Pamela Monterosso, D.M.D.; Denial of Application, 11146-11148 [E8-3873]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 41 / Friday, February 29, 2008 / Notices
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[FR Doc. E8–3679 Filed 2–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
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Equus Beds Division of the Wichita
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ACTION: Notice of Intent To Prepare an
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 102(2)(C)
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drop in the water table which has led to
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While you can ask us in your comment
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Dated: February 15, 2008.
Donald E. Moomaw,
Assistant Regional Director, Great Plains
Region.
[FR Doc. E8–3530 Filed 2–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Pamela Monterosso, D.M.D.; Denial of
Application
On February 6, 2006, the Deputy
Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause to Pamela Monterosso,
D.M.D., (Respondent) of New York, N.Y.
The Show Cause Order proposed the
denial of Respondent’s pending
application for a DEA Certificate of
Registration as a practitioner on the
ground that her ‘‘registration would be
inconsistent with the public interest.’’
Show Cause Order at 1 (citing 21 U.S.C.
823(f)).
The Show Cause Order specifically
alleged that Respondent had previously
held a DEA registration at premises
located in Washington, DC, which she
surrendered for cause in November
1997. Id. According to the allegations, in
September 1997, Respondent was
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 41 / Friday, February 29, 2008 / Notices
arrested for obtaining oxycodone, a
schedule II controlled substance, by use
of a fraudulent prescription, and
admitted to investigators that she was
abusing pharmaceutical controlled
substances. Id. The Show Cause Order
alleged that following her arrest, DEA
investigators audited Respondent’s
handling of controlled substances and
found that she could not ‘‘produce
proper records to account for the
dispensing of these substances.’’ Id. at 2.
The Show Cause Order further alleged
that on October 22, 1997, the United
States Attorney for the District of
Columbia filed an information which
charged Respondent with obtaining a
controlled substance by fraud, a
violation of 21 U.S.C. 843(a)(3), and that
Respondent subsequently pled guilty to
the charge and was sentenced to two
years probation. Id.
The Show Cause Order next alleged
that in July 1998, Respondent entered
into a Consent Order with the Maryland
Board of Dental Examiners under which
she was placed on probation for three
years. Id. The Show Cause Order further
alleged that in June 1999, the Maryland
Board suspended Respondent’s dental
license for a period of twelve months.
Id.
The Show Cause Order alleged that
between September 1998 and March
1999, Respondent ‘‘fraudulently
obtained narcotics from Maryland
pharmacies’’ on six occasions. Id. The
Show Cause Order alleged that
Respondent was subsequently arrested
for obtaining hydrocodone by fraud, and
that in April 2000, Respondent was
convicted following her guilty plea on
one count of violating Maryland
narcotics laws and was sentenced to
twelve months probation. Id.
The Show Cause Order also alleged
that in June 2004, Respondent failed to
disclose her ‘‘post-1997 drug abuse,
arrest, and conviction’’ to the New York
State Board of Dentistry. Id. The Show
Cause Order further alleged that
Respondent committed a material
falsification because she ‘‘failed to
disclose [her] 2000 criminal conviction’’
on the DEA application that is at issue
in this proceeding. Id.
Upon service of the Show Cause
Order, Respondent, through her
counsel, requested a hearing and
submitted a letter responding to the
allegations. The matter was assigned to
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Mary
Ellen Bittner who ordered the parties to
file pre-hearing statements. While the
Government timely filed its statement,
Respondent did not meet its May 30,
2006 filing deadline. Accordingly, on
July 13, 2006, the Government moved to
terminate the proceeding and requested
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19:22 Feb 28, 2008
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that the ALJ find that Respondent had
waived her right to a hearing. Gov. Mot.
for Summ. Disp. at 1–2.
Upon receipt of the Government’s
motion, the ALJ issued a memorandum
offering Respondent the opportunity to
respond by July 31, 2006. Order
Terminating Proceeding at 1.
Respondent failed to do so. On August
9, 2006, the ALJ found that Respondent
had waived her right to a hearing,
granted the Government’s motion, and
ordered that the proceeding be
terminated. Id.
On June 6, 2007, the case file was
forwarded to me for final agency action.
Based on: (1) Respondent’s failure to
comply with the ALJ’s Order to submit
her pre-hearing statement, and (2) her
failure to respond to the Government’s
motion for summary disposition, I adopt
the ALJ’s finding that Respondent has
waived her right to a hearing. See 21
CFR 1301.43(d). I therefore issue this
Decision and Final Order without a
hearing based on relevant material in
the investigative file and make the
following findings.
Findings
On February 6, 2005, Respondent
submitted an application for a DEA
Certificate of Registration as a
practitioner. On the application,
Respondent was required to answer
several questions including whether she
had ‘‘ever been convicted of a crime in
connection with controlled substances
under state or federal law?,’’ and
whether she had ‘‘ever surrendered or
had a federal controlled substance
registration revoked, suspended,
restricted or denied?’’ Respondent
answered ‘‘yes’’ to both of these
questions.1 Respondent offered the
following explanation of her ‘‘yes’’
answers:
[O]n December 14, 1997 I [pled] guilty to
one count of Rx fraud in Washington D.C.
under His Honor Judge Stanley Sporkin. I
was suffering from post partum depression
after the birth of my first & second child. I
was told not to prescribe narcotics until my
treatment was completed, and my diagnosis
assured. * * * Full prescribing rights were
given back to me. No state license was ever
revoked [or] suspended. No problems have
occurred since, and to the best of my
knowledge the case was expunged exactly 7
years later in 2004.
Based on Respondent’s affirmative
answers to the two questions, her
application was assigned to a Diversion
Investigator (DI) for further
1 On the application, Respondent was also asked
whether she had ‘‘ever surrendered or had a state
professional license or controlled substance
registration revoked, suspended, denied, restricted,
or placed on probation?’’ Respondent answered
‘‘no’’ to this question.
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11147
investigation. During the course of her
investigation, the DI determined that in
December 1997, Respondent had pled
guilty to one count of obtaining
oxycodone by fraud, a violation of 21
U.S.C. 843(a)(3), in the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia, and
that she had also surrendered her DEA
registration. Moreover, as a result of her
conviction, in July 1998, the Maryland
State Board of Dental Examiners entered
into a consent order with Respondent
which placed her on probation for a
period of three years during which she
was prohibited from prescribing
controlled substances.
The DI also determined that a DEA
investigation had found that on various
dates between January 4, 1995, and
August 28, 1997, Respondent had failed
to document on order forms, the date
and quantity of schedule II controlled
substances (oxycodone) she had
received. The same investigation also
audited Respondent’s handling of
controlled substances and found that
she was short 427 oxycodone tablets. As
a result of this investigation,
Respondent entered into a civil
settlement with the Department of
Justice and agreed to pay a civil penalty
of $15,000.
The DI further determined that in
early 1999, Respondent was arrested by
officers of the Montgomery County,
Maryland police department, and
charged with six additional offenses
under Maryland law related to
controlled substances including
obtaining hydrocodone by fraud and the
unlawful possession of hydrocodone.
While five of the six counts were
dismissed, on April 6, 2000, Respondent
pled guilty to the unlawful possession
of a controlled substance for which she
was fined and placed on probation.
Respondent satisfactorily completed her
probation and was granted probation
before judgment.
In her request for a hearing,
Respondent acknowledged that she ‘‘did
in fact obtain the schedule III controlled
substance hydrocodone from a
pharmacy in Montgomery County.’’
Resp. Req. for Hearing at 1. Respondent
asserts, however, that she ‘‘return[ed]
the pills to the pharmacist just 10
minutes later,’’ but that the pharmacist
nonetheless filed a police report which
led to her arrest ‘‘364 days later.’’ Id.
Respondent contends that ‘‘in the
spring of 2000, in the Montgomery
County Court, the case was ruled nulle
prosequi * * * and was dropped.’’ Id.
Respondent further asserts that ‘‘[w]e
were advised by our legal counsel that
a nol-pros decision meant that [the]
arrest was thrown out and future
disclosure of the event was neither
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 41 / Friday, February 29, 2008 / Notices
appropriate nor necessary,’’ and that she
‘‘was told that this decision meant, in
laymen’s terms, ‘that the arrest never
happened.’ ’’ Id.2 Respondent further
stated that she would submit the
transcript from the proceeding to the
Agency, Id., but did not do so.
Discussion
Section 303(f) of the Controlled
Substances Act provides that an
application for a practitioner’s
registration may be denied upon a
determination ‘‘that the issuance of such
registration would be inconsistent with
the public interest.’’ 21 U.S.C. 823(f). In
making the public interest
determination, the CSA requires the
consideration of the following factors:
(1) The recommendation of the appropriate
State licensing board or professional
disciplinary authority.
(2) The applicant’s experience in
dispensing * * * controlled substances.
(3) The applicant’s conviction record under
Federal or State laws relating to the
manufacture, distribution, or dispensing of
controlled substances.
(4) Compliance with applicable State,
Federal, or local laws relating to controlled
substances.
(5) Such other conduct which may threaten
the public health and safety.
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Id.
• ‘‘These factors are considered in the
disjunctive.’’ Robert A. Leslie, M.D., 68
FR 15227, 15230 (2003). I ‘‘may rely on
any one or a combination of factors, and
may give each factor the weight [I]
deem[] appropriate in determining
whether * * * an application for
registration [should be] denied.’’ Id.
Moreover, I am ‘‘not required to make
findings as to all of the factors.’’ Hoxie
v. DEA, 419 F.3d 477, 482 (6th Cir.
2005); see also Morall v. DEA, 412 F.3d
165, 173–74 (D.C. Cir. 2005).
Furthermore, under Section 304(a)(1),
a registration may be revoked or
suspended ‘‘upon a finding that the
registrant * * * has materially falsified
any application filed pursuant to or
required by this subchapter.’’ 21 U.S.C.
824(a)(1). Under agency precedent, the
various grounds for revocation or
2 Respondent also contended that while in June
1999, the Maryland Board ‘‘did indeed suspend her
dental license for 12 months, [the suspension] was
also stayed immediately.’’ Respondent’s Req. for
Hearing at 1. The record contains, however, a copy
of a June 2, 1999 consent order under which
Respondent voluntarily agreed not to practice
dentistry for a period of twelve months. This order
contains no indication that it was stayed. The Show
Cause Order did not, however, allege either that
Respondent’s ‘‘no’’ answer to the liability question
regarding whether her state license had been the
subject of discipline or her statement that ‘‘[n]o
state license was ever revoked and/or suspended’’
was materially false. I therefore do not consider
whether either of these statements is grounds for
the denial of her application.
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19:22 Feb 28, 2008
Jkt 214001
suspension of an existing registration
that Congress enumerated in section
304(a), 21 U.S.C. 824(a), are also
properly considered in deciding
whether to grant or deny an application
under section 303. See Anthony D.
Funches, 64 FR 14267, 14268 (1999);
Alan R. Schankman, 63 FR 45260
(1998); Kuen H. Chen, 58 FR 65401,
65402 (1993). Thus, the allegation that
Respondent materially falsified her
application is properly considered in
this proceeding, see Samuel S. Jackson,
72 FR 23848, 23852 (2007), and is, if
proved, an adequate ground for denying
her application.
On the Show Cause Order, the
Government made two allegations that
Respondent engaged in material
falsification. First, it alleged that in June
2004, Respondent failed to disclose her
‘‘post-1997 drug, abuse, arrest, and
conviction’’ when she ‘‘appeared before
the New York State Board of Dentistry
* * * as an applicant for a license to
practice dentistry.’’ Show Cause Order
at 2.
Respondent remains, however,
licensed in good standing in the State of
New York. Under these circumstances,
the allegation that she failed to disclose
to the New York Board of Dentistry the
second arrest and conviction (and thus
procured her dental license by
fraudulent means) is a matter which
should be resolved in the first instance
by the State and not DEA. The allegation
is therefore dismissed.
Respondent’s statement on her DEA
application is, however, properly before
the Agency. Even accepting
Respondent’s statement that she was
advised by her legal counsel that she
was not required to disclose her arrest
and plea, DEA has long taken the view
that even when a court withholds
adjudication and ultimately dismisses
the charge after the completion of
probation, the proceeding is still a
conviction within the meaning of the
Controlled Substances Act. See Eric A.
Baum, M.D., 53 FR 47272, 47274 (1988);
see also David A. Hoxie, 69 FR 51477,
51478 (1994).
Moreover, the failure to disclose such
a conviction constitutes a material
falsification because it is ‘‘capable of
influencing’’ the decision as to whether
to grant an application. See Kungys v.
United States, 485 U.S. 759, 770 (1988)
(int. quotation and other citation
omitted). As DEA has frequently noted,
an applicant’s answers to the various
liability questions are material because
the Agency ‘‘relies upon such answers
to determine whether an investigation is
needed prior to granting the
application.’’ Martha Hernandez, M.D.,
62 FR 61145, 61146 (1997).
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Sfmt 4703
Respondent’s failure to disclose the
2000 Maryland proceeding is material
because the public interest inquiry
under section 303(f) requires, inter alia,
that the Agency examine her
‘‘experience in dispensing * * *
controlled substances,’’ her ‘‘conviction
record * * * relating to the * * *
dispensing of controlled substances,’’
and her ‘‘[c]ompliance with applicable
State, Federal, or local laws relating to
controlled substances.’’ 21 U.S.C. 823(f).
Respondent was therefore required to
disclose the circumstances surrounding
her subsequent arrest even if her
conviction was expunged. Her failure to
do so constitutes material falsification.
Furthermore, even crediting
Respondent’s statement that she was
advised by counsel that she need not
disclose the Maryland proceeding in the
future, in her explanation she then
proceeded to make an affirmative and
material misrepresentation when she
stated that ‘‘[n]o problems have
occurred since’’ the 1997 federal
proceeding. The statement was clearly
false and Respondent had reason to
know this to be so. I therefore conclude
that Respondent knowingly made a
material false statement in an attempt to
obtain a favorable decision from the
Agency on Respondent’s application
and that granting Respondent a new
registration ‘‘would be inconsistent with
the public interest.’’ 21 U.S.C. 823(f);
see also e.g., Dan E. Hale, 69 FR 69402
(2004).
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me
by 21 U.S.C. 823(f), as well as 28 CFR
0.100(b) & 0.104, I order that the
application Pamela Monterosso, D.M.D.,
for a DEA Certificate of Registration as
a practitioner, be, and it hereby is,
denied. This order is effective March 31,
2008.
Dated: February 15, 2008.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8–3873 Filed 2–28–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Importer of Controlled Substances;
Notice of Application
Pursuant to 21 U.S.C. 958(i), the
Attorney General shall, prior to issuing
a registration under this Section to a
bulk manufacturer of a controlled
substance in schedule I or II and prior
to issuing a regulation under 21 U.S.C.
952(a)(2)(B) authorizing the importation
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 41 (Friday, February 29, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11146-11148]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-3873]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Pamela Monterosso, D.M.D.; Denial of Application
On February 6, 2006, the Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause to Pamela Monterosso, D.M.D., (Respondent) of New York, N.Y.
The Show Cause Order proposed the denial of Respondent's pending
application for a DEA Certificate of Registration as a practitioner on
the ground that her ``registration would be inconsistent with the
public interest.'' Show Cause Order at 1 (citing 21 U.S.C. 823(f)).
The Show Cause Order specifically alleged that Respondent had
previously held a DEA registration at premises located in Washington,
DC, which she surrendered for cause in November 1997. Id. According to
the allegations, in September 1997, Respondent was
[[Page 11147]]
arrested for obtaining oxycodone, a schedule II controlled substance,
by use of a fraudulent prescription, and admitted to investigators that
she was abusing pharmaceutical controlled substances. Id. The Show
Cause Order alleged that following her arrest, DEA investigators
audited Respondent's handling of controlled substances and found that
she could not ``produce proper records to account for the dispensing of
these substances.'' Id. at 2. The Show Cause Order further alleged that
on October 22, 1997, the United States Attorney for the District of
Columbia filed an information which charged Respondent with obtaining a
controlled substance by fraud, a violation of 21 U.S.C. 843(a)(3), and
that Respondent subsequently pled guilty to the charge and was
sentenced to two years probation. Id.
The Show Cause Order next alleged that in July 1998, Respondent
entered into a Consent Order with the Maryland Board of Dental
Examiners under which she was placed on probation for three years. Id.
The Show Cause Order further alleged that in June 1999, the Maryland
Board suspended Respondent's dental license for a period of twelve
months. Id.
The Show Cause Order alleged that between September 1998 and March
1999, Respondent ``fraudulently obtained narcotics from Maryland
pharmacies'' on six occasions. Id. The Show Cause Order alleged that
Respondent was subsequently arrested for obtaining hydrocodone by
fraud, and that in April 2000, Respondent was convicted following her
guilty plea on one count of violating Maryland narcotics laws and was
sentenced to twelve months probation. Id.
The Show Cause Order also alleged that in June 2004, Respondent
failed to disclose her ``post-1997 drug abuse, arrest, and conviction''
to the New York State Board of Dentistry. Id. The Show Cause Order
further alleged that Respondent committed a material falsification
because she ``failed to disclose [her] 2000 criminal conviction'' on
the DEA application that is at issue in this proceeding. Id.
Upon service of the Show Cause Order, Respondent, through her
counsel, requested a hearing and submitted a letter responding to the
allegations. The matter was assigned to Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
Mary Ellen Bittner who ordered the parties to file pre-hearing
statements. While the Government timely filed its statement, Respondent
did not meet its May 30, 2006 filing deadline. Accordingly, on July 13,
2006, the Government moved to terminate the proceeding and requested
that the ALJ find that Respondent had waived her right to a hearing.
Gov. Mot. for Summ. Disp. at 1-2.
Upon receipt of the Government's motion, the ALJ issued a
memorandum offering Respondent the opportunity to respond by July 31,
2006. Order Terminating Proceeding at 1. Respondent failed to do so. On
August 9, 2006, the ALJ found that Respondent had waived her right to a
hearing, granted the Government's motion, and ordered that the
proceeding be terminated. Id.
On June 6, 2007, the case file was forwarded to me for final agency
action. Based on: (1) Respondent's failure to comply with the ALJ's
Order to submit her pre-hearing statement, and (2) her failure to
respond to the Government's motion for summary disposition, I adopt the
ALJ's finding that Respondent has waived her right to a hearing. See 21
CFR 1301.43(d). I therefore issue this Decision and Final Order without
a hearing based on relevant material in the investigative file and make
the following findings.
Findings
On February 6, 2005, Respondent submitted an application for a DEA
Certificate of Registration as a practitioner. On the application,
Respondent was required to answer several questions including whether
she had ``ever been convicted of a crime in connection with controlled
substances under state or federal law?,'' and whether she had ``ever
surrendered or had a federal controlled substance registration revoked,
suspended, restricted or denied?'' Respondent answered ``yes'' to both
of these questions.\1\ Respondent offered the following explanation of
her ``yes'' answers:
\1\ On the application, Respondent was also asked whether she
had ``ever surrendered or had a state professional license or
controlled substance registration revoked, suspended, denied,
restricted, or placed on probation?'' Respondent answered ``no'' to
this question.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[O]n December 14, 1997 I [pled] guilty to one count of Rx fraud
in Washington D.C. under His Honor Judge Stanley Sporkin. I was
suffering from post partum depression after the birth of my first &
second child. I was told not to prescribe narcotics until my
treatment was completed, and my diagnosis assured. * * * Full
prescribing rights were given back to me. No state license was ever
revoked [or] suspended. No problems have occurred since, and to the
best of my knowledge the case was expunged exactly 7 years later in
2004.
Based on Respondent's affirmative answers to the two questions, her
application was assigned to a Diversion Investigator (DI) for further
investigation. During the course of her investigation, the DI
determined that in December 1997, Respondent had pled guilty to one
count of obtaining oxycodone by fraud, a violation of 21 U.S.C.
843(a)(3), in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and
that she had also surrendered her DEA registration. Moreover, as a
result of her conviction, in July 1998, the Maryland State Board of
Dental Examiners entered into a consent order with Respondent which
placed her on probation for a period of three years during which she
was prohibited from prescribing controlled substances.
The DI also determined that a DEA investigation had found that on
various dates between January 4, 1995, and August 28, 1997, Respondent
had failed to document on order forms, the date and quantity of
schedule II controlled substances (oxycodone) she had received. The
same investigation also audited Respondent's handling of controlled
substances and found that she was short 427 oxycodone tablets. As a
result of this investigation, Respondent entered into a civil
settlement with the Department of Justice and agreed to pay a civil
penalty of $15,000.
The DI further determined that in early 1999, Respondent was
arrested by officers of the Montgomery County, Maryland police
department, and charged with six additional offenses under Maryland law
related to controlled substances including obtaining hydrocodone by
fraud and the unlawful possession of hydrocodone. While five of the six
counts were dismissed, on April 6, 2000, Respondent pled guilty to the
unlawful possession of a controlled substance for which she was fined
and placed on probation. Respondent satisfactorily completed her
probation and was granted probation before judgment.
In her request for a hearing, Respondent acknowledged that she
``did in fact obtain the schedule III controlled substance hydrocodone
from a pharmacy in Montgomery County.'' Resp. Req. for Hearing at 1.
Respondent asserts, however, that she ``return[ed] the pills to the
pharmacist just 10 minutes later,'' but that the pharmacist nonetheless
filed a police report which led to her arrest ``364 days later.'' Id.
Respondent contends that ``in the spring of 2000, in the Montgomery
County Court, the case was ruled nulle prosequi * * * and was
dropped.'' Id. Respondent further asserts that ``[w]e were advised by
our legal counsel that a nol-pros decision meant that [the] arrest was
thrown out and future disclosure of the event was neither
[[Page 11148]]
appropriate nor necessary,'' and that she ``was told that this decision
meant, in laymen's terms, `that the arrest never happened.' '' Id.\2\
Respondent further stated that she would submit the transcript from the
proceeding to the Agency, Id., but did not do so.
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\2\ Respondent also contended that while in June 1999, the
Maryland Board ``did indeed suspend her dental license for 12
months, [the suspension] was also stayed immediately.'' Respondent's
Req. for Hearing at 1. The record contains, however, a copy of a
June 2, 1999 consent order under which Respondent voluntarily agreed
not to practice dentistry for a period of twelve months. This order
contains no indication that it was stayed. The Show Cause Order did
not, however, allege either that Respondent's ``no'' answer to the
liability question regarding whether her state license had been the
subject of discipline or her statement that ``[n]o state license was
ever revoked and/or suspended'' was materially false. I therefore do
not consider whether either of these statements is grounds for the
denial of her application.
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Discussion
Section 303(f) of the Controlled Substances Act provides that an
application for a practitioner's registration may be denied upon a
determination ``that the issuance of such registration would be
inconsistent with the public interest.'' 21 U.S.C. 823(f). In making
the public interest determination, the CSA requires the consideration
of the following factors:
(1) The recommendation of the appropriate State licensing board
or professional disciplinary authority.
(2) The applicant's experience in dispensing * * * controlled
substances.
(3) The applicant's conviction record under Federal or State
laws relating to the manufacture, distribution, or dispensing of
controlled substances.
(4) Compliance with applicable State, Federal, or local laws
relating to controlled substances.
(5) Such other conduct which may threaten the public health and
safety.
Id.
``These factors are considered in the disjunctive.''
Robert A. Leslie, M.D., 68 FR 15227, 15230 (2003). I ``may rely on any
one or a combination of factors, and may give each factor the weight
[I] deem[] appropriate in determining whether * * * an application for
registration [should be] denied.'' Id. Moreover, I am ``not required to
make findings as to all of the factors.'' Hoxie v. DEA, 419 F.3d 477,
482 (6th Cir. 2005); see also Morall v. DEA, 412 F.3d 165, 173-74 (D.C.
Cir. 2005).
Furthermore, under Section 304(a)(1), a registration may be revoked
or suspended ``upon a finding that the registrant * * * has materially
falsified any application filed pursuant to or required by this
subchapter.'' 21 U.S.C. 824(a)(1). Under agency precedent, the various
grounds for revocation or suspension of an existing registration that
Congress enumerated in section 304(a), 21 U.S.C. 824(a), are also
properly considered in deciding whether to grant or deny an application
under section 303. See Anthony D. Funches, 64 FR 14267, 14268 (1999);
Alan R. Schankman, 63 FR 45260 (1998); Kuen H. Chen, 58 FR 65401, 65402
(1993). Thus, the allegation that Respondent materially falsified her
application is properly considered in this proceeding, see Samuel S.
Jackson, 72 FR 23848, 23852 (2007), and is, if proved, an adequate
ground for denying her application.
On the Show Cause Order, the Government made two allegations that
Respondent engaged in material falsification. First, it alleged that in
June 2004, Respondent failed to disclose her ``post-1997 drug, abuse,
arrest, and conviction'' when she ``appeared before the New York State
Board of Dentistry * * * as an applicant for a license to practice
dentistry.'' Show Cause Order at 2.
Respondent remains, however, licensed in good standing in the State
of New York. Under these circumstances, the allegation that she failed
to disclose to the New York Board of Dentistry the second arrest and
conviction (and thus procured her dental license by fraudulent means)
is a matter which should be resolved in the first instance by the State
and not DEA. The allegation is therefore dismissed.
Respondent's statement on her DEA application is, however, properly
before the Agency. Even accepting Respondent's statement that she was
advised by her legal counsel that she was not required to disclose her
arrest and plea, DEA has long taken the view that even when a court
withholds adjudication and ultimately dismisses the charge after the
completion of probation, the proceeding is still a conviction within
the meaning of the Controlled Substances Act. See Eric A. Baum, M.D.,
53 FR 47272, 47274 (1988); see also David A. Hoxie, 69 FR 51477, 51478
(1994).
Moreover, the failure to disclose such a conviction constitutes a
material falsification because it is ``capable of influencing'' the
decision as to whether to grant an application. See Kungys v. United
States, 485 U.S. 759, 770 (1988) (int. quotation and other citation
omitted). As DEA has frequently noted, an applicant's answers to the
various liability questions are material because the Agency ``relies
upon such answers to determine whether an investigation is needed prior
to granting the application.'' Martha Hernandez, M.D., 62 FR 61145,
61146 (1997). Respondent's failure to disclose the 2000 Maryland
proceeding is material because the public interest inquiry under
section 303(f) requires, inter alia, that the Agency examine her
``experience in dispensing * * * controlled substances,'' her
``conviction record * * * relating to the * * * dispensing of
controlled substances,'' and her ``[c]ompliance with applicable State,
Federal, or local laws relating to controlled substances.'' 21 U.S.C.
823(f). Respondent was therefore required to disclose the circumstances
surrounding her subsequent arrest even if her conviction was expunged.
Her failure to do so constitutes material falsification.
Furthermore, even crediting Respondent's statement that she was
advised by counsel that she need not disclose the Maryland proceeding
in the future, in her explanation she then proceeded to make an
affirmative and material misrepresentation when she stated that ``[n]o
problems have occurred since'' the 1997 federal proceeding. The
statement was clearly false and Respondent had reason to know this to
be so. I therefore conclude that Respondent knowingly made a material
false statement in an attempt to obtain a favorable decision from the
Agency on Respondent's application and that granting Respondent a new
registration ``would be inconsistent with the public interest.'' 21
U.S.C. 823(f); see also e.g., Dan E. Hale, 69 FR 69402 (2004).
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me by 21 U.S.C. 823(f), as well
as 28 CFR 0.100(b) & 0.104, I order that the application Pamela
Monterosso, D.M.D., for a DEA Certificate of Registration as a
practitioner, be, and it hereby is, denied. This order is effective
March 31, 2008.
Dated: February 15, 2008.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8-3873 Filed 2-28-08; 8:45 am]
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