[Federal Register: August 24, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 164)]
[Notices]
[Page 50100-50102]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr24au06-79]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. 05-15]
Oakland Medical Pharmacy; Revocation of Registration
On October 27, 2004, I, the Deputy Administrator of the Drug
Enforcement Administration, issued an Order to Show Cause and further
ordered the immediate suspension of DEA Certificate of Registration,
AO6837477, issued to Oakland Medical Pharmacy (Respondent) of Madison
Heights, Michigan. The Show Cause Order proposed to revoke Respondent's
pharmacy registration and to deny any pending applications for renewal
or modification of its registration on the ground that Respondent's
continued registration would be inconsistent with the public interest.
See 21 U.S.C. 823(f) and 824(a). The Order of Immediate Suspension was
based on my preliminary finding that Respondent's continued
registration ``would constitute an imminent danger to the public health
and safety because of the substantial likelihood'' that Howard
Applebaum, Respondent's owner and chief pharmacist would ``continue to
divert controlled substances to persons who will abuse them.'' Show
Cause Order at 3. The Show Cause Order also notified Respondent of its
right to a hearing. Id.
The Show Cause Order specifically alleged that between February
2002 and October 2004, Mr. Applebaum had ``[o]n many occasions * * *
provided [two undercover] agents with refills of controlled substance
prescriptions when refills had not been authorized by a physician.''
Id. at 2. The Show Cause Order further alleged that Mr. Applebaum had
``also provided the agents with excessive amounts of controlled
substances that had not been authorized by a physician'' by providing
the agents with refills when he dispensed the initial prescriptions.
Id. The Order also alleged that Mr. Applebaum had provided refills to
the agents long before their original prescriptions would have been
used up. Id.
The Show Cause Order alleged that on July 26, 2004, Mr. Applebaum
filled a controlled substance prescription for an agent ``with no
authorization from her physician.'' Id. The Order also alleged that on
the same day, the agent observed Mr. Applebaum provide another customer
with two refills for a controlled substance. Id.
The Show Cause Order further alleged that a review Respondent's
records for
[[Page 50101]]
the period January 2003 through May 2004 indicated that ``Mr. Applebaum
routinely dispenses unauthorized controlled substances by providing
early refills * * * and multiple refills of prescriptions for the same
controlled substances on the same date.'' Id. The Order also alleged
that Respondent's records show that ``Mr. Applebaum dispenses narcotic
to drug addicts and to individuals obtaining treatment for narcotic
addiction.'' Id.
The Show Cause Order alleged that ``Mr. Applebaum was ``routinely
dispens[ing] contraindicated controlled substances at the same time to
the same patient,'' and that he was also ``routinely dispens[ing]
controlled substances'' to doctor shoppers. Id. Finally, the Show Cause
Order alleged that from October 2003 through April 2004, Respondent had
purchased 350,000 units of hydrocodone products and that 46 percent of
the hydrocodone prescriptions it dispensed were issued by the same
physician. Id. at 3. The Order thus alleged that there was a
``substantial likelihood that Mr. Applebaum will continue to divert
controlled substances to'' drug abusers and that Respondent's continued
registration ``would constitute an imminent danger to public health and
safety.'' Id.
On December 13, 2004, the Office of the Administrative Law Judges
received Respondent's request for a hearing. The case was assigned to
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Gail A. Randall.
On December 22, 2004, the Government moved for summary disposition.
The basis for the motion was that on November 16, 2004, the Michigan
Board of Pharmacy had filed an Administrative Complaint against
Respondent and had also summarily suspended Respondent's state pharmacy
license. The State's Order of Summary Suspension was effective
immediately. The Government thus contended that because Respondent no
longer had authority under state law to distribute or dispense
controlled substances, see 21 U.S.C. 824(a)(3), it was not entitled to
hold its Federal registration. The Government further contended that
there was no factual matter in dispute.\1\
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\1\ Upon receipt of the Government's motion, the ALJ ordered
that the proceedings be stayed pending a decision on the motion and
further order Respondent to file a reply.
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On January 21, 2005, Respondent filed an opposition to the
Government's motion. While Respondent acknowledged that the State had
summarily suspended its registration, it contended that the State's
action ``was predicated in large part on the immediate ex-parte
suspension of respondent's DEA registration * * * and the facts
developed by the DEA.'' Resp. Answer to Motion for Summary Disp. at 1.
Respondent further contended that the hearing before the State ALJ was
ongoing and that the state order was not final. See id. Respondent
argued that for DEA to rely on the State's summary suspension when the
State's action was based on the original DEA proceeding ``is a case of
boot-strapping extraordinaire.'' Id. at 2.
Respondent thus contended that it would be ``fundamentally unfair''
to grant the Government's motion. Id. Respondent further contended that
revocation was not required by the statutory language of 21 U.S.C.
824(a)(3). See id. (quoting 21 U.S.C. 824(a)(3) (``a registration * * *
may be suspended or revoked by the Attorney General upon a finding that
the registrant has had his State license or registration suspended,
revoked or denied by competent State authority''). According to
Respondent, ``[t]he action is not mandatory nor is it warranted in this
situation where the respondent has specifically requested a hearing on
the merits and is currently in the midst of'' a State hearing ``on the
issue of whether * * * Respondent's conduct merits [an] order of
summary suspension of the licenses by the State.'' Id. at 2-3.
Respondent thus requested that the ALJ deny the Government's motion for
summary disposition and that the Federal proceeding be stayed until the
State issued a decision on the merits.
On February 4, 2005, the ALJ issued an Order for Status Report. In
the order, the ALJ notified the parties that she had taken the matter
under advisement and that the proceedings would remain stayed. The ALJ
also ordered Respondent to file a status report with respect to its
State license on or before April 18, 2005. The ALJ further notified
Respondent that if it failed to file the report, the ALJ would rule on
the government's motion based on the information then before her. See
Order for Status Report at 1.
As of May 27, 2005, Respondent had not filed a status report. The
ALJ therefore issued her order, opinion and recommended decision. In
her order, the ALJ granted the Government's motion for summary
disposition, denied the Respondent's request for a continued stay of
the proceedings and recommended the revocation of Respondent's
registration on the ground that Respondent lacked State authority to
handle controlled substances. See ALJ Dec. at 5-7.
The ALJ specifically found that ``Respondent did not deny that it
is currently without state authorization to handle controlled
substances.'' ALJ Dec. at 5. The ALJ further noted that Respondent had
failed to file a report advising her of the status of the state
proceeding. See id. Because state authorization is an essential
prerequisite to a DEA registration, see id. at 4, and it was undisputed
that ``that the Respondent does not have authority to handle controlled
substances in the jurisdiction where it seeks to maintain its DEA
registration,'' the ALJ granted the Government's motion for summary
disposition. Id. at 5.
The ALJ acknowledged Respondent's argument that it was ``unfair''
for DEA to revoke its registration based on the Michigan suspension,
because it had been based on the DEA Order to Show Cause and Immediate
Suspension of Registration. Id. at 5-6. The ALJ further noted that
``such an action is circular and may result in the Respondent being
denied an opportunity to adjudicate the facts.'' Id. at 6.
The ALJ also denied Respondent's request for a stay until the
conclusion of the state proceeding. According to the ALJ, ``[t]he fact
remains that the Respondent currently lacks state authorization to
handle controlled substances, and therefore cannot remain registered
with the DEA.'' Id. The ALJ thus concluded that she had ``no choice but
to grant summary disposition at the present time, and to deny''
Respondent's motion for a stay. Id.
Thereafter, Respondent sought reconsideration of the ALJ's
recommended decision. The basis for Respondent's motion was that he had
not intentionally failed to file a Status Report but had erroneously
believed, based on a phone conversation with Government counsel that
occurred on April 11, 2005, that Government counsel ``was going to
investigate the matter and confirm with Respondent's counsel whether it
was still necessary for him to file anything additional in writing
given the status of the'' state hearing. Resp. Req. for Recon. at 2.
Respondent's counsel stated that when he did not hear back from
Government counsel, he ``wrongly assumed that the issue had been
resolved.'' Id. Respondent further informed the ALJ that the state
proceedings were continuing and that the proceeding had been ``an
elongated and vigorously contested hearing,'' which had been held on
five different dates with one additional date to follow, at which the
State's ``expert pharmacy witness'' was to testify. Id. at 3.
The Government responded that while it did not object to the late
filing of the status report, it did object to
[[Page 50102]]
reconsideration of the ALJ's decision. See Govt. Resp. at 2. While the
Government counsel did not remember the aforementioned telephone
conversation, he did not dispute that Respondent's counsel may have
asked him whether he had to file anything. Id. The Government further
pointed out that Respondent's counsel did not contend that he had not
received the ALJ's Order for Status Report, and that the Order, which
the Government had not received, presumably clearly stated the deadline
for filing the Status Report. See id. at 2-3.
The Government contended that whether Respondent should be
permitted to file a status report was irrelevant because Respondent's
state license had been suspended in November 2004 and had remained so
since then. The Government further argued that ``Respondent still does
not know when the state proceedings will end, and there is no assurance
that Respondent will regain its state authority.'' Id. at 3. According
to the Government, ``[t]he ALJ based her Decision on the fact that
Respondent had no state authority to handle controlled substances at
the time of the Decision. That fact was true at the time of the
deadline for the status report, at the time of the Decision and is true
at the present.'' Id. Therefore, the Government argued that there was
no basis for the ALJ to reconsider her decision.
The ALJ denied Respondent's motion for reconsideration. Again, the
ALJ noted that ``under the Controlled Substances Act it is clear that
the DEA does not have statutory authority to maintain a registration if
the registrant is without state authority to handle controlled
substances in the state in which the registrant conducts business.''
Order Denying Resp. Req. for Recon. at 2. The ALJ then transmitted the
record to me.\2\
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\2\ I emphasize that there is no provision in DEA's regulations
for either party to request reconsideration of an ALJ's recommended
decision. See generally 21 CFR Subpart D. The appropriate means of
challenging the ALJ's decision is to file exceptions. See 21 CFR
1316.66.
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Having considered the record as a whole, I hereby issue this
decision and final order. I adopt the ALJ's findings of fact and
conclusions of law. I further adopt the ALJ's recommended decision to
revoke Respondent's registration. I do not, however, adopt the opinion
to the extent it suggests that it was ``unfair'' for this agency to
revoke Respondent's Federal registration based on the State proceeding
and that ``such an action is circular and may result in the Respondent
being denied an opportunity to adjudicate the facts.'' ALJ Dec. at 6.
I acknowledge that the State's Administrative Complaint relied in
part on my Order to Show Cause and Immediate Suspension of
Registration. See Admin. Complaint at 3. But the state complaint did
not rely solely on my action. The state complaint cited a variety of
grounds under Michigan law for imposing sanctions including ``failing
to comply with applicable Federal laws,'' id. at 2 (citing Mich. Comp.
Laws Sec. 333.7311(1)(f)); dispensing of ``controlled substances for
other than legitimate medical purposes,'' id. (citing Mich. Comp. Laws
Sec. 333.7311(1)(g)); and ``if an officer or stockholder of the
pharmacy lacks good moral character.'' Id. at 2-3 (citing Mich. Comp.
Laws Sec. 333.17768(2)(a)). The complaint further alleged that
Respondent had violated these provisions of state law. Id. at 3-4.
Furthermore, the State's Order of Summary Suspension was based on the
``careful consideration of the documentation filed'' in the State's
administrative proceeding including the complaint. Order of Summary
Suspension 1. The State's Order also provided a procedure for
Respondent to petition for dissolution of the state suspension. See id.
I take the State on its word and conclude that its decision to
summarily suspend Respondent's state license was not based solely on my
order but was also based on its own evaluation of the evidence.
Furthermore, as Respondent itself pointed out, the State proceeding has
been ``an elongated and vigorously contested hearing,'' which included
at least six days of hearings with the State putting on an expert
witness. It is hard to imagine why a proceeding would take so long to
litigate and require expert testimony if it did not involve an
adjudication of the underlying facts. Thus, I do not accept the ALJ's
conclusion that it is ``circular'' for this agency to revoke
Respondent's registration based on the State's summary suspension order
and that doing so ``may result in * * * Respondent being denied an
opportunity to adjudicate the facts.'' ALJ Dec. at 6. Quite the
opposite, it appears that the State entered its suspension order based
on its own examination of the evidence; it further appears that
Respondent has had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the facts in
the State proceeding.
DEA's regulations make clear that the ALJ's decision is only a
recommendation; it is not the final agency action. The revocation of
Respondent's Federal registration becomes final only with this order.
Yet in the interval between the ALJ's decision and the publication of
this order, Respondent has submitted no evidence to show that the State
has lifted its suspension.
As the ALJ correctly recognized, DEA has consistently held that a
registrant may not hold a DEA registration if it is without appropriate
authority under the laws of the state in which it does business. See,
e.g., Rx Network of South Florida, LLC, 69 FR 62,093 (2004); Wingfield
Drugs, Inc., 52 FR 27,070 (1987). Respondent does not have authority
under Michigan law to handle controlled substances. Therefore, it is
not entitled to maintain its DEA registration. See Rx Network of South
Florida, 69 FR at 62095.
Order
Accordingly, pursuant to the authority vested in me by 21 U.S.C.
823(f) and 824(a), as well as 28 CFR 0.100(b) and 0.104, I hereby order
that DEA Certificate of Registration, No. AO6837477, issued to Oakland
Medical Pharmacy be, and it hereby is, revoked. I further order that
any pending applications for renewal or modification of its
registration be, and they hereby are, denied. This order is effective
September 25, 2006.
Dated: August 15, 2006.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E6-14045 Filed 8-23-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-09-P