Hi camloops, I'm a little late to respond here, but thought I should throw in my 2 cents.
If you and your spouse hadn't already legally married, and you never listed an address the same as his, you might be able to achieve some privacy here. That's why I'm still interested in common law marriage where possible... It has most of the benefits of legal marriage with none of the drawbacks. But yeah, that's not an option for you anymore and I personally wouldn't risk it if I were in your situation.
An FBI security clearance background check goes so far beyond your typical "FBI background check" (where they simply submit your fingerprints to the FBI and wait for hits in order to terminate your employment, say, as a teacher or working in the financial industry). I assume you're taking about actually working for the FBI, military, etc. That actually goes beyond what is legally permissible for the hiring process at most jobs. Your medical records are not private, they ask you similar questions multiple times about your personal life to look for divergences, can polygraph you, and often interview friends, family, acquaintances and neighbors regarding your behavior. So you would not only have to hide your paper trail, but actually hide the existence of your relationship from everyone you meet. Both of those options seem impossible at this point.
An ex of mine had a friend at an Ivy League university they went to, and that friend happened to be roommates with someone who was later being investigated for a high-level position at the FBI or CIA, I can't remember. They interviewed him just because they were roommates back in college. To this day, that friend cannot go through TSA without being flagged for additional security precautions and presumably, tracked. It causes a lot of difficulty for him getting through security lines behind schedule. Pretty strange. I'm sure he didn't mention the psychedelic mushrooms they used to grow under their bed during that initial interview, though, so that was pretty good looking-out. I don't know if your husband needed that high of security clearance, but who knows what his future may hold.
To be honest, I don't think camming is even worth this risk. You would have a better chance at making decent money and staying off the radar as a stripper, assuming you're in a state that's not notorious for unfair busts that might land you an arrest or conviction record. You're obviously not going to be able to hide the paper trail for camming, but you'd have a shot working at a club that doesn't employ its dancers and doesn't issue 1099s.
Even then, the club could easily get audited and then potentially the IRS could go after you, (though I don't know if that really establishes a connection, even if you're in default). So long as you make a cover S-Corp or something, and pay all your taxes, and don't make it easy for undercover busts to nab you, it's pretty much the only place left to hide that's legal. I even wonder about the legality of your husband's employer doing a background check on you, unless it's a matter of public record anyway. The real trick would be to work at a club across state lines, in a state where you've never applied for credit and never filed taxes, because they wouldn't look there. Unless you give them your fingerprints, they would pretty much only be able to check the public records of states where they have reason to suspect you've lived. Even better, if you choose a state that has expungement laws and have no prior offenses, you could potentially expunge any record that unfairly crops up. All of this would also work better if you have a common name. This is all getting pretty theoretical now and I'm sure that the entire reason you wanted to cam was to work from home, but figured this might help someone in a similar situation who has these options.
For camming or dancing, in order to really cover your bases, you could just do what the illegals do and use someone else's information, preferably with their permission, and use that to get ID and SSC from Silk Road (or whoever has taken their place by now), but that's more pertinent to the people who already have far worse criminal records than such acts would create. Fugitives, basically. Just don't forget to pay their taxes! The dreamers have figured it out. Whew... These mental gymnastics can make one feel like a fugitive at times. I'm kidding, BTW, but there are a lot of people doing this already because they totally lack US identities. It accounts for billions of dollars generated for Social Security every year by people who will never receive the benefit of their payments.



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