Summary
A security clearance holder was denied a clearance due to concerns under Guideline E (Personal Conduct), Guideline H (Drug Involvement), and Guideline J (Criminal Conduct). The Statement of Reasons detailed allegations including a history of marijuana use, intentional falsification of security forms, and providing false information to an investigator. Specifically, the applicant used marijuana from 1964 until March 1996 and intentionally misrepresented this use on multiple occasions, even indicating a willingness to use it again in the future.
The judge found that the applicant deliberately omitted, concealed, or falsified material facts on personnel security questionnaires and provided false information to an investigator. This pattern of dishonesty and criminal conduct, specifically related to intentional falsifications regarding drug use, raised significant security concerns.
Despite presenting character references and attending counseling, the judge determined there was insufficient evidence of rehabilitation and that the applicant's assurances of future abstinence from marijuana lacked credibility. Consequently, the security clearance was denied.
Why the Applicant Was Denied
- The applicant had a history of marijuana use from 1964 until March 1996, raising security concerns.
- The applicant intentionally falsified information on multiple security questionnaires and during interviews.
- The applicant's repeated assurances of future abstinence from marijuana were not credible, given his history of non-compliance.
Conditions Referenced
- AG ¶ 24raisedDrug Involvement
- AG ¶ 15raisedPersonal Conduct
- AG ¶ 30raisedCriminal Conduct
Key Rule Quoted
“An applicant's drug history is relevant and material to his suitability for safeguarding classified information.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedAug 19, 1996
- Answer filedOct 28, 1996
- Hearing heldJun 17, 1997
- Decision dateSep 11, 1997
Cite For
- Pattern of Intentional Falsifications Impacting Security Clearance Eligibility
- Credibility Issues Related to Past Drug Use and Dishonesty
- Insufficient Evidence of Rehabilitation Despite Favorable Character References