Summary
A 22-year-old U.S. Government contractor employee was denied a Secret security clearance under Guideline H (Drug Involvement) due to past marijuana use. The applicant admitted to using marijuana with varying frequency from approximately October 1994 to at least June 1996. Although he claimed he would not use marijuana in the future, this intent was deemed insufficiently demonstrated.
Specifically, the applicant expressed uncertainty regarding his ability to resist future peer pressure to use marijuana. Despite not having used marijuana for over nine months prior to the hearing, the judge found this lack of demonstrated intent concerning.
The decision cited Disqualifying Conditions H.1 and H.3, while Mitigating Conditions H.2 and H.3 were considered. Ultimately, the applicant's security clearance was denied due to the unresolved concerns about potential future marijuana use.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The applicant's marijuana use was infrequent and occurred over a 20-month period.
- He has not used marijuana for over nine months prior to the hearing.
Conditions Referenced
- H.1raisedAny Drug Abuse
- H.3rejectedCurrent Drug InvolvementThe applicant has not used marijuana since June 1996.
- H.2appliedIsolated or Infrequent Drug Involvement
- H.3rejectedDemonstrated Intent Not to Abuse Drugs in the FutureThe applicant's intent was not sufficiently demonstrated.
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 issuedJan 16, 1997
- Answer filedJan 27, 1997
- Hearing heldMar 26, 1997
- Decision dateMay 28, 1997
Cite For
- Evaluation of Infrequent Drug Use Under Guideline H
- Insufficient Demonstration of Intent Not to Use Drugs in the Future
- Consideration of Peer Pressure in Drug Use Determinations