In 2016, an NSA employee alleged that a colleague had been improperly hired-someone with prior access to classified information and potential foreign government connections.

The case triggered a months-long internal investigation by the agency’s Inspector General.

The resulting document, Investigation IV-16-0032, doesn’t offer scandal.

But it reveals how suspicion inside the NSA-especially suspicion about foreign entanglements-triggers a precise, opaque machinery of review.

🕵️ The Allegation: Improper Hiring with Security Red Flags

According to the IG report, the subject of the complaint-referred to only by position and anonymized references-was flagged for:

  • Prior involvement with foreign nationals

  • Access to sensitive intelligence

  • Potential misrepresentation during the hiring process

The complainant alleged this individual had either failed to disclose-or been allowed to bypass-standard security protocols during their onboarding.

The IG took it seriously.

🔍 The Investigation

The Inspector General reviewed:

  • The employee’s background investigation file

  • Personnel security forms, including the SF-86

  • Interviews with both the complainant and the subject

  • Email chains and internal referrals regarding clearance status

There was no smoking gun. But there were contradictions.

One issue: the subject’s timeline of foreign contacts didn’t precisely match NSA records.

Another: the justification for waiving a clearance hold lacked documentation.

📑 Clearance Discrepancies and Administrative Gaps

At the center of the issue was a “Security Processing Interruption"-an administrative hold that had been lifted under unclear circumstances. The IG flagged this as a procedural failure, noting that:

  • The Personnel Security Office (PersSec) could not produce full records of who authorized the override

  • No record existed showing the foreign contact issue was adjudicated in detail

  • The subject’s file was incomplete at the time of hire

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Despite this, the individual was cleared for duty.

🧾 The Conclusion: No Misconduct, But Policy Holes

Ultimately, the IG ruled that no intentional wrongdoing occurred. The hiring did not violate law or policy-because, technically, no policy required more than what was done.

But the report’s tone is cautionary. It highlights weaknesses in the security clearance process, particularly when:

  • Time pressure to fill roles overrides vetting

  • Foreign contacts aren’t disclosed early

  • Internal documentation is assumed but missing

The result was a cleared hire-and a reminder of how easily red flags become bureaucratic footnotes.

🕳️ What Happens Next? Nothing.

The investigation concluded with recommendations for better documentation and clearer authority chains-but no disciplinary action. No referral to DOJ. No follow-up audit.

The file was closed in 2017. The subject remained employed.

Sometimes, the intelligence world doesn’t bury stories. It just files them under "resolved."

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