Summary
A 46-year-old senior electronics engineer was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline D (Sexual Behavior), Guideline E (Personal Conduct), and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The applicant had a history of sexually molesting his six-year-old nephew in November 1981 and his nine-year-old daughter in February 1988. He participated in a sexual offenders therapy group from June 1988 to June 1989.
Further issues included charges of aggravated sexual battery and forcible sodomy in September 1994, which were dismissed in January 1996. In January 1996, he pleaded guilty to a simple assault charge, receiving a 12-month suspended jail sentence. The applicant also deliberately falsified a statement to Air Force investigators in February 1983 regarding his sexual misconduct with his nephew and omitted his January 1996 assault conviction from his most recent security clearance application (SF 86).
The judge found that the applicant failed to mitigate these concerns, specifically by not accepting full responsibility for his past sexual conduct, which undermined confidence in his rehabilitation. His deliberate falsification of statements to the government and his history of criminal conduct, including molestation and assault, indicated a lack of judgment and reliability, leading to the denial of his security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant failed to accept full responsibility for his past sexual conduct, undermining confidence in his rehabilitation.
- The applicant's deliberate falsification of statements to the government raised significant security concerns.
- The applicant's history of criminal conduct, including molestation and assault, indicated a lack of judgment and reliability.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1appliedCriminal Conduct
- DC 2appliedCriminal Conduct
- DC 4appliedSexual Behavior
- MC 2appliedMore Than 10 Years Since Last Incident
- MC 4rejectedPast Conduct Known to FamilyThe applicant's lack of acceptance of responsibility undermined the mitigating effect.
Key Rule Quoted
“A person with such access enters into a fiduciary relationship with the government based on trust and confidence.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedJul 28, 2004
- Answer filed—
- Hearing heldNov 15, 2005
- Decision dateMay 31, 2006
Cite For
- Failure to Mitigate Security Concerns Related to Sexual Behavior Under Guideline D
- Deliberate Falsification of Statements to the Government Under Guideline E
- Criminal Conduct Indicating Lack of Judgment Under Guideline J