Summary
A 58-year-old federal contractor employee was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline G (Alcohol Consumption). The denial stemmed from two alcohol-related driving incidents in 1985 and 1999, both of which resulted in probation.
The primary issue was the applicant's repeated failure to disclose these incidents on multiple security clearance applications and subsequent written interrogatories. This pattern of dishonesty, specifically falsifying information by denying any alcohol-related arrests or probation, raised significant trustworthiness concerns.
While Disqualifying Conditions 2 and 5 were raised, and Mitigating Conditions 1 and 2 were applied, the applicant's inability to recognize the importance of truthfulness and honesty was a significant factor in the final decision. The repeated failure to disclose the incidents established a pattern of dishonesty, leading to the denial of the security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant falsified information on his security clearance application by denying any alcohol-related incidents, arrests, or probation.
- The applicant's repeated failure to disclose his alcohol-related incidents on multiple security questionnaires established a pattern of dishonesty.
- The applicant's inability to recognize the importance of truthfulness and honesty was a significant factor in the denial.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 2appliedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, or Falsification of Relevant and Material Facts
- DC 5appliedA Pattern of Dishonesty or Rule Violations
- MC 1appliedThe Alcohol-related Incidents Do Not Indicate a Pattern
- MC 2appliedThe Problem Occurred a Number of Years Ago and There Is No Indication of a Recent Problem
Key Rule Quoted
“The clearly consistent standard indicates that trustworthiness determinations should err, if they must, on the side of denials.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedDec 30, 2003
- Answer filedJan 16, 2004Applicant elected to have the case decided on the written record.
- Hearing held—No hearing; decided on the written record.
- Decision dateSep 30, 2004
Cite For
- Pattern of Dishonesty Under Guideline E
- Failure to Disclose Alcohol-related Incidents on Security Applications
- Trustworthiness Concerns Due to Falsification of Information