Summary
This case concerns a 36-year-old applicant employed by a government health care benefits company, whose security clearance for a sensitive position was denied under Guideline H (Drug Involvement). The denial stemmed from an extensive history of cocaine use between 1996 and 2004, during which the applicant used cocaine approximately 40 to 100 times and was diagnosed as cocaine dependent.
In 2004, the applicant voluntarily sought a substance abuse evaluation and began a recommended rehabilitation program. However, the program was not completed, and the applicant failed to provide sufficient evidence of sustained abstinence from cocaine use. Although the applicant asserted no cocaine use since August 2004 and has not participated in any sobriety program since that time, these claims were not adequately substantiated.
Despite the application of several mitigating conditions, the applicant's failure to complete the rehabilitation program and provide sufficient evidence of abstinence, combined with the extensive history of cocaine use, raised significant and unresolved trustworthiness concerns. Consequently, the security clearance was denied.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant did not complete the recommended rehabilitation program.
- The applicant failed to provide sufficient evidence of abstinence from cocaine use.
- The applicant's extensive history of cocaine use raised significant trustworthiness concerns.
Conditions Referenced
- DC 1raisedAny Drug Abuse
- MC 1appliedThe Drug Involvement Was Not Recent
- MC 3appliedA Demonstrated Intent Not to Abuse Any Drugs in the Future
- MC 2rejectedThe Drug Involvement Was an Isolated or Infrequent EventThe applicant's cocaine use was extensive and not isolated.
- MC 4rejectedSatisfactory Completion of a Drug Treatment Program Prescribed by a Credentialed Medical ProfessionalThe applicant did not complete the recommended treatment program.
Key Rule Quoted
“The standard that must be met for . . . assignment to sensitive duties is that, based on all available information, the person's loyalty, reliability, and trustworthiness are such that . . . assigning the person to sensitive duties is clearly consistent with the interests of national security.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedAug 25, 2006
- Answer filedSep 20, 2006
- Hearing heldNov 28, 2006
- Decision dateJan 24, 2007
Cite For
- Failure to Complete a Recommended Rehabilitation Program Under Guideline H
- Significant History of Drug Use Impacting Trustworthiness
- Insufficient Evidence of Sustained Abstinence From Drug Use