Summary
A 51-year-old engineer was denied a security clearance under Guideline J (Criminal Conduct) due to two drug-related convictions from 1973 and 1975. The first conviction, in 1973, involved possession and sale of hallucinogens, specifically 3/4 of an ounce of marijuana, leading to a suspended sentence of one year for possession and 20-40 years for sale, served concurrently, with probation.
In 1975, the applicant was arrested and convicted for possession of heroin and possession of heroin for sale, receiving a suspended sentence of two to fifteen years. This second conviction violated his probation from the 1973 case, resulting in a resentencing to 22 to 55 years incarceration, concurrent with the 1975 sentence. He ultimately served five months in prison before being released on five years probation.
Despite the applicant maintaining a DoD security clearance since 1987 without incident and demonstrating a productive life, the judge determined that 10 U.S.C. 986 precluded granting a clearance. This statute prohibits individuals with drug-related convictions resulting in sentences exceeding one year from holding a DoD security clearance, unless a waiver is granted by the Secretary of Defense. The judge concluded that the statutory prohibition was controlling, leading to the denial of the security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- Applicant had two drug-related convictions that resulted in sentences exceeding one year, which are disqualifying under 10 U.S.C. 986.
- The judge found that the statutory prohibition against granting a security clearance due to the applicant's convictions was controlling, despite evidence of rehabilitation.
Conditions Referenced
- J1raisedAny Criminal Conduct
- J2raisedA Single Serious Crime or Multiple Lesser Offenses
- J1appliedThe Criminal Behavior Was Not Recent
- J2rejectedThe Crime Was an Isolated IncidentWhile there were two incidents, they were related and occurred years apart.
- J5appliedThere Is Clear Evidence of Rehabilitation
Key Rule Quoted
“10 U.S.C. 986 precludes the granting or continuation of a DoD security clearance for anyone convicted of a crime and sentenced to more than one year imprisonment.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedApr 18, 2003
- Answer filedMay 14, 2003
- Hearing heldSep 18, 2003
- Decision dateJun 21, 2004
Cite For
- Application of 10 U.S.C. 986 Regarding Security Clearance Eligibility
- Impact of Historical Criminal Conduct on Current Security Clearance Decisions
- Consideration of Rehabilitation in the Context of Disqualifying Criminal Conduct