Date: February 27, 1997

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In re:

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SSN: -----------

Applicant for Security Clearance

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ISCR OSD Case No. 96-0360

DECISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE

KATHRYN MOEN BRAEMAN

APPEARANCES

FOR THE GOVERNMENT

Matthew E. Malone, Esq.

Peregrine D. Russell-Hunter, Esq.

Department Counsel

FOR THE APPLICANT

Rudolf A. Carrico, Jr., Esq .

La Plata, MD.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

The Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals (DOHA) issued a Statement of Reasons (SOR) to the Applicant on September 24, 1996. (Copy attached.) The SOR detailed reasons why the Government could not make the preliminary affirmative finding that it is clearly consistent with the national interest to grant or continue a security clearance for the Applicant.(1) The SOR consists of allegations based on Criterion J (pattern of criminal activity) paragraph 1. Applicant responded to the allegations set forth in the SOR in a written Answer, dated October 14, 1996, and chose to have a hearing. This matter was assigned to me on November 18, 1996; but I did not receive it until November 21, 1996. On December 6, 1996, this case was set for hearing on January 3, 1997, and the hearing was held that date. The Government called no witnesses, but offered 18 exhibits. (Part of one exhibit, 15A, was not admitted into evidence; but it remains in the record for review). The Applicant's counsel called six witnesses to testify, including Applicant, and offered fourteen exhibits. (Exhibits I and L were not admitted but remain in the record for review).

The record remained open for an additional ten working days, so that the Applicant's counsel could submit his legal memorandum by January 10, 1997,(2)

and Department Counsel could then have time to submit their reply by January 17, 1997. The transcript (TR) was received on January 14, 1997.

It is my role as administrative judge to determine whether it is clearly consistent with the national interest to grant or continue a security clearance for Applicant.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Applicant only admitted in his Answer that he had been arrested on the dates listed in the SOR. These limited admissions are incorporated herein as findings of fact. After a complete and thorough review of the evidence in the record, and upon due consideration of the same, I make the following additional Findings of Fact:

Applicant, a 46-year old --------------- employed by a defense contractor (Company #1) from November 1993 to present, has a secret security clearance reinstated on February 3, 1994, which had been initially granted in May 1987 when he worked for another defense contractor from 1987 to 1993 (Company #2). Exhibits 1, 2, 16 & 17. He first obtained a security clearance in 1973. TR 198.

Applicant completed a National Agency Questionnaire (NAQ) on December 22, 1993, where he revealed the following:

(1) his November 28, 1983, arrest for Public Indecency and Battery(3) where the charges were dismissed after he voluntarily went for counseling; (TR 199)

(2) his August 1992 arrest for Malicious Destruction of Property and Battery which was indefinitely postponed and placed on the stet docket after he attended Batterer's Group Therapy;

(3) his November 6, 1993, arrest for domestic violence and battery which at that point was set to go to trial on December 23, 1993. Exhibit 2 at 3-5.

A Ph.D. psychologist reported that he voluntarily came to her for therapy related to his 1983 arrest for indecent exposure and battery on December 2, 1983, and that she met with for seven sessions to address "control of his compulsive sexual behavior as well as the breaking up of his sexual patterns of responding to stress." She did not believe the incident including battery. She determined he had a very good prognosis as he admitted his behavior. Exhibit 6, TR 251-255. In April, 1984, she summarized his treatment as consisting of sixteen counseling sessions and that he never missed an appointment. She recommended that Applicant terminate his counseling because he was accepting a position in another state. Exhibit C.

With respect to his August 1992 arrest, treatment center #1 confirmed that he was referred by the state's attorney on November 23, 1992, for domestic violence services and that he did participate in the Domestic Violence Batterer's group weekly from December 8, 1992, to January 16, 1992 (sic.) and successfully completed the program. TR 203-204; Exhibit D. Applicant then sought therapy at treatment center #2 on January 14, 1993, for counseling on his difficulty in managing his anger. The psychiatrist diagnosed him with 309.40 adjustment disorder; Applicant dropped out but needed further therapy. Exhibit 8. State district court records referenced two incident complaints, one in January 1992 and one in July 1992, by his estranged girlfriend that led to his arrest on August 29, 1992, for battery and property destruction. The January 1992, incident involved his girlfriend (who later became his wife) who went to her daughter's birthday at her former husband's house and staying too long which angered Applicant; she waited seven months to file charges. TR 201-202, 228-230. There was another incident in July 1992 when Applicant asked her to leave and grabbed her arm to escort her out of the house and her watchband fell off and broke. TR 203, 230-232. The records confirm his statement that the case was placed on the stet docket and continued until he completed treatment. TR 232-236; Exhibits 7-8 & A.

In June 1993 he married his girlfriend, and their daughter was born in July 1993, but their problems in the relationship continued. TR 205, 237. On October 6, 1993, he was again arrested on two charges of battery on his wife and 17 year-old step-daughter. TR 205-207, 237-238; Exhibit 10. Applicant was given 120 days jail time suspended and eighteen months probation on December 2, 1993, for the offense of battery. TR 238-239; Exhibit 11.

Although they were no longer living together, on December 20, 1994, there was another incident of battery against his wife. TR 208- 211, 239-240; Exhibits 12 & 13. The complaint describes Applicant as having "put victim in full Nelson and pushed her out door" and as having "placed her a hold described as a full Nelson, and pushed her out the door." Exhibit 12. Applicant in his Statement to DIS on November 5, 1995, admitted he put his wife "in a full Nelson,(4) which I considered a minimal force alternative, and walked her out of the front door." Exhibit 14. He was arrested in January 1995 on a charge of battery and on ay 4, 1995, was found guilty and in violation of probation on his prior charge of battery. TR 212. He was sentenced to ten days in jail for the 1994 incident and to 120 days for the violation of probation. He appealed. Exhibits 14 and 15 at pages 9, 13, 17-20. After the circuit court heard the matter on February 5, 1996, the outcome on appeal was that the battery charge was dismissed, but Applicant was found guilty of violation of probation and sentenced to sixty days, thirty in a detention center and thirty days on home detention which were to be completed on April 2, 1996, with no further probation required.

Applicant during this period remained in the employment of Company #1, performed his engineering services in support of the federal contract, and kept his supervisor and the FSO advised of the situation. Exhibit 17.

While he was arranging bail on the 1994 battery incident on May 4, 1995, he was served papers accusing him of threatening arson and communicating a threat against a state official. Exhibits 14 and 15. The arrest records indicate that the wife applied for a statement of charges on March 21, 1995, because the Applicant allegedly threatened to blow up the courthouse and allegedly said that "If that judge says that [his child] goes to a foster home, he's dead. I guarantee he'll be dead before he utters another word."(5) Exhibit 15 at 1-2. This disputed conversation between Applicant and his wife was taped by her without his permission. TR 214; Exhibit B.

I find Applicant credible in his consistent position that he had does not recall that disputed conversation exactly and that he did not intend a real threat. During that period he and his wife were having many conversations, some of them quite heated. TR 220, 256-259. For example, his memory that his wife called him(6) was supported by her divorce deposition admission. He did concede that the disputed telephone conversation involved a discussion of the custody of his daughter and whether or not the court might put her in a foster home or put her up for adoption and deny him visitation rights. He offered a reasonable explanation that his anger was not at the judicial system, but at his wife who pushed his buttons in this sensitive area. TR 220-221, 225. Indeed, Applicant has not actually listened to the tape of this conversation as a copy of the actual tape was never produced to Applicant or his lawyer. TR 213-214. [The tape was not offered in evidence.]

Further adding to my assessment of Applicant's credibility is that his October 5, 1995, Statement to DIS, was consistent with his testimony and the other evidence at the security hearing. Applicant explained that his estranged wife illegally recorded a telephone conversation in February 1995 which led to his arrest for arson and threats. Exhibit 14. Applicant told DIS that he had "no recollection of saying I was going to blow up the courthouse or shoot the judge; however, the telephone call does indicate I made such threats." He stated he was not a terrorist and would "not know how to make a bomb or blow up a building." He admitted that his "ex-wife is prone to make me angry at which time I blow up and run off at the mouth; however, I am not one to follow my comments up with action." Exhibit 14 at 1-2.

Significant contemporaneous evidence indicates that the alleged threat was not a real threat: