Summary
A 40-year-old operating engineer was denied a security clearance under Guideline D (Sexual Behavior) and Guideline E (Personal Conduct) due to past criminal charges and a failure to disclose them. The applicant was charged in March 1988 with four counts of rape, stemming from a consensual sexual relationship with a 15-year-old girl when he was 23, which resulted in her pregnancy. In July 1990, he was also charged with rape and statutory burglary. Although found not guilty of these charges, the allegations themselves raised concerns.
Further issues arose from the applicant's security clearance application submitted in March 2001. He failed to disclose the aforementioned criminal charges, as well as a January 2001 arrest for disorderly conduct. The applicant provided incorrect answers in his application and his explanations for these non-disclosures were deemed not credible.
The denial was based on the applicant's failure to disclose multiple criminal charges, the lack of credibility in his explanations for these omissions, and the significant security concerns his past conduct raised regarding his trustworthiness.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- Applicant failed to disclose multiple criminal charges in his security clearance application.
- The applicant's explanations for non-disclosure were deemed not credible.
- The applicant's past conduct raised significant security concerns regarding trustworthiness.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1raisedSexual Behavior of a Criminal Nature
- DC 2appliedDeliberate Omission, Concealment, or Falsification of Relevant and Material Facts
- DC 3appliedSexual Behavior That Causes an Individual to Be Vulnerable to Coercion, Exploitation, or Duress
- DC 4appliedPersonal Conduct or Concealment of Information That Increases an Individual's Vulnerability to Coercion, Exploitation or Duress
Key Rule Quoted
“No one has a right to a security clearance and the clearly consistent standard indicates that security clearance determinations should err, if they must, on the side of denials.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedOct 14, 2003
- Answer filedOct 27, 2003
- Hearing heldJun 7, 2004
- Decision dateAug 23, 2004
Cite For
- Failure to Disclose Criminal Charges in Security Clearance Applications
- Credibility of Applicant's Explanations for Non-disclosure
- Impact of Past Conduct on Trustworthiness for Security Clearance