Summary
A 44-year-old electrician was granted a security clearance despite concerns under Guidelines E (Personal Conduct), G (Alcohol Consumption), and J (Criminal Conduct). The Statement of Reasons detailed several alcohol-related incidents, including a public intoxication arrest in May 1983 and a DWI conviction in April 1998. Additionally, the applicant was terminated from a job in 2005 for consuming alcohol before work.
Further allegations included the applicant's intentional failure to disclose this alcohol-related termination on his SF 86 and during a security investigator interview, which was also alleged to constitute a felony. Disqualifying conditions G.1, E.2, and J.1 were raised.
However, the applicant successfully mitigated these concerns. He demonstrated that the alcohol-related incidents did not indicate a pattern of abuse, and his blood-alcohol level during the 2005 incident was low, not indicating impairment. The applicant also established that his conduct was motivated by a medical need rather than personal enjoyment. Based on these mitigating factors, the security clearance was granted.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The applicant successfully demonstrated that the alcohol-related incidents did not indicate a pattern of abuse.
- The applicant's blood-alcohol level during the incident was low and did not indicate impairment.
- The applicant's conduct was motivated by a medical need rather than personal enjoyment.
Conditions Referenced
- G.1raisedAlcohol Consumption
- E.2raisedPersonal Conduct
- J.1raisedCriminal Conduct
- G.1appliedAlcohol ConsumptionThe incidents do not indicate a pattern of alcohol abuse.
- G.2appliedAlcohol ConsumptionThe problem occurred a number of years ago and there is no indication of a recent problem.
- E.2rejectedPersonal ConductThe government did not prove the applicant's state of mind regarding the omission.
Key Rule Quoted
“"[N]o one has a 'right' to a security clearance."”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedNov 4, 2005
- Answer filedNov 17, 2005
- Hearing heldMar 28, 2006
- Decision dateMay 23, 2006
Cite For
- Mitigation of Alcohol-related Incidents Under Guideline G
- Consideration of Applicant's State of Mind in Personal Conduct Allegations
- Impact of Low Blood-alcohol Levels on Employment-related Terminations.