John B. Freitas, D.O.; Revocation of Registration, 17524-17525 [E9-8620]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 71 / Wednesday, April 15, 2009 / Notices
doing so, this Agency does not expect
its registrants to possess divine powers.
It does, however, expect that its
registrants exercise common sense and
act responsibly.
Respondent’s and Mr. Gregg’s
violation in selling this product cannot
be condoned. I therefore conclude that
Respondent’s registration should be
suspended for a period of six months.
However, in light of the total record in
this case, which establishes that
Respondent has otherwise attempted to
obey applicable laws and regulations, I
conclude that the suspension should be
stayed for a period of three years at
which time the suspension will be
rescinded provided Respondent does
not commit any further violation of
federal or state laws or regulations
related to listed chemicals or controlled
substances.
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me
by 21 U.S.C. 823(h) & 824(a), as well as
28 CFR 0.100(b) & 0.104, I order that the
application of Gregg & Son Distributors
to renew its DEA Certificate of
Registration be, and it hereby is,
granted. I further order that the DEA
Certificate of Registration issued to
Gregg & Son Distributors be, and it
hereby is suspended for a period of six
months, but that the suspension shall be
stayed for a period of three years from
the date of this Order provided
Respondent complies with all
applicable laws and regulations as set
forth above. This Order is effective
immediately.
Dated: April 3, 2009.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9–8621 Filed 4–14–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Meeting of the CJIS Advisory Policy
Board
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with PROPOSALS
AGENCY: Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI), Department of Justice.
ACTION: Meeting Notice.
SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is
to announce the meeting of the Criminal
Justice Information Services (CJIS)
Advisory Policy Board (APB). The CJIS
APB is a Federal advisory committee
established pursuant to the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA). This
meeting announcement is being
published as required by section 10 of
the FACA.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
16:44 Apr 14, 2009
Jkt 217001
The CJIS APB is responsible for
reviewing policy issues and appropriate
technical and operational issues related
to the programs administered by the
FBI’s CJIS Division, and thereafter,
making appropriate recommendations to
the FBI Director. The programs
administered by the CJIS Division are
the Integrated Automated Fingerprint
Identification System, the Interstate
Identification Index, Law Enforcement
Online, National Crime Information
Center, the National Instant Criminal
Background Check System, the National
Incident-Based Reporting System, Law
Enforcement National Data Exchange,
and Uniform Crime Reporting.
The meeting will be open to the
public on a first-come, first-seated basis.
Any member of the public wishing to
file a written statement concerning the
CJIS Division programs or wishing to
address this session should notify
Senior CJIS Advisor Roy G. Weise at
(304) 625–2730 at least 24 hours prior
to the start of the session. The
notification should contain the
requestor’s name, corporate designation,
and consumer affiliation or government
designation along with a short statement
describing the topic to be addressed and
the time needed for the presentation. A
requestor will ordinarily be allowed no
more than 15 minutes to present a topic.
DATES AND TIMES: The APB will meet in
open session from 8:30 a.m. until 5
p.m., on June 4–5, 2009.
The meeting will take place
at the Gaylord National, 201 Waterfront
Street, National Harbor, Maryland, (301)
965–2300.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Inquiries may be addressed to Ms. Lori
A. Kemp, Management and Program
Analyst, Advisory Groups Management
Unit, Liaison, Advisory, Training and
Statistics Section, FBI CJIS Division;
Module C3, 1000 Custer Hollow Road,
Clarksburg, West Virginia 26306–0149;
telephone (304) 625–2619; facsimile
(304) 625–5090.
Dated: April 1, 2009.
Roy G. Weise,
Senior CJIS Advisor, Criminal Justice
Information Services Division, Federal Bureau
of Investigation.
[FR Doc. E9–8490 Filed 4–14–09; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. 08–58]
John B. Freitas, D.O.; Revocation of
Registration
On August 29, 2008, the Deputy
Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause to John B. Freitas, D.O.
(Respondent), of Carthage, Missouri.
The Show Cause Order proposed the
revocation of Respondent’s DEA
Certificate of Registration, BF2847715,
which authorizes him to dispense
controlled substances in schedules II
through V as a practitioner, as well as
the denial of any pending application to
renew or modify the registration, on the
ground that Respondent lacks authority
to dispense controlled substances in
Missouri, the State in which he is
registered with DEA. Show Cause Order
at 1.
Respondent timely requested a
hearing on the allegation; the matter was
placed on the docket of the Agency’s
Administrative Law Judges (ALJ).
Thereafter, the Government moved for
summary disposition. Motion for
Summary Disp. at 1. The basis of the
motion was that Respondent’s Missouri
Controlled Substances Registration
automatically terminated when
Respondent ceased practicing at the
location where he held his State
registration and ‘‘did not notify the
[State] of [his] change of address or a
new Missouri practice location.’’ Id. at
Attachment 1 (Letter of Michael R.
Boeger, Asst. Administrator, Missouri
Bureau of Narcotics & Dangerous Drugs,
to Dr. John Freitas (May 13, 2008)).1
Thereafter, Respondent filed his
response to the Government’s motion.
Therein, Respondent acknowledged the
State BNDD’s letter and further stated
that he ‘‘does not deny that he no longer
has the authority to handle controlled
substances in the State of Missouri.’’
Respondent’s Response to Gov.’s Mot.
for Summ. Disp. at 1. Respondent
argued, however, that his state
registration had not been ‘‘suspended,
revoked, or denied under Missouri law
by the BNDD,’’ and that under 21 U.S.C.
824(a)(3), DEA’s authority to revoke is
limited to those situations in which a
registrant’s State authority has been
1 According to the letter, the State ‘‘ha[d] received
information that [Respondent’s] last day of
practicing at that location was the[e] date of [his]
overdose on March 25, 2008,’’ and ‘‘had received
written documentation that [Respondent’s]
privileges were terminated at that location on
March 26, 2008.’’ Gov. Motion at Attachment 1.
Sfmt 4703
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 71 / Wednesday, April 15, 2009 / Notices
‘‘suspended, revoked or denied by
competent State authority’’ and the
registrant ‘‘is no longer authorized by
State law to engage in the * * *
dispensing of controlled substances.’’
Id. at 2.
On November 7, 2008, the ALJ
granted the Government’s motion,
noting that ‘‘it is undisputed that the
Respondent currently lacks authority to
handle controlled substances in
Missouri.’’ ALJ at 3. Because
Respondent’s argument as to the scope
of the Agency’s authority under 21
U.S.C. 823(a)(3) had previously been
rejected with respect to a practitioner
who allowed his registration to expire,
the ALJ found ‘‘no meaningful basis on
which to distinguish expiration of a
State authorization from automatic
termination by operation of law.’’ Id. at
5. The ALJ thus applied the Agency’s
longstanding interpretation that it lacks
authority under the Controlled
Substances Act to maintain a
registration if a registrant lacks authority
under State law to dispense controlled
substances. Id. at 4–5. The ALJ thus
recommended that Respondent’s
registration be revoked and that any
pending application to renew or modify
his registration be denied.
After the period for filing exceptions
lapsed,2 the record was forwarded to me
for final agency action. Having
considered the entire record in this
matter, I adopt the ALJ’s decision in its
entirety.
I find that Respondent currently holds
DEA Certificate of Registration,
BF2847715, which authorizes him to
dispense controlled substances in
schedules II through V as a practitioner,
at the registered location of 2232 S.
Garrison Ave., Carthage, Missouri. I also
find that Respondent’s Missouri
Controlled Substances Registration has
terminated. I therefore further find that
Respondent is currently without
authority to dispense controlled
substances in Missouri, the State in
which he practices medicine and holds
his DEA Registration. Moreover,
according to the Web site of the
Missouri Department of Health and
Senior Services, Respondent does not
possess a State controlled substances
registration.
Under the Controlled Substances Act
(CSA), a practitioner must be currently
authorized to handle controlled
substances in ‘‘the jurisdiction in which
he practices’’ in order to maintain a
DEA registration. See 21 U.S.C. 802(21)
(‘‘[t]he term ‘practitioner’ means a
physician * * * licensed, registered, or
otherwise permitted, by * * * the
2 Respondent
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did not file exceptions.
16:44 Apr 14, 2009
Jkt 217001
jurisdiction in which he practices * * *
to distribute, dispense, [or] administer
* * * a controlled substance in the
course of professional practice’’). See
also id. § 823(f) (‘‘The Attorney General
shall register practitioners * * * if the
applicant is authorized to dispense
* * * controlled substances under the
laws of the State in which he
practices.’’). As these provisions make
plain, possessing authority under state
law to handle controlled substances is
an essential condition for holding a DEA
registration.
Accordingly, DEA has held repeatedly
that the CSA requires the revocation of
a registration issued to a practitioner
who lacks authority under state law to
dispense controlled substances.
Moreover, DEA has applied this rule not
only where a registrant’s state authority
has been suspended or revoked, but also
where a practitioner with an existing
DEA registration has lost his state
authority for reasons other than through
formal disciplinary action of a State
board.
For example, in William D. Levitt, 64
FR 49882, 49823 (1999), DEA held that
because ‘‘state authorization was clearly
intended to be a prerequisite to DEA
registration, Congress could not have
intended for DEA to maintain a
registration if a registrant is no longer
authorized by the state in which he
practices to handle controlled
substances due to the expiration of his
state license.’’ See also Mark L. Beck, 64
FR 40899, 40900 (1999); Charles H.
Ryan, 58 FR 14430 (1993). Moreover, in
Marlou D. Davis, 69 FR 1307, 1310
(2004), I addressed and rejected the
same argument raised by Respondent in
a case which involved the same factual
scenario as is presented here—the
termination under Missouri law of a
practitioner’s authority which arose
because of an address change. In Davis,
I specifically relied on the reasoning of
Levitt and rejected the argument that the
respondent’s registration should be
deemed terminated under 21 CFR
1301.52 rather than revoked under 21
U.S.C. 824(a)(3).3 Id. at 1310. Indeed, as
the ALJ observed in her recommended
decision in this matter, because
possessing authority under State law is
an essential requirement for holding a
CSA registration, there is ‘‘no
3 While there is a procedure available for
terminating a registration, under the Agency’s
regulation, a registrant who discontinues
professional practice must ‘‘notify the [Agency]
promptly of such fact.’’ 21 CFR 1301.52(a).
Moreover, the registrant must return his certificate
of registration to the Agency for cancellation, as
well as any unexecuted order forms. Id. 1301.52(c).
Notably, in Davis, the respondent did not comply
with the regulation and indeed had continued
professional practice.
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Fmt 4703
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17525
meaningful basis’’ for distinguishing
between those registrants who allow
their State authority to expire and those
whose State authority expires by
operation of law. ALJ at 5.
Here, as in Davis, Respondent has not
notified the Agency that he has
permanently ceased the practice of
medicine (or the dispensing of
controlled substances in the course of
medical practice). 21 CFR 1301.52(a).
Nor is there any evidence that he has
returned his certificate of registration for
cancellation. Id. 1301.52(c).
Accordingly, Respondent’s registration
cannot be deemed terminated. Because
Respondent does not have authority
under Missouri law to dispense
controlled substances, he does not meet
the statutory requirement for holding a
registration under Federal law. See 21
U.S.C. 823(f). His registration must
therefore be revoked.
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me
by 21 U.S.C. 823(f) & 824(a), as well as
28 CFR 0.100(b) & 0.104, I order that
DEA Certificate of Registration,
BF2847715, issued to John B. Freitas,
D.O., be, and it hereby is, revoked. I
further order that any pending
application of John B. Freitas, D.O., to
renew or modify his registration, be, and
it hereby is; denied. This Order is
effective May 15, 2009.
Dated: April 10, 2009.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9–8620 Filed 4–14–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. 08–49]
Joseph Baumstarck, M.D.; Revocation
of Registration
On May 19, 2008, I, the Deputy
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause and Immediate Suspension
of Registration to Joseph Baumstarck,
M.D. (Respondent), of Lovell, Wyoming.
The Order proposed the revocation of
Respondent’s DEA Certificate of
Registration, BB2806480, which
authorizes him to dispense controlled
substances in schedules II through V,
and proposed the denial of any pending
applications to renew or modify his
registration, on the ground that
Respondent had committed acts which
render his continued registration
inconsistent with the public interest.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 71 (Wednesday, April 15, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17524-17525]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-8620]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. 08-58]
John B. Freitas, D.O.; Revocation of Registration
On August 29, 2008, the Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause to John B. Freitas, D.O. (Respondent), of Carthage,
Missouri. The Show Cause Order proposed the revocation of Respondent's
DEA Certificate of Registration, BF2847715, which authorizes him to
dispense controlled substances in schedules II through V as a
practitioner, as well as the denial of any pending application to renew
or modify the registration, on the ground that Respondent lacks
authority to dispense controlled substances in Missouri, the State in
which he is registered with DEA. Show Cause Order at 1.
Respondent timely requested a hearing on the allegation; the matter
was placed on the docket of the Agency's Administrative Law Judges
(ALJ). Thereafter, the Government moved for summary disposition. Motion
for Summary Disp. at 1. The basis of the motion was that Respondent's
Missouri Controlled Substances Registration automatically terminated
when Respondent ceased practicing at the location where he held his
State registration and ``did not notify the [State] of [his] change of
address or a new Missouri practice location.'' Id. at Attachment 1
(Letter of Michael R. Boeger, Asst. Administrator, Missouri Bureau of
Narcotics & Dangerous Drugs, to Dr. John Freitas (May 13, 2008)).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ According to the letter, the State ``ha[d] received
information that [Respondent's] last day of practicing at that
location was the[e] date of [his] overdose on March 25, 2008,'' and
``had received written documentation that [Respondent's] privileges
were terminated at that location on March 26, 2008.'' Gov. Motion at
Attachment 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thereafter, Respondent filed his response to the Government's
motion. Therein, Respondent acknowledged the State BNDD's letter and
further stated that he ``does not deny that he no longer has the
authority to handle controlled substances in the State of Missouri.''
Respondent's Response to Gov.'s Mot. for Summ. Disp. at 1. Respondent
argued, however, that his state registration had not been ``suspended,
revoked, or denied under Missouri law by the BNDD,'' and that under 21
U.S.C. 824(a)(3), DEA's authority to revoke is limited to those
situations in which a registrant's State authority has been
[[Page 17525]]
``suspended, revoked or denied by competent State authority'' and the
registrant ``is no longer authorized by State law to engage in the * *
* dispensing of controlled substances.'' Id. at 2.
On November 7, 2008, the ALJ granted the Government's motion,
noting that ``it is undisputed that the Respondent currently lacks
authority to handle controlled substances in Missouri.'' ALJ at 3.
Because Respondent's argument as to the scope of the Agency's authority
under 21 U.S.C. 823(a)(3) had previously been rejected with respect to
a practitioner who allowed his registration to expire, the ALJ found
``no meaningful basis on which to distinguish expiration of a State
authorization from automatic termination by operation of law.'' Id. at
5. The ALJ thus applied the Agency's longstanding interpretation that
it lacks authority under the Controlled Substances Act to maintain a
registration if a registrant lacks authority under State law to
dispense controlled substances. Id. at 4-5. The ALJ thus recommended
that Respondent's registration be revoked and that any pending
application to renew or modify his registration be denied.
After the period for filing exceptions lapsed,\2\ the record was
forwarded to me for final agency action. Having considered the entire
record in this matter, I adopt the ALJ's decision in its entirety.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Respondent did not file exceptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I find that Respondent currently holds DEA Certificate of
Registration, BF2847715, which authorizes him to dispense controlled
substances in schedules II through V as a practitioner, at the
registered location of 2232 S. Garrison Ave., Carthage, Missouri. I
also find that Respondent's Missouri Controlled Substances Registration
has terminated. I therefore further find that Respondent is currently
without authority to dispense controlled substances in Missouri, the
State in which he practices medicine and holds his DEA Registration.
Moreover, according to the Web site of the Missouri Department of
Health and Senior Services, Respondent does not possess a State
controlled substances registration.
Under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), a practitioner must be
currently authorized to handle controlled substances in ``the
jurisdiction in which he practices'' in order to maintain a DEA
registration. See 21 U.S.C. 802(21) (``[t]he term `practitioner' means
a physician * * * licensed, registered, or otherwise permitted, by * *
* the jurisdiction in which he practices * * * to distribute, dispense,
[or] administer * * * a controlled substance in the course of
professional practice''). See also id. Sec. 823(f) (``The Attorney
General shall register practitioners * * * if the applicant is
authorized to dispense * * * controlled substances under the laws of
the State in which he practices.''). As these provisions make plain,
possessing authority under state law to handle controlled substances is
an essential condition for holding a DEA registration.
Accordingly, DEA has held repeatedly that the CSA requires the
revocation of a registration issued to a practitioner who lacks
authority under state law to dispense controlled substances. Moreover,
DEA has applied this rule not only where a registrant's state authority
has been suspended or revoked, but also where a practitioner with an
existing DEA registration has lost his state authority for reasons
other than through formal disciplinary action of a State board.
For example, in William D. Levitt, 64 FR 49882, 49823 (1999), DEA
held that because ``state authorization was clearly intended to be a
prerequisite to DEA registration, Congress could not have intended for
DEA to maintain a registration if a registrant is no longer authorized
by the state in which he practices to handle controlled substances due
to the expiration of his state license.'' See also Mark L. Beck, 64 FR
40899, 40900 (1999); Charles H. Ryan, 58 FR 14430 (1993). Moreover, in
Marlou D. Davis, 69 FR 1307, 1310 (2004), I addressed and rejected the
same argument raised by Respondent in a case which involved the same
factual scenario as is presented here--the termination under Missouri
law of a practitioner's authority which arose because of an address
change. In Davis, I specifically relied on the reasoning of Levitt and
rejected the argument that the respondent's registration should be
deemed terminated under 21 CFR 1301.52 rather than revoked under 21
U.S.C. 824(a)(3).\3\ Id. at 1310. Indeed, as the ALJ observed in her
recommended decision in this matter, because possessing authority under
State law is an essential requirement for holding a CSA registration,
there is ``no meaningful basis'' for distinguishing between those
registrants who allow their State authority to expire and those whose
State authority expires by operation of law. ALJ at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ While there is a procedure available for terminating a
registration, under the Agency's regulation, a registrant who
discontinues professional practice must ``notify the [Agency]
promptly of such fact.'' 21 CFR 1301.52(a). Moreover, the registrant
must return his certificate of registration to the Agency for
cancellation, as well as any unexecuted order forms. Id. 1301.52(c).
Notably, in Davis, the respondent did not comply with the regulation
and indeed had continued professional practice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here, as in Davis, Respondent has not notified the Agency that he
has permanently ceased the practice of medicine (or the dispensing of
controlled substances in the course of medical practice). 21 CFR
1301.52(a). Nor is there any evidence that he has returned his
certificate of registration for cancellation. Id. 1301.52(c).
Accordingly, Respondent's registration cannot be deemed terminated.
Because Respondent does not have authority under Missouri law to
dispense controlled substances, he does not meet the statutory
requirement for holding a registration under Federal law. See 21 U.S.C.
823(f). His registration must therefore be revoked.
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me by 21 U.S.C. 823(f) &
824(a), as well as 28 CFR 0.100(b) & 0.104, I order that DEA
Certificate of Registration, BF2847715, issued to John B. Freitas,
D.O., be, and it hereby is, revoked. I further order that any pending
application of John B. Freitas, D.O., to renew or modify his
registration, be, and it hereby is; denied. This Order is effective May
15, 2009.
Dated: April 10, 2009.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Deputy Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9-8620 Filed 4-14-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-09-P