Security clearance cases are rarely lost because of a single issue.

They are lost because of how that issue is documented, interpreted, and evaluated over time.

In this series, we break down real-world security clearance fact patterns and analyze:

  • what is actually happening inside the system

  • how adjudicators will read the case

  • what a Statement of Reasons (SOR) will likely say

  • and what a winning strategy looks like


The Fact Pattern

An applicant:

  • accepts a sensitive federal position

  • completes the SF-86

  • begins working while the clearance is pending

During the investigation, the government identifies:

  • a prior VA psychiatric hold

  • documentation classifying the hold as involuntary

  • records referencing heavy cannabis use during that period

The applicant had reported:

  • the hold as voluntary

  • no illegal drug use

The applicant then:

  • receives a Letter of Interrogatory (LOI)

  • responds without understanding the significance

  • is later asked to provide supporting documentation

Those documents do not fully align with prior disclosures.

The applicant now expects a Statement of Reasons (SOR).


What Is Actually Happening in This Case

At first glance, this looks like a mental health and drug use issue.

It is not.

This is primarily a:

👉 credibility and candor case

The government is no longer focused on:

  • what happened

It is focused on:

  • whether the applicant can be trusted


Why the LOI Stage Changed Everything

The LOI is one of the most misunderstood stages in a clearance case.

Many applicants think it is:

  • a clarification step

  • a routine follow-up

  • or a chance to explain

In reality:

👉 The LOI response becomes part of the permanent record

👉 It often becomes the foundation for the SOR

👉 It is where many cases are quietly won—or lost

By responding without strategy, the applicant has now:

  • created a second version of events

  • committed to language that will be compared later

  • increased the risk of inconsistency


What the Statement of Reasons (SOR) Will Likely Say

If an SOR is issued, it will likely include allegations under:

Guideline E — Personal Conduct

Specifically:

  • falsification or omission on the SF-86

  • inconsistency between SF-86, LOI, and records

  • questions about candor and reliability


Possibly Additional Guidelines

Depending on facts, it may also include:

Guideline H — Drug Involvement

  • cannabis use

  • frequency and recency

  • reliability concerns

Guideline I — Psychological Conditions

  • nature of the hold

  • stability and treatment

  • whether the condition affects judgment


How the Allegations Will Be Framed

The SOR will not say:

“You used cannabis”

“You had a psychiatric hold”

Instead, it will say something like:

  • you provided inconsistent information

  • your disclosures conflict with official records

  • your statements raise concerns about candor

👉 That framing is what makes the case dangerous


How Adjudicators Will Read This Case

Adjudicators do not read cases as isolated facts.

They read them as patterns.


What They Will Compare

They will line up:

  • SF-86 responses

  • LOI responses

  • medical records

  • investigator notes

And ask:

  • Are these consistent?

  • Do explanations change?

  • Does the applicant minimize or shift framing?


What Raises Concern

The biggest risks are:

  • voluntary vs involuntary classification mismatch

  • omission or denial of drug use

  • explanations that evolve after documentation appears

These create the appearance of:

👉 minimization

👉 lack of candor

👉 or selective disclosure


What They Actually Care About

The adjudicator is asking:

“Can I trust this person going forward?”

Not:

“Was this person perfect in the past?”


Why This Case Is Still Winnable

Despite the risks, this type of case is often salvageable.


Reason 1: The Underlying Issues Are Mitigable

  • mental health treatment is often neutral or positive if properly framed

  • cannabis use is evaluated based on recency, frequency, and behavior

These issues alone do not usually cause denial.


Reason 2: The Inconsistency May Be Explainable

Key distinction:

👉 misunderstanding vs intentional deception

Examples that matter:

  • misunderstanding VA classification terminology

  • misunderstanding disclosure requirements

  • answering without realizing legal significance

  • lack of guidance


Reason 3: Timing Is Not Too Late

This case is:

  • post-LOI

  • pre-SOR

That is one of the last points where:

👉 the record can still be stabilized


What a Winning Mitigation Strategy Looks Like

This is where most cases succeed or fail.


Step 1: Stabilize the Record

The goal is not to:

  • “correct everything”

  • or introduce new conflicting explanations

The goal is:

👉 one consistent, supportable narrative going forward


Step 2: Address the Inconsistency Directly

A strong response will:

  • acknowledge discrepancies

  • explain the reason for them clearly

  • avoid defensive or shifting language


Step 3: Reframe the Underlying Issues

The case should show:

  • mental health = treatment, stability, responsibility

  • cannabis use = past behavior, not ongoing risk


Step 4: Demonstrate Credibility Going Forward

This is critical.

The adjudicator must believe:

👉 the current version is complete and reliable


Step 5: Build Institutional Defensibility

The final question is:

“Can I approve this case and defend that decision later?”

Your mitigation must answer:

👉 yes


The Real Lesson From This Case

This situation is extremely common.

The pattern looks like this:

  • SF-86 completed without strategy

  • LOI answered casually

  • documentation later conflicts

  • SOR issued

And at that point:

👉 the case becomes about credibility, not conduct


The Key Takeaway

Security clearance cases are not decided by what happened.

They are decided by how the record is built.

And once that record contains inconsistencies:

👉 the case becomes about trust

If you are unsure how your case will be evaluated, understanding how a security clearance mitigation strategy applies to your situation is the first step.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before the Record Hardens Further

If you are facing:

  • an LOI

  • inconsistencies between your disclosures and records

  • or a potential Statement of Reasons

the most important step is understanding how your case will be evaluated from this point forward.

You can schedule a free consultation to evaluate your situation and next steps.


The Record Controls the Case.