Title: DEFENSE OFFICE OF HEARINGS
1DEFENSE OFFICE OF HEARINGS APPEALS NCMS
CHESAPEAKE BAY CHAPTERANNUAL SECURITY AWARENESS
SEMINAR12 November 2008
2Whats New
- New Executive Order 13467 aligns clearance and
suitability. - NISPOM 2-202 paragraph governing handling the
SF-86. - DISCO and DOHA both improving processing times.
- Revised Adjudicative Guidelines used across
Government enhance reciprocity and supersede the
2000 DoD foreign passport policy. - 10 USC 986 has been repealed and replaced for
some by an amendment to the Intelligence Reform
and Terrorism Prevention Act, effective January
1, 2008, commonly called the Bond Amendment. - Third-Party Witnesses are now allowed in DoD due
process hearings for military members and
civilian employees of the Department.
3Basis of Personnel SecurityClearance Due Process
- Green v. McElroy (1959), E.O. 10865 (1960), Navy
v. Egan (1988), E.O. 12968 (1995), E.O. 13467
(2008). - DOHA provides the opportunity to appear
personally and to present relevant documents,
materials, and information under both E.O. 10865
and E.O. 12968 as part of due process for all of
the Departments security clearance applicants
and contractors and for the industrial
contractors of 23 other Federal agencies. - Executive Order 13467 does not diminish or
otherwise affect the denial and revocation
procedures provided to individuals covered by
Executive Order 10865 and only amends other parts
of Executive Order 12968 to support clearance
reform.
4 The Opportunity to Appear Personally
- Executive Order 10865, Safeguarding Classified
Information Within Industry as amended January
6, 1993 guarantees the opportunity to appear
personally as part of industrial security
clearance due process and has been reaffirmed by - Executive Order 12829, January 6, 1993
(establishing the NISP) - Executive Order 12968, Access to Classified
Information, August 2, 1995 provides the
opportunity to appear personally and to present
relevant documents and information (stating
this order shall not diminish or otherwise
affect the denial and revocation procedures
provided to individuals covered by Executive
Order No. 10865) - Executive Order 13467 (which replaced Executive
Order 13381), Reforming Processes Related to
Suitability for Government Employment, Fitness
for Contractor Employees, and Eligibility for
Access to Classified National Security
Information, Jun 30, 2008 (states that Nothing
in this order shall diminish or otherwise
affect the denial and revocation procedures
provided to individuals covered by Executive
Order 10865 of February 20, 1960, as amended.).
5Adjudication Due Process
- Preliminary Adjudicative Process
- Largest portion of cases never go to due process,
as adjudicators can make decision to grant
clearance at earliest possible time. - The adjudicators apply common Adjudicative
Guidelines and may grant the clearance or either
issue interrogatories (written questions) to the
individual or request a further investigation, if
potentially disqualifying issues are not resolved
by the investigation. The adjudicator does not
deny or revoke the clearance, but issues a
Statement of Reasons (SOR) if unable to grant the
clearance. The SOR is the start of due process. - Due Process Hearings Files of Relevant Material
- Required before denial, but an SOR can be
withdrawn after the Answer. - Appeals
- In the industrial security clearance process, not
all cases (only between 20 to 30) get appealed.
As a result, this is very efficient as the vast
majority of decisions become final after the
Administrative Judge makes a decision. Either
party (Government or individual) can appeal.
6 Administrative Judge Appeal
Board Decisions
- In Fiscal Year 2008, DOHA Administrative Judges
issued almost 2,000 Decisions. This total
includes 1,288 industrial security clearance
decisions, 70 suitability decisions for ADP
contractors, and 617 recommended decisions in
military and civilian clearance cases. - In Fiscal Year 2008, the DOHA Appeal Board
issued over 250 Decisions in industrial security
clearance cases. - The DOHA Appeal Board is the appellate authority
for industrial security clearance decisions and
suitability decisions for ADP contractors but
only if an appeal is filed. Other component
PSABs review all AJ recommended decisions in
military and civilian clearance cases.
7NISPOM 2-202
- 2-202. Procedures for Completing the Electronic
Version of the SF 86 - a. The FSO or designee shall review the
application solely to determine its adequacy and
to ensure that necessary information has not been
omitted. The FSO or designee shall provide the
employee with written notification that review of
the information is for adequacy and completeness,
information will be used for no other purpose
within the company, and that the information
provided by the employee is protected by the
Privacy Act. The FSO or designee shall not share
information from the employees SF 86 within the
company and shall not use the information for any
purpose other than determining the adequacy and
completeness of the SF 86.
8NISPOM 2-202
- 2-202. Procedures for Completing the Electronic
Version of the SF 86 - b. The FSO or designee shall retain an
original, signed copy of the SF86, the
Authorization for Release of Information and
Records, and Authorization for Release of Medical
Information until the clearance process has been
completed. The FSO or designee shall maintain
the retained documentation in such a manner that
the confidentiality of the documents is preserved
and protected against access by anyone within the
company other than the FSO or designee. When
the applicants eligibility for access to
classified information has been granted or
denied, the retained documentation shall be
destroyed.
9 Adjudication
- A personnel security investigation is reviewed
for investigative scope and adverse information.
In some instances, the case will require
additional information to resolve issues. This
may require returning the case to OPM for further
investigation or the use of interrogatories
(questions to the Subject of the investigation)
to resolve the concern. The adjudicative
guidelines are then applied. If the adverse
information can be mitigated under the guidelines
the case is closed favorably and clearance
eligibility is entered in JPAS. If it cannot,
the individual is issued a Statement of Reasons
and due process begins.
10 Overall Timeliness
- Now the 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism
Prevention Act requires - By December 2006, 80 of clearances processed in
average of 120 days - By December 2009, 90 of clearances processed in
average of 60 days
11 Overall Timeliness
- 2008 Security Clearance Oversight Group Report to
Congress stated that by September 2008 - Agencies will complete 90 of the initial
security clearances, end-to-end, in an average of
1051 days. - - 90 of initial investigations within an
average of 65 days. - - 90 of initial adjudications within an
average of 25 days. - Agencies will complete 90 of their TS
reinvestigations, end-to-end, within an average
of 195 days. - - 90 of investigations within an average of
150 days. - - 90 of adjudications within an average of 30
days. - 1 The sum of the targeted investigation and
adjudication time, plus 14 days for the initial
transmission of the application.
12 Adjudication Timeliness
- From January 2007 to the present, DOHA has had no
backlog. It closed more cases than it received
from DISCO during this period, even when it had
to use overtime to do so. - Over the past year, DOHAs monthly average is
about 24 days for favorable adjudications. -
13 Adjudication Timeliness
- From January 1, 2007 to January 31, 2008, DOHA
adjudicated and closed 23,158 cases, (more than
received) for an average of 1,781 per month.
This total includes favorable decisions,
defaults, and terminations. - DISCO has been dramatically reducing its backlog
while also fine-tuning its processes to clear
more cases without referral to DOHA. - Thus DISCO and DOHA will both be faster.
14 Revised Adjudicative Guidelines
- Revised Adjudicative Guidelines were issued
December 29, 2005, with a Memorandum from Stephen
J. Hadley, Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs, stating that the
President had approved the revision of the
Adjudicative Guidelines for Determining
Eligibility for Access to Classified Information. - The Revised Adjudicative Guidelines are effective
for all new DoD cases and where the Statement of
Reasons is issued on or after September 1, 2006.
15 Foreign Passport PolicyNow Supports
Reciprocity
- Because the Revised Adjudicative Guidelines are
effective for all DoD cases in which the SOR was
issued on or after September 1, 2006, for those
cases, the Revised Adjudicative Guidelines
supersede the 2000 Guidance to DoD Central
Adjudication Facilities (CAFs) Clarifying the
Application of the Foreign Preference
Adjudicative Guideline which stated that
Consistent application of the guideline requires
that any clearance be denied or revoked unless
the applicant surrenders the foreign passport or
obtains official approval for its use from the
appropriate agency of the United States
Government.
16 A Foreign Passport Case
- Mitigating Conditions of the Revised Adjudicative
Guidelines might be applied as follows in a real
decision Applicants Australian citizenship is
derived solely by his birth in Australia to
Australian parents To accommodate the Revised
Guidelines, Applicant has surrendered his
Australian passport to his FSO, and his FSO has
stated any request by the Applicant seeking
return of his Australian passport would be
documented by a JPAS entry explaining such
action.
17 A Foreign Passport Case
- By Applicant surrendering his Australian
passport to his FSO, he forfeits the flexibility
of unfettered and undocumented travel.
Furthermore, any attempt by Applicant to retrieve
his Australian passport will be documented by a
JPAS entry and the U.S. Government will have
knowledge of such action. These collective facts
warrant application of Foreign Preference
Mitigating Conditions (FP MC) 11.a. dual
citizenship is based solely on parents
citizenship or birth in a foreign country and FP
MC 11.e. the passport has been destroyed,
surrendered to the cognizant security authority,
or otherwise invalidated.
1810 USC 986 Repealed
- 10 USC 986 was a Federal statute placing
restrictions on the granting or renewal of
security clearances by the Department of Defense.
- 10 USC 986 Applied to any DOD officer or
employee, officer, director, or employee of a DOD
contractor, or member of Army, Navy, Air Force,
or Marine Corps falling under one or more of
these provisions - (c)(1) The person has been convicted in any
court of the United States of a crime was
sentenced to imprisonment for a term exceeding
one year and was incarcerated as a result of that
sentence for not less than one year - (c)(2) The person is an unlawful user of, or is
addicted to, a controlled substance (21 USC 802) - (c)(3) Is mentally incompetent, as determined by
a mental health professional approved by the
Department of Defense or - (c)(4) Has been discharged or dismissed from the
Armed Forces under dishonorable conditions.
19 2008 Amendment to IRTPA
- Effective January 1, 2008, Public Law 110-181,
Section 3002 (the Bond Amendment) repealed Title
10 U.S.C. 986 (the Smith Amendment), which
applied only to the Department of Defense (DoD).
Section 3002 also provided an amendment to the
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act.
- The Bond Amendment prohibits all Federal agencies
from granting or renewing a security clearance
for any covered person who is an unlawful user of
a controlled substance or is an addict under the
Controlled Substances Act.
20 2008 Amendments to IRTPA (continued)
- Now the provisions pertaining to individuals who
have been convicted of crimes and incarcerated
for not less than one year, who have been
discharged or dismissed from the Armed Forces
under dishonorable conditions, or who are
mentally incompetent, apply only to those
applicants seeking clearances that provide access
to Special Access Programs (SAP), Restricted Data
(RD), or Sensitive Compartmented Information
(SCI). - This is a significant change from 10 U.S.C. 986.
This change is also effective January 1, 2008.
21 2008 Amendments to IRTPA (continued)
- A Federal agency may not grant or renew a
security clearance to individuals seeking
clearances that provide access to Special Access
Programs (SAP), Restricted Data (RD), or
Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) (1)
who have been convicted of crimes and
incarcerated for not less than one year, (2) who
have been discharged or dismissed from the Armed
Forces under dishonorable conditions, and (3) who
are determined to be mentally incompetent.
22 2008 Amendments to IRTPA (continued)
- Individuals previously barred under the Smith
Amendment may now be eligible for reconsideration
for a security clearance and do not have to wait
the normal year to re-apply. - USDI has worked successfully with both the ODNI
and the Personnel Security Working Group to
develop policy guidance to implement the
statutory change.
23 DoD Implementation of Bond Amendment to IRTPA
- On June 20, 2008, the Deputy Under Secretary of
Defense (HUMINT, Counterintelligence Security)
signed out a four-page memorandum to the
Departments adjudicators implementing the Bond
Amendment. - This guidance is designed to maximize the
efficiency with which the Departments security
clearance adjudicators will handle the relatively
small number of cases in which the facts trigger
the Bond Amendment.
24One Less Due Process Difference
- -- The opportunity to call third-party witnesses
enjoyed by industrial clearance holders and
applicants has now been extended to military
personnel and DoD civilian employees by a
Memorandum signed 19 November 2007 by the Under
Secretary of Defense (Intelligence) titled
Amendment to DoD Regulation 5200.2-R to Delete
Bar on Witnesses. That Memorandum directs the
implementation of this important change to DoD
5200.2-R by deleting, effective immediately, the
sentence in Appendix 13, Paragraph AP 13.1.5.4
which stated that The appellant will not have
the opportunity to present or cross-examine
witnesses.
25 Visit the DOHA Web Site
- Feel free to direct an individual with questions
to the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals web
site address - http//www.defenselink.mil.dodgc.doha
- This site provides information about DOHA
programs and can answer many questions. All
Administrative Judge and Appeal Board Decisions
since 1996 are published on the DOHA website for
anyone to read in redacted form (to protect
personal privacy). In addition, you can advise
any individual that they can call DOHA at either -
- 1-866-231-3153 (Arlington, Virginia) or
- 1-614-827-1619 (Columbus, Ohio) to ask about a
case.