Summary
A 34-year-old defense contractor was granted a security clearance despite allegations under Guideline E (Personal Conduct) and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The Statement of Reasons alleged the Applicant intentionally falsified material aspects of his personal background during the clearance screening process, specifically denying marijuana use after August 1997 when he had used it until August 1998. It was also alleged he knowingly and willfully provided false material information to the Department of Defense on January 5, 2000, constituting criminal acts.
However, the Administrative Judge found that the Applicant only falsified one statement in January 2000. The Applicant did not falsify a statement in February 2000 or a questionnaire in October 2001.
The Applicant successfully mitigated the Government's concerns by demonstrating that subsequent statements were truthful, and the falsification was an isolated incident that occurred five years prior to the decision. His admissions and clarifications also demonstrated a willingness to cooperate with the investigation. Consequently, the security clearance was granted.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The Applicant provided truthful information in subsequent statements after the initial falsification.
- The falsification was an isolated incident and not recent, occurring five years prior to the decision.
- The Applicant's admissions and clarifications demonstrated a willingness to cooperate with the investigation.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A5.1.2.3raisedDeliberately Providing False or Misleading Information Concerning Relevant and Material Matters to an Investigator
- E2.A10.1.2.1raisedAllegations or Admissions of Criminal Conduct
- E2.A5.1.3.2appliedThe Falsification Was an Isolated Incident, Was Not Recent, and the Individual Has Subsequently Provided Correct Information Voluntarily
- E2.A10.1.3.1appliedThe Criminal Behavior Was Not Recent
- E2.A10.1.3.2appliedThe Crime Was an Isolated Incident
Key Rule Quoted
“Each adjudication is to be an overall common sense determination based upon consideration and assessment of all available information, both favorable and unfavorable.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedApr 26, 2004
- Answer filedMay 18, 2004Applicant requested decision without a hearing.
- Hearing held—No hearing was conducted.
- Decision dateFeb 28, 2005
Cite For
- Mitigation of Falsification Under Guideline E
- Isolated Incidents of Criminal Conduct Under Guideline J
- Truthfulness in Subsequent Statements as a Mitigating Factor