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JPL Background Check Case Reaches Supreme Court

Dthief writes "A long-running legal battle between the United States government and a group of 29 scientists and engineers of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, has now reached the US Supreme Court." At issue: mandatory background checks for scientists and engineers working at JPL, which they allege includes snooping into their sexual orientation, as well as their mental and physical health.

5 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. Re:I'm not clear on what their case is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am also not entirely sure what the issue is, but it could be something like this: JPL, as an EO employer, cannot discriminate based on sex, race, sexual orientation, etc. Therefore any background checks that are done should not be explicitly seeking out information on, for instance, whether they are gay or not unless there is some outside relevance (eg, their gay S/O is a known terrorist or something). If the background checks /were/ screening for sexual orientation without cause, I can see where they might get uppity about privacy concerns and the like.

    Also, low-level clearances (Secret, for example) are basically just a criminal background check and a quick sweep over the government databases to make sure you're not someone /obviously/ bad. There'd be no reason whatsoever to stick in "are you gay?" to that level of check.

  2. Re:I'm not clear on what their case is... by kriston · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It still does not matter. The customer is the US Government. They want contractors to abide by certain rules including security clearance vetting. These do not involve sexual orientation but they do involve blackmail risks which is perfectly reasonable for them to be concerned about.

    If you do not agree with security clearances you should not work for entities that require them. They really do not care about sexual orientation. They only care about exploitation risks. It really is that simple. The question is: can you be extorted? It's a valid question. It needs to be addressed.

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    Kriston

  3. Re:I'm not clear on what their case is... by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am also not entirely sure what the issue is,

    Scientists working in the lab on unclassified and non-sensitive research are objecting to an invasive background check.

    If the background checks /were/ screening for sexual orientation without cause, I can see where they might get uppity about privacy concerns and the like.

    The reason sexuality and sexual activity is part of a background check is because, in the past, it has been used to blackmail individuals into disclosing classified and sensitive information.

    Background checks aren't just snooping for red flags.
    All that information gets considered together and used to make a risk assesment.
    To the government, a guy secretly cheating on his wife can be just as risky as a closeted homosexual.

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    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  4. Re:I'm not clear on what their case is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's no constitutional right to work at JPL.

    STOP IT RIGHT NOW, YOU POMPOUS, BLOODY FUCK!!!

    I am sick to goddamned death of you little shits who pretend to be Constitutional scholars and can't understand (likely due to having never read) the Ninth amendment -- a single clear statement.

    "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

    IOW, asshole, rights need not be explicitly granted to the people.

    Harsh language and harsh argument were had to guarantee the inclusion of the Ninth Amendment in the Bill of Rights. It was absolutely a show-stopper. One sentence used was directly aimed at dipshits like you -- "... otherwise some fool, two hundred years from now, will try to assert that people may not have a certain right, just because we failed to enumerate it."

    Write to your congress-critter, dumbass -- they pass out copies of the Constitution for free.

  5. Re:I'm not clear on what their case is... by honkycat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is very, very little classified work at JPL. The vast majority of the jobs have no need for any sort of clearance. The few that require a clearance already have it, and there is no objection to this requirement or to the background checks for those who need the clearance. The problem is that they're essentially asking for a carte blanche to probe the backgrounds of employees who have explicitly been categorized as not needing special access. Furthermore, there were strong signs that absurd criteria based on the results of these background checks were going to be used to deny them.

    I was affected by this as a graduate student who used to work at JPL. As you suggest, I would have changed projects rather than submit to this. Several high-profile scientists and engineers there made a similar decision, and they and others filed this suit. You can be flippant about it, but the work they do there is important, and it's awful, awful policy to force these people out over a ridiculous show of force like this. These people could make a lot more money working in the private sector, but they offer their talents toward projects that benefit us all. It takes a special kind of stupid to act like anyone's doing THEM a favor by "letting" them work there.