Summary
A 52-year-old senior systems analyst was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline F (Financial Considerations). The denial stemmed from significant indebtedness exceeding $53,000 and the intentional omission of material financial information on her security clearance application.
Specifically, the applicant failed to disclose several debts on her December 2000 security questionnaire, including a credit account of $7,738, a second credit card debt of $14,619, and a delinquent telephone debt of $154. She also did not list a state education debt of $24,175, a fuel account of $2,494.15, back taxes of $795, and mortgage arrearages of $3,123. The judge found her explanations for these omissions to be contradictory and determined that she intentionally withheld information regarding at least two of the credit debts.
Despite some mitigating circumstances related to her financial difficulties, the judge concluded that her lack of candor regarding her debts was a critical factor. The denial was based on her intentional omission of material financial information and a demonstrated history of not meeting financial obligations, indicating an unwillingness to satisfy debts.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant intentionally omitted material financial information from her security clearance application.
- The applicant had a history of not meeting financial obligations and demonstrated an unwillingness to satisfy debts.
Conditions Referenced
- E2appliedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, or Falsification of Relevant and Material Facts
- F1appliedA History of Not Meeting Financial Obligations
- F3appliedInability or Unwillingness to Satisfy Debts
- F3appliedThe Conditions That Resulted in the Behavior Were Largely Beyond the Person's Control
- F6appliedThe Individual Has Made a Good Faith Effort to Repay Overdue Creditors or Otherwise Resolve Debts
Key Rule Quoted
“The granting (or continuance) of a security clearance under this Directive may only be done upon a finding that to do so is clearly consistent with the national interest.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedApr 30, 2003
- Answer filedUndatedNotarized response to SOR
- Hearing heldAug 7, 2003Testimony taken from Applicant
- Decision dateNov 21, 2003
Cite For
- Intentional Omission of Financial Information Under Guideline E
- History of Financial Obligations Under Guideline F
- Mitigating Circumstances Related to Financial Difficulties