Summary
A 25-year-old electrical engineer was denied a security clearance due to concerns under Guideline H (Drug Involvement) and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The applicant had a history of drug use from 1995 to 2003, including occasional cocaine and marijuana use, psilocybin mushrooms in 2000, and specific instances of cocaine use in 2001 and marijuana use in 2003. Additionally, the applicant was arrested in November 2001 for Driving Under the Influence and convicted of a "wet reckless" in January 2002.
While the judge found that the applicant mitigated concerns related to criminal conduct, the concerns regarding drug involvement were not mitigated. The applicant's history of drug abuse spanned several years, with some use occurring after applying for a security clearance.
The denial was based on the applicant's failure to provide sufficient evidence of rehabilitation or a clear intent to abstain from future drug use. Furthermore, the applicant's attitude towards past drug use raised doubts about their reliability and trustworthiness, leading to the ultimate denial of the security clearance.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- Applicant had a history of drug abuse spanning several years, including use after applying for a security clearance.
- The applicant did not provide sufficient evidence of rehabilitation or a clear intent not to use drugs in the future.
- The applicant's cavalier attitude towards past drug use raised doubts about his reliability and trustworthiness.
Conditions Referenced
- E2.A8.1.2.1appliedDrug Involvement Disqualifying Condition
- E2.A10.1.2.1appliedCriminal Conduct Disqualifying Condition
- E2.A8.1.3.1rejectedDrug Involvement Mitigating ConditionThe applicant's two-year abstinence was insufficient to demonstrate rehabilitation.
- E2.A10.1.3.1appliedCriminal Conduct Mitigating ConditionThe DUI conviction was not recent.
- E2.A10.1.3.2appliedCriminal Conduct Mitigating ConditionThe DUI was considered an isolated incident.
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 issuedMar 18, 2005
- Answer filedApr 6, 2005Amended SOR filed, withdrawing allegations under Guideline E.
- Hearing heldN/ADecided on the written record.
- Decision dateOct 26, 2005
Cite For
- Denial of Clearance Due to Drug Involvement Under Guideline H
- Mitigation of Criminal Conduct Under Guideline J
- Insufficient Evidence of Rehabilitation for Drug Abuse