If You Don’t Understand How Adjudicators Think, You Cannot Predict the Outcome of Your Case

Security clearance decisions are not made in a courtroom.

They are made inside a federal system designed to evaluate:

  • long-term reliability

  • credibility across time

  • and whether granting access creates unacceptable risk

Most applicants focus on:

👉 what happened

Adjudicators focus on:

👉 what the record shows—and whether it supports approval

At National Security Law Firm, our attorneys include former adjudicators, administrative judges, and attorneys who have worked inside the Defense Office of Hearings and Appeals (DOHA) system.

We do not speculate about how decisions are made.

👉 We have made them.

To understand how these decisions fit within the broader framework, see the

Security Clearance Adjudicative Guidelines Explained


Where This Happens in the Clearance Process

Adjudicator decision-making occurs after:

  • the SF-86 is submitted

  • the investigation is completed

  • issues are identified under the Adjudicative Guidelines

At this stage, the case moves from:

👉 fact collection

to:

👉 risk evaluation


👉 For a full breakdown of how cases move through this process, see the

security clearance process guide


What Adjudicators Are Actually Deciding

Adjudicators are not deciding:

  • whether you are a good person

  • whether your explanation makes sense

  • whether the government was “too harsh”

They are deciding:

👉 whether granting a clearance is clearly consistent with national security


👉 Learn more about this standard:

What “Clearly Consistent with National Security” Really Means


How Adjudicators Actually Decide a Security Clearance Case

Security clearance cases are not decided all at once.

They are evaluated through a structured process that moves from identifying risk to determining whether approval can be justified.

Understanding this process is the key to understanding outcomes.


Step 1: Identify All Potential Risk Issues

The adjudicator begins by reviewing the investigative record and identifying concerns under the

Adjudicative GuidelinesAttachment.tiff

This includes:

  • financial issues (Guideline F)

  • foreign influence (Guideline B)

  • personal conduct (Guideline E)

  • criminal conduct (Guideline J)

At this stage, the goal is not to decide the case—but to define the scope of risk.


Step 2: Evaluate the Severity of Each Issue

Next, the adjudicator evaluates:

  • how serious each issue is

  • whether it is recent or remote

  • whether it appears isolated or part of a pattern

A minor issue can become significant if it is:

  • recent

  • repeated

  • poorly explained


Step 3: Evaluate Credibility Across the Entire Record

Adjudicators compare:

  • SF-86 disclosures

  • investigator notes

  • written responses

  • testimony

They are looking for one thing:

👉 consistency

Even small inconsistencies can create doubt.

And doubt is risk.


Step 4: Apply Mitigating Conditions

At this stage, the adjudicator evaluates whether the risk has been resolved.

The key question is:

👉 Has the issue been resolved—or just explained?

Effective mitigation must show:

  • the issue is under control

  • recurrence is unlikely

  • behavior has changed over time


Step 5: Apply the Whole Person Concept

The adjudicator evaluates the entire case together using the

Whole Person Concept

This means:

  • no issue is considered in isolation

  • patterns matter more than individual events

  • the total record determines the outcome


Step 6: Make a Forward-Looking Risk Determination

Finally, the adjudicator asks:

👉 “If I approve this clearance, what is the future risk?”

They consider:

  • likelihood of recurrence

  • stability of behavior

  • whether the decision would withstand future review

If approval cannot be clearly justified:

👉 denial is the safer decision


Why This Framework Matters

Most applicants evaluate their case based on what happened.

Adjudicators evaluate it based on:

  • how it was documented

  • how it evolved

  • whether it is resolved

That difference explains why outcomes often feel unpredictable.


When This Becomes a Real Problem in Your Case

Most clearance cases do not start as major problems.

They begin with:

  • small omissions

  • minor financial issues

  • isolated conduct

These become serious when:

  • the record becomes inconsistent

  • mitigation is delayed

  • explanations evolve

This is how cases turn into:


Why Waiting Makes This Worse

Security clearance cases are not static.

The record is built over time through:

  • disclosures

  • interviews

  • written responses

What you say today may appear later in:

  • reinvestigations

  • Continuous Evaluation

  • promotion reviews


👉 Learn more:

Continuous Evaluation for Security Clearances


Why Similar Cases Get Different Results

Two people can have:

  • the same issue

  • similar facts

And receive different outcomes.

Why?

👉 Because adjudicators evaluate:

  • timing

  • consistency

  • mitigation

  • credibility


👉 Learn more:

Why Two Identical Security Clearance Cases Have Different Outcomes


How Adjudicators Evaluate Risk vs Rehabilitation

Adjudicators distinguish between:


Reactive Behavior

  • action taken after being caught

  • last-minute mitigation

  • incomplete efforts


Sustained Rehabilitation

  • consistent behavior over time

  • documented change

  • credible evidence


👉 The system rewards stability—not urgency


Cascading Federal Consequences

Adjudicator decisions affect more than clearance.

They can trigger:

  • federal employment discipline

  • suitability determinations

  • contractor sponsorship loss

  • Continuous Evaluation alerts

This is why clearance cases must be handled as part of a broader federal system.


Why National Security Law Firm Is Different

Security clearance cases are decided inside a federal system.

At National Security Law Firm:

  • our attorneys include former adjudicators, administrative judges, and DOHA attorneys

  • we understand how decisions are made internally

  • we apply that insight to every case


Attorney Review Board

Complex cases are reviewed through our

Attorney Review Board

This mirrors how government agencies evaluate cases.


Record Control Strategy

We structure every case with long-term implications in mind:

Record Control Strategy

The Record Controls the Case


Security Clearance Resource Hub

For a full breakdown of the system, visit the

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub


FAQs

How do adjudicators decide security clearance cases?

They evaluate risk, credibility, mitigation, and long-term reliability—not just facts.

What is the most important factor?

Consistency and credibility across the record.

Do adjudicators care about intent?

Less than whether the issue creates ongoing risk.

Can a case be won with past problems?

Yes—if the issue is mitigated and no longer creates risk.

What is the biggest mistake applicants make?

Waiting too long and allowing the record to develop incorrectly.


Pricing and Consultation

We offer transparent

security clearance lawyer pricing

With financing available through

Pay Later by Affirm

Clients consistently highlight our approach in our

4.9-star Google reviews


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before Your Case Is Decided

If your clearance is at risk, the most important question is:

👉 “How will this case be evaluated?”

We offer free consultations to help you:

  • understand your position

  • identify risks

  • determine your strategy

schedule a free consultation


The Record Controls the Case.