Would parent working in the cannabis industry affect children's federal security clearance?
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I might be offered a position as a software developer at a company that produces software for the cannabis industry. My son is an officer in the Navy and has security clearance. I'm wondering if me taking a job in this industry would have repercussions for him. I live in Washington state where recreational cannabis is legal, but it is still considered illegal at the federal level, so I'm not sure what that means as far as it concerns my son's clearance.
united-states security-clearance
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up vote
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I might be offered a position as a software developer at a company that produces software for the cannabis industry. My son is an officer in the Navy and has security clearance. I'm wondering if me taking a job in this industry would have repercussions for him. I live in Washington state where recreational cannabis is legal, but it is still considered illegal at the federal level, so I'm not sure what that means as far as it concerns my son's clearance.
united-states security-clearance
6
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
3
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
1
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
5
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I might be offered a position as a software developer at a company that produces software for the cannabis industry. My son is an officer in the Navy and has security clearance. I'm wondering if me taking a job in this industry would have repercussions for him. I live in Washington state where recreational cannabis is legal, but it is still considered illegal at the federal level, so I'm not sure what that means as far as it concerns my son's clearance.
united-states security-clearance
I might be offered a position as a software developer at a company that produces software for the cannabis industry. My son is an officer in the Navy and has security clearance. I'm wondering if me taking a job in this industry would have repercussions for him. I live in Washington state where recreational cannabis is legal, but it is still considered illegal at the federal level, so I'm not sure what that means as far as it concerns my son's clearance.
united-states security-clearance
united-states security-clearance
edited Nov 15 at 18:04
yoozer8
4,12342955
4,12342955
asked Aug 11 at 0:53
user91157
301
301
6
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
3
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
1
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
5
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24
|
show 2 more comments
6
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
3
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
1
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
5
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24
6
6
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
3
3
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
1
1
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
5
5
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24
|
show 2 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
6
down vote
I believe that if your son has a security clearance, then there should be a person responsible for handling that clearance, and that person should be able to answer such questions. Or questions like "I want to go on holiday to China / South Korea / North Korea, will that affect my clearance".
Most things that might affect a security clearance are not either Ok or lead to loss of clearance, there might be things that speak against your sons clearance but are fine if there are not too many. That person might know that your son is either perfectly clean, or very close to not getting a clearance, so the same thing might be fine in one case and not fine in the other case. (For example an uncle who is a suspected drug dealer may be fine on its own, dad working in the cannabis industry may be fine on its own, but both together might lead to loss of clearance - hypothetical example).
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Probably not, but there is a slim chance it could.
https://news.clearancejobs.com/2014/10/16/guilt-association-shady-family-members-affect-security-clearance/amp/
How close are you? Does he live in your home? Does he provide financial support? All of these things will be contributing factors in the decision.
If he already has a clearance it will be much less of an issue.
Another thing to consider, working for a software developer may be far enough removed from the actual cannabis industry that it won't be a problem.
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I'm going to say it largely depends. If you look at past historical cases, http://ogc.osd.mil/doha/industrial/2018.html you can see that sometimes the parent or family member's association affects the clearance. Especially if the parent is potentially associated with bad countries or bad actors.
Generally speaking though, what your family does won't affect your clearance unless it raises a doubt. One of those will be how much he interacts with you.
It's impossible to give you a sure answer, though. However, common sense, if cannabis is legal in your area, and you're operating legally, then you are not committing a crime. However, at the federal level, cannabis is considered illegal, even medical cannabis.
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
6
down vote
I believe that if your son has a security clearance, then there should be a person responsible for handling that clearance, and that person should be able to answer such questions. Or questions like "I want to go on holiday to China / South Korea / North Korea, will that affect my clearance".
Most things that might affect a security clearance are not either Ok or lead to loss of clearance, there might be things that speak against your sons clearance but are fine if there are not too many. That person might know that your son is either perfectly clean, or very close to not getting a clearance, so the same thing might be fine in one case and not fine in the other case. (For example an uncle who is a suspected drug dealer may be fine on its own, dad working in the cannabis industry may be fine on its own, but both together might lead to loss of clearance - hypothetical example).
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
I believe that if your son has a security clearance, then there should be a person responsible for handling that clearance, and that person should be able to answer such questions. Or questions like "I want to go on holiday to China / South Korea / North Korea, will that affect my clearance".
Most things that might affect a security clearance are not either Ok or lead to loss of clearance, there might be things that speak against your sons clearance but are fine if there are not too many. That person might know that your son is either perfectly clean, or very close to not getting a clearance, so the same thing might be fine in one case and not fine in the other case. (For example an uncle who is a suspected drug dealer may be fine on its own, dad working in the cannabis industry may be fine on its own, but both together might lead to loss of clearance - hypothetical example).
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
up vote
6
down vote
I believe that if your son has a security clearance, then there should be a person responsible for handling that clearance, and that person should be able to answer such questions. Or questions like "I want to go on holiday to China / South Korea / North Korea, will that affect my clearance".
Most things that might affect a security clearance are not either Ok or lead to loss of clearance, there might be things that speak against your sons clearance but are fine if there are not too many. That person might know that your son is either perfectly clean, or very close to not getting a clearance, so the same thing might be fine in one case and not fine in the other case. (For example an uncle who is a suspected drug dealer may be fine on its own, dad working in the cannabis industry may be fine on its own, but both together might lead to loss of clearance - hypothetical example).
I believe that if your son has a security clearance, then there should be a person responsible for handling that clearance, and that person should be able to answer such questions. Or questions like "I want to go on holiday to China / South Korea / North Korea, will that affect my clearance".
Most things that might affect a security clearance are not either Ok or lead to loss of clearance, there might be things that speak against your sons clearance but are fine if there are not too many. That person might know that your son is either perfectly clean, or very close to not getting a clearance, so the same thing might be fine in one case and not fine in the other case. (For example an uncle who is a suspected drug dealer may be fine on its own, dad working in the cannabis industry may be fine on its own, but both together might lead to loss of clearance - hypothetical example).
answered Aug 11 at 19:07
gnasher729
79.1k34143249
79.1k34143249
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Probably not, but there is a slim chance it could.
https://news.clearancejobs.com/2014/10/16/guilt-association-shady-family-members-affect-security-clearance/amp/
How close are you? Does he live in your home? Does he provide financial support? All of these things will be contributing factors in the decision.
If he already has a clearance it will be much less of an issue.
Another thing to consider, working for a software developer may be far enough removed from the actual cannabis industry that it won't be a problem.
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Probably not, but there is a slim chance it could.
https://news.clearancejobs.com/2014/10/16/guilt-association-shady-family-members-affect-security-clearance/amp/
How close are you? Does he live in your home? Does he provide financial support? All of these things will be contributing factors in the decision.
If he already has a clearance it will be much less of an issue.
Another thing to consider, working for a software developer may be far enough removed from the actual cannabis industry that it won't be a problem.
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Probably not, but there is a slim chance it could.
https://news.clearancejobs.com/2014/10/16/guilt-association-shady-family-members-affect-security-clearance/amp/
How close are you? Does he live in your home? Does he provide financial support? All of these things will be contributing factors in the decision.
If he already has a clearance it will be much less of an issue.
Another thing to consider, working for a software developer may be far enough removed from the actual cannabis industry that it won't be a problem.
Probably not, but there is a slim chance it could.
https://news.clearancejobs.com/2014/10/16/guilt-association-shady-family-members-affect-security-clearance/amp/
How close are you? Does he live in your home? Does he provide financial support? All of these things will be contributing factors in the decision.
If he already has a clearance it will be much less of an issue.
Another thing to consider, working for a software developer may be far enough removed from the actual cannabis industry that it won't be a problem.
edited Aug 11 at 2:10
answered Aug 11 at 2:04
Lumberjack
6,16032551
6,16032551
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
add a comment |
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
7
7
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
The only thing I'd add is that @user91157 needs to talk to his son if he hasn't already so that his son can talk to his security officer about the issue in advance.
– Dan Neely
Aug 11 at 16:33
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I'm going to say it largely depends. If you look at past historical cases, http://ogc.osd.mil/doha/industrial/2018.html you can see that sometimes the parent or family member's association affects the clearance. Especially if the parent is potentially associated with bad countries or bad actors.
Generally speaking though, what your family does won't affect your clearance unless it raises a doubt. One of those will be how much he interacts with you.
It's impossible to give you a sure answer, though. However, common sense, if cannabis is legal in your area, and you're operating legally, then you are not committing a crime. However, at the federal level, cannabis is considered illegal, even medical cannabis.
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I'm going to say it largely depends. If you look at past historical cases, http://ogc.osd.mil/doha/industrial/2018.html you can see that sometimes the parent or family member's association affects the clearance. Especially if the parent is potentially associated with bad countries or bad actors.
Generally speaking though, what your family does won't affect your clearance unless it raises a doubt. One of those will be how much he interacts with you.
It's impossible to give you a sure answer, though. However, common sense, if cannabis is legal in your area, and you're operating legally, then you are not committing a crime. However, at the federal level, cannabis is considered illegal, even medical cannabis.
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I'm going to say it largely depends. If you look at past historical cases, http://ogc.osd.mil/doha/industrial/2018.html you can see that sometimes the parent or family member's association affects the clearance. Especially if the parent is potentially associated with bad countries or bad actors.
Generally speaking though, what your family does won't affect your clearance unless it raises a doubt. One of those will be how much he interacts with you.
It's impossible to give you a sure answer, though. However, common sense, if cannabis is legal in your area, and you're operating legally, then you are not committing a crime. However, at the federal level, cannabis is considered illegal, even medical cannabis.
I'm going to say it largely depends. If you look at past historical cases, http://ogc.osd.mil/doha/industrial/2018.html you can see that sometimes the parent or family member's association affects the clearance. Especially if the parent is potentially associated with bad countries or bad actors.
Generally speaking though, what your family does won't affect your clearance unless it raises a doubt. One of those will be how much he interacts with you.
It's impossible to give you a sure answer, though. However, common sense, if cannabis is legal in your area, and you're operating legally, then you are not committing a crime. However, at the federal level, cannabis is considered illegal, even medical cannabis.
answered Aug 11 at 17:11
Dan
6,24321323
6,24321323
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
add a comment |
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
clearancejobsblog.com/…
– Lumberjack
Aug 11 at 18:19
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
@Lumberjack that article only discusses use by the person applying for a clearance, not any behavior by family members. I don't see how it's relevant.
– Dan Neely
Aug 12 at 0:02
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
Just for anyone, who is reading this question that wants a security clearance, just because the drug is legal in your state doesn’t meant it’s legal at the federal level. Until otherwise made legal, the use of this particular drug, isn’t allowed even in those states where it’s been made legal. Make no mistake, the use of this drug, will result in the loss of your security clearance.
– Ramhound
Aug 13 at 6:19
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@DanNeely The article is relevant because it talks about the fact that "Legal Cannabis" is still viewed as an illegal drug by the US Federal government.
– Lumberjack
Aug 13 at 12:21
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
@Lumberjack That fact is given in the question itself, as part of the premise for why it's being asked.
– Dan Neely
Aug 13 at 12:46
add a comment |
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6
Sorry - we generally don't handle questions of legality here. You could try law.stackexchange.com instead.
– HorusKol
Aug 11 at 1:30
3
Seems to me this falls under the umbrella of questions an HR rep who deals with security clearance would know about and is therefore on-topic.
– AffableAmbler
Aug 11 at 4:53
@AffableAmbler Perhaps a general question on the concept of guilt-by-association in security clearances might be on-topic but this question is very specific and essentially asking for legal advice on one particular situation which we (and most HR reps) aren't equipped to do.
– Lilienthal♦
Aug 11 at 7:58
1
By "cannabis industry", do you mean "illegal drug cartels" or "legalized medical industry"?
– nick012000
Aug 11 at 9:38
5
@nick012000 I think he is not talking about either. I think is is talking about the cannabis industry which is legal under Washington state law and illegal under US federal law.
– Ben Mz
Aug 11 at 17:24