The Pentagon is reviewing Elon Muskâs federal security clearance following the billionaireâs marijuana toke on a California comedianâs podcast in September, according to a U.S. official.
Musk has refiled his SF-86 security form, which requires a federal employee or contractor seeking a clearance to acknowledge any illegal drug use over the previous seven years, according to the official, who asked not to be identified. The entrepreneur has a secret-level clearance because of his role as founder and CEO of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., which is certified to launch military spy satellites.
A SpaceX official, who asked not to be identified, said the review hasnât had an impact on the company. SpaceXâs day-to-day operations are run by President and Chief Operating Officer Gwynne Shotwell. The company has won contracts for national security space launches since Muskâs podcast incident.
But the refiling and review underscore the continuing ramifications from the chief executive officerâs decision last year to smoke marijuana on the podcast, which quickly went viral. And it highlights the legal discrepancies between federal and state policy on marijuana use: While about three dozen states have taken steps to decriminalize pot, its use remains a federal crime.
Elon Musk smoking weed on âThe Joe Rogan Experience.â Joe Rogan Experience/YouTube
It âtotally would make senseâ for the Defense Security Service to ask Musk to update his application and to investigate the situation further, said Mark Zaid, a Washington attorney who specializes in federal whistle-blower cases and representing clients facing clearance challenges. Zaid doesnât represent Musk and isnât aware of the details of his case.
James Gleeson, a SpaceX spokesman, declined to comment.
Musk in September sipped whiskey during a podcast of more than two and a half hours with comedian Joe Rogan in California that touched on topics from flamethrowers and artificial intelligence to the end of the universe.
The security refiling may be the least of Muskâs issues after a tumultuous week in which he got into another spat with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over his tweets about Tesla Inc., unveiled cheaper versions of Teslaâs electric vehicles and caught investors by surprise with plans to close auto showrooms. He also watched SpaceX launch a new spacecraft designed to ferry humans into orbit.
Muskâs âadjudicationâ review by the Defense Security Service continues with no decision yet, the U.S. official said. Typically during an adjudication a person keeps his or her security clearance but loses access to information classified as secret, according to the official. If the drug use involves minor issues or doesnât appear to contain any serious security concerns, the unit reviewing the case could just close it and update Muskâs record.
Nevertheless, there can be serious consequences for breaching security protocols.
Smoking marijuana is âabsolutely grounds for termination or loss of a clearance if a federal employee or contractor currently usesâ it, lawyer Zaid said in an email.
Top Defense Security Service officials are aware of Muskâs reapplication and review, said the U.S. official, who declined to discuss the case in detail but guided a reporter through the process Muskâs review is following.
âThe Department of Defense is following its normal process when information which may affect an individualâs clearance eligibility is brought to our attention,â the service said in an emailed statement to Bloomberg News, when asked if Musk was required to resubmit his clearance form after the podcast. âFor privacy and security reasons, we do not publicly discuss individual clearance status.â
Although marijuana is legal for recreational use in many states, including California, it remains illegal for federal employees or contractors with security clearances, a point reiterated most recently in 2014 in a government-wide memo issued by then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, which remains in effect.
Clapperâs October 2014 memo says âan individualâs disregard of federal law pertaining to the use, sale or manufacture of marijuana remains relevantâ in reviewing whether a security clearance must be reevaluated.
Separately, Muskâs marijuana use drew criticism from analysts and investors who follow Tesla, his electric car company, as a sign the CEO wasnât focused sufficiently on addressing management and production issues during a particularly tumultuous period.
During the podcast, Musk said that while he wasnât âa regular smoker of weed,â he took a drag from what Rogan described as a blunt containing tobacco mixed with marijuana.
âYou want some of it? You probably canât because of stockholders, right?â Rogan asked.
Musk replied âI mean itâs legal, right?â and then took a drag.
âWith assistance from Craig Trudell.
Bloomberg.com