer filedFeb 19, 2003
- Hearing held—Decision based on written record.
- Decision dateOct 8, 2003
Cite For
- Mitigation of Drug Involvement Under Guideline H
- Candid Disclosure of Past Drug Use as a Mitigating Factor
- Absence of Recent Drug Use as a Basis for Granting Clearance