Summary
A 49-year-old maintenance carpenter was denied a security clearance under Guideline G (Alcohol Consumption) due to a history of alcohol dependence and continued consumption despite treatment and recommendations for abstinence. The Statement of Reasons detailed a March 1998 arrest for driving under the influence, which led to probation and ordered alcohol abuse treatment. During this treatment, the applicant was diagnosed as alcohol dependent and advised to abstain from alcohol.
However, the applicant continued to consume alcohol until at least December 2003, despite the advice to remain abstinent. The judge determined that the applicant failed to mitigate the security concerns arising from his alcohol use.
The denial was based on the applicant's continued alcohol consumption after being diagnosed as dependent and advised to abstain, his history of alcohol-related incidents, and the finding that his recent attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous was insufficient to predict future sobriety.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant continued to consume alcohol despite being diagnosed as alcohol dependent and advised to abstain.
- The applicant's recent attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous was deemed insufficient to predict future sobriety.
- The applicant's history of alcohol-related incidents raised significant security concerns.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1appliedAlcohol-related Incidents Away From Work
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 issuedNov 7, 2003
- Answer filedNov 21, 2003
- Hearing heldFeb 4, 2004
- Decision dateApr 1, 2004
Cite For
- Denial of Security Clearance Due to Alcohol Dependence Under Guideline G
- Insufficient Evidence of Rehabilitation in Alcohol-related Cases
- Impact of Recent Alcohol Consumption on Security Clearance Eligibility