Last thing you need is an attorney.
Ugh, he has a factual misrepresentation on a medical application that involves a high BAC alcohol medical issue. The FIRST thing he needs is an aviation attorney. It's not about the medical, it's about him not losing all his certs, getting a huge fine, or ending up in prison. He's a CFI and responsible for being one of the gatekeepers to aviation and teaching others to fly. Additionally he's most likely training to be a professional pilot.
If there ever was a case to draw legal attention from the FAA this one is it.
OP,
Before I start, this isn't about judging you or trying to throw a label on you. It's about trying to help you with the best information I have. I'm not an AME or an attorney, but I have some amateur experience with AMCD and alcohol.
21 years old with 2 hospital encounters related to alcohol already. Sounds like the drinking thing isn't working out too well for you. It may be time for some introspection about your relationship with alcohol and how it's impacted(ing) your life. If you're in a collegiate flight program I assume you have professional aviation aspirations. Your current lifestyle and the life of a professional pilot are most definitely not in alignment.
You might not fit the diagnosis criteria for alcohol use disorder in a clinical sense, but the FAA uses the FARs to define abuse and dependence. The FAR criteria are much more strict than the DSM. You're almost definitely going to end up in HIMS. The only chance (and it's a very remote one) you have of avoiding that would be if the pancreatitis is attributable to something other than heavy alcohol consumption. Even with that, I'd bet my retirement on HIMS. If you want to keep flying, your drinking days are over.
My opinion is that you meet the criteria for substance dependence as defined by 67.307(a)(4)(ii). You meet the criteria for 67.307(a)(4)(ii)(A) with a previous BAC of .202 demonstrating increased tolerance. You meet the criteria for 67.307(a)(4)(ii)(D) with 2 alcohol related hospital visits (damage to physical health), impairment of occupational functioning (you can't work as a CFI, future aviation options jeopardized), and impairment of social/personal functioning (you can't be in a collegiate flight program if you can't hold a medical). You only needed to meet one of these to be considered substance dependent.
If it's not dependence it will be abuse. You meet the criteria of 67.307(b)(1) (BAC test > .04) and 67.307(b)(2) (2 uses of a substance that was physically hazardous). You only need 1 of those to be diagnosed with substance abuse.
Here's what I would do if I were in your shoes.
1. Keep in mind the Sport Pilot and BasicMed consequences of failing an FAA medical or having your medical revoked/withdrawn. I would not take another FAA medical exam until I had more information from professionals (HIMS AME & attorney). You're already going to have enough educational/professional hurdles, but you don't want to close all aviation doors.
2. Figure out what impact alcohol has on your life and if you have a problem. If booze isn't doing good stuff for your life then get it under control. Get this piece right before you worry about your medical. Consider whether you're really ready to be done with alcohol. If you aren't, you'll most likely make your situation worse by starting HIMS.
3. Gather all of the medical records for the hospital admission and the pancreatitis incident from the hospital medical records office.
4. Review with your attorney to head off any legal consequences of the failure to report on previous medicals. The medical records will be helpful here. Hopefully they can "work something out" to keep you out of revocation or criminal territory.
5. Once you have the legalities sorted, deal with the medical. Locate a HIMS AME and engage them on a consultative basis to discuss your case and their willingness to work with you. Again, the records will be helpful. Dr. Chien and Dr. Fowler are around on this board and they're great options. The HIMS AME will provide you with the best course of action to begin establishing proof of sobriety and recovery. These are 2 related but very different things and you need to demonstrate both.
6. Once you and your HIMS AME are satisfied that you'll meet the criteria for a special issuance medical you can complete the exam and get a special issuance. Whatever you do, do not complete a medical exam unless you and your AME are confident that you'll meet the criteria for a special issuance and prepared to submit all the required documentation in one pass.
Your special issuance will include requirements for years of ongoing drug/alcohol monitoring. As it stands right now, if you are diagnosed substance dependent you'll continue this monitoring in some capacity for as long as you hold an FAA medical certificate.
It's going to be expensive (>$10k), take a lot of time (years), and a lot of work on your part, but it can be done. The question is how bad do you want it.