Summary
A 29-year-old married male with a Master's Degree, employed as a computer scientist for a defense contractor, was granted a Secret-level DoD security clearance despite initial concerns under Guideline H (Drug Involvement). The Statement of Reasons alleged ineligibility due to past illegal drug abuse, specifically marijuana use.
However, the applicant successfully mitigated these concerns. Evidence showed he had not used marijuana since June 1994, demonstrating long-term abstinence. He also credibly expressed an intent to abstain from marijuana and all other illegal drugs in the future.
The judge noted that the applicant's past drug use was primarily infrequent and isolated, occurring mainly during his college years. Based on these mitigating factors, the judge found that the applicant had resolved the government's security concerns, and his security clearance was granted.
Why the Applicant Prevailed
- The applicant had not used marijuana since June 1994, demonstrating long-term abstinence.
- The applicant expressed a credible intent not to use marijuana or any other illegal drug in the future.
- The applicant's drug use occurred primarily during college and was infrequent and isolated.
Conditions Referenced
- H1raisedDrug Involvement
- H2appliedThe Drug Involvement Was Not Recent
- H3appliedThe Drug Involvement Was an Isolated or Infrequent Event
- H4appliedA Demonstrated Intent Not to Abuse Any Drugs in the Future
Key Rule Quoted
“Each adjudication is to be an overall common sense determination based upon consideration and assessment of all available information, both favorable and unfavorable.”
Procedural Posture
- SOR issuedSep 8, 1997
- Answer filedOct 3, 1997
- Hearing heldDec 10, 1997
- Decision dateFeb 26, 1998
Cite For
- Mitigation of Drug Use Under Guideline H
- Demonstrated Intent Not to Use Drugs in the Future
- Consideration of Long-term Abstinence in Security Clearance Decisions