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In reply to the discussion: Trump Son In Law Jared Kushner Was Just Told To Lawyer Up Because He Committed A Crime [View all]Lee-Lee
(6,324 posts)And yes, iPhone typo on the form number.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/mobile.nytimes.com/2017/04/06/us/politics/jared-kushner-russians-security-clearance.amp.html
https://www.google.com/amp/origin-nyi.thehill.com/homenews/administration/327753-kushner-didnt-disclose-meetings-with-russians-on-security-clearance%3Famp
I've dealt with corrections. Once they notify them material is incomplete the process will not be completed until the rest is submitted, so it is treated as a partial submission. They may start reviewing what was provided but won't issue a final decision or clearance until the missing information is provided and they have gone over it.
I mentioned in another post here a few weeks ago when this first came up a case I worked where the person was in the military in Afghanistan working in a joint headquarters with military from several nations and often briefed high level civilian leaders from those nations and others when they visited. He was required to list all contacts who were representatives of foreign governments and it took him a lot of time to gather that info requiring multiple corrections to be sent. Eventually he was still working on it when the investigatior told us she had enough info and could see the picture and to not worry about more corrections unless she asked about any specifics.
Can it hold up issuance of a clearance? Absolutely it will. Does it rise to the level of a criminal act? Not unless they find it was done with intent to deceive, and making notification of omissions the next day is not indicative of intent to deceive.