Summary
A 29-year-old associate engineer for a defense contractor was denied a security clearance under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The denial stemmed primarily from the applicant's falsification of his security clearance application (SF-86) and a history of arrests.
Specifically, the applicant omitted multiple arrests from his SF-86, which raised significant concerns regarding his judgment and trustworthiness. This failure to disclose was compounded by his delay in correcting these omissions until confronted by authorities, further undermining his credibility.
While mitigating conditions were considered regarding the timing of some arrests, the applicant's consistent pattern of dishonesty and failure to disclose relevant information on his SF-86 were deemed sufficiently serious to warrant the denial of his security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant falsified his security clearance application by omitting multiple arrests, which raised significant concerns about his judgment and trustworthiness.
- The applicant failed to correct his omissions in a timely manner before being confronted by authorities, undermining his credibility.
- The applicant's pattern of dishonesty and failure to disclose relevant information on his SF-86 were deemed serious enough to warrant denial of clearance.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 2raisedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, Falsification or Misrepresentation of Relevant and Material Facts
- DC 5raisedA Pattern of Dishonesty or Rule Violations
- MC 2rejectedThe Falsification Was an Isolated Incident, Was Not Recent, and the Individual Has Subsequently Provided Correct Information VoluntarilyThe applicant failed to take advantage of earlier opportunities to correct his SF-86 omissions.
- MC 3rejectedPrompt, Good Faith Disclosure of Relevant InformationThe applicant did not disclose omitted information until confronted over a year later.
Key Rule Quoted
“Deviation tolerances for incidents of trust betrayal are calibrated narrowly.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedJul 16, 2003
- Answer filedAug 23, 2003
- Hearing heldOct 29, 2003
- Decision dateNov 28, 2003
Cite For
- Falsification of Security Clearance Applications Under Guideline E
- Pattern of Dishonesty Impacting Security Clearance Eligibility
- Timeliness of Disclosure in Security Clearance Cases