suspension without pay, revocation of your security clearance, termination of employment, and loss of DoD contracts.
It MAY dpend on the level of clearance you are going to hold and your duties - and on the circumstances of the DV case. For relatively high clearanaces, and for anything requiring you to be armed with a firearm - no - you will not be cleared.
how do i get security clearance far a job
You can do a security clearance on the website called clearancejobs.com. The security clearance has to be active and ready. The security clearance is a status granted to individuals, allowing them access to classified information.
A security clearance lawyer is the professional you want representing you in a case of being denied or having lost your security clearance. Typically needed for government and military careers, a loss of your security clearance can be catastrophic. These lawyers specialize in obtaining or re-obtaining your security clearance.
In military terms it means Department of Defense Clearance.
"A security clearance attorney takes on cases in which an individual has lost the requisite security clearance needed to perform their job, and fights to help restore their clearance."
DoD Instruction 8500.2
The document that provides basic guidance and regulatory requirements for derivative classification for DoD personnel is: DoDM 5200.01, DoD Information Security Program
dod wide system for reporting and managing serious security incidents
There are three DoD regulations that have provisions for implementing safeguards. DoD Regulation 5400.11, "DoD Privacy Program;" DoD Instruction 8500.2, "DoD Information Assurance Implementation;" and DoD Regulation 8580.2, "DoD Health Information Security Regulation."
NO, it will not. I went to school for medical assistant, AND worked for the DoD, I have a FEDERAL security clearance and me not graduating HS did not show up on a Federal back ground check.