Karen S. Dunning, N.P.; Decision and Order, 28640-28643 [2015-12020]
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On January 9, 2015, I, the
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to
Show Cause and Immediate Suspension
of Registration to Karen S. Dunning,
N.P. (hereinafter, Respondent) of Kouts,
Indiana. The Order to Show Cause and
Immediate Suspension of Registration
proposed the revocation of
Respondent’s DEA Certificate of
Registration MD2249161, pursuant to
which she was authorized to dispense
controlled substances in schedules II
through V as a practitioner, and the
denial of any application to renew or
modify her registration, on the ground
that she has committed acts which
render her ‘‘continued registration
inconsistent with the public interest.’’
Show Cause Order, at 1.
More specifically, the Order alleged
that Respondent, who is an Advanced
Practice Nurse licensed by the Indiana
State Board of Nursing, is not
authorized under state law ‘‘to prescribe
controlled substances in Schedules III
and IV for the purpose of weight
reduction or to control obesity.’’ Show
Cause Order, at 1. The Order then
alleged that ‘‘between August 2007 and
March 2014,’’ Respondent issued
prescriptions, ‘‘on multiple occasions,’’
for phendimetrazine, a schedule III
controlled substance, and phentermine,
a schedule IV controlled substance, for
‘‘the purpose of weight loss or to control
obesity, in violation of state and federal
law.’’ Id. at 2 (citing Ind. Code §§ 35–
48–3–11; 25–22.5–8–2(a); 21 CFR
1306.03 & 1306.04(a)). The order then
set forth specific allegations regarding
Respondent’s prescribing of the
aforesaid controlled substances to nine
patients. Id. at 2–4.
The Order also alleged that
‘‘beginning in February 2014 and for
several months thereafter,’’ Respondent
had violated federal law by issuing
controlled substance prescriptions for
weight loss medications that had been
pre-signed by her collaborating
physician, as well as that between
February and August 2014, she issued
controlled substance prescriptions
‘‘without a collaborative agreement’’
having been filed with the Indiana
Board of Nursing. Id. at 4 (citing 21 CFR
1306.05 and 1306.03(a)(1); 848 Ind.
Admin. Code § 5–1–1(a)(7)). The Order
further alleged that Respondent had
dispensed Bontril (phendimetrazine) to
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a patient at an unregistered location. Id.
Finally, the Order alleged that
Respondent had failed to keep various
records as required by DEA regulations.
Id. at 5. Based on the totality of
Respondent’s misconduct, I concluded
that her continued registration during
the pendency of the proceeding ‘‘would
constitute an imminent danger to the
public health and safety’’ and therefore
ordered that her registration be
immediately suspended. Id. at 6–7.
Following service of the Order,
Respondent timely requested a hearing
on the allegations. The matter was
placed on the docket of the Office of
Administrative Law Judges and assigned
to Administrative Law Judge (ALJ)
Christopher B. McNeil, who proceeded
to conduct pre-hearing procedures.
However, the next day, the
Government moved for summary
disposition and to stay the proceeding,
asserting that the Indiana State Board of
Nursing had ordered the emergency
suspension of Respondent’s nursing
license and advanced practice nurse
prescriptive authority, and that she was
without authority to dispense controlled
substances and to possess a DEA
registration in the State. Mot. For
Summ. Disp., at 1–3. As support for its
Motion, the Government attached a
printout from a license verification Web
page maintained by the State of Indiana.
See id. at Attachment A. The printout
showed that Respondent’s Indiana
Advanced Practice Nurse Prescriptive
Authority license was the subject of an
emergency suspension.1 Id.
Upon review of the Government’s
Motions, the ALJ issued an Order for
Stay and for Respondent’s Response to
Allegations Concerning Respondent’s
Lack of State Authority. R.D. at 2.
Thereafter, Respondent timely filed her
Response, in which she did not dispute
that her license was suspended but
asserted that section 824(a)(3)
‘‘authorizes suspension or revocation of
a DEA registration based on the loss of
State privileges’’ and thus ‘‘gives a
choice of remedies and clearly
contemplates the exercise of
administrative discretion.’’
Respondent’s Response, at 1.
1 Subsequently, the Government also filed a copy
of the Summary Suspension Order issued to
Respondent by the Indiana State Board of Nursing.
See Notice of Filing of Written Suspension Order
(Exhibit A).
I take official notice of the registration records of
this Agency, which establish that Respondent’s
registration will not expire until June 30, 2016. See
21 CFR 1316.59(e). Respondent may refute this fact
by filing a properly supported motion for
reconsideration no later than ten (10) business days
from the date of issuance of this Decision and
Order.
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Respondent contends that the Nursing
Board has only suspended her license
and advanced practice nurse
prescriptive authority for ninety (90)
days. Id. at 3. She further argues that the
prior cases in which the Agency
revoked a practitioner’s registration
based on a state’s suspension of
prescribing authority involved
suspensions that ‘‘were of indefinite
rather than, as here, for a finite, definite,
and limited time’’ and that ‘‘[t]his
indefiniteness was the gravamen of the
decisions holding revocation to be the
appropriate remedy.’’ Id. (citing Anne
Lazar Thorn, 62 FR 12847, 12848
(1997)).
Respondent also argues that the
temporary suspension of her license
‘‘does not render her ‘no longer
authorized by State law’ to dispense
controlled substances. It only
temporarily restrains her from
dispensing controlled substances.’’ Id.
And she further argues that suspending
her registration ‘‘mean[s] that she is not
holding a DEA Registration and would
fully satisfy statutory requirements.’’ Id.
She thus contends that revoking her
registration would be ‘‘arbitrary,
capricious, a clear abuse of discretion
and not in accordance with the law.’’ Id.
at 4.
The ALJ correctly rejected these
contentions, explaining that the CSA
defines the term ‘‘practitioner’’ to
‘‘mean[] a physician, dentist,
veterinarian . . . or other person
licensed, registered, or otherwise
permitted, by the United States or the
jurisdiction in which [s]he practices to
distribute [or] dispense a controlled
substance in the course of professional
practice,’’ 21 U.S. C. 802(21), and that
under section 823(f), only a person who
is authorized to dispense controlled
substances and is therefore a
practitioner within the meaning of the
Act can be registered. R.D., at 3; see also
21 U.S. C. 823(f) (‘‘The Attorney General
shall register practitioners . . . to
dispense . . . controlled substances
. . . if the applicant is authorized to
dispense . . . controlled substances
under the laws of the States in which he
practices.’’).
Respondent contends, however, that
the decision in Anne Lazar Thorn, M.D.,
62 FR 12847 (1997), stands for the
proposition that the Agency’s consistent
practice of revoking registrations based
on a loss of state authority ‘‘rests on the
indefinite nature of a State suspension.’’
Respondent’s Resp., at 2–3. Respondent
quotes the following passage from
Thorn:
[T]he Acting Deputy Administrator
recognizes that he has discretionary authority
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to either revoke or suspend a DEA
registration. However, given the indefinite
nature of the suspension of Respondent’s
state license to practice medicine, the Acting
Deputy Administrator agrees with [the ALJ]
that revocation is appropriate in this case.
Id. at 3 (quoting 62 FR at 12848).
Notwithstanding the implication of
the above passage, no decision of this
Agency has held that a suspension
(rather than a revocation) is warranted
where a State has imposed a suspension
of a fixed or certain duration. To the
contrary, in the case of practitioners,
DEA has long and consistently
interpreted the CSA as mandating the
possession of authority under state law
to handle controlled substances as a
fundamental condition for obtaining
and maintaining a registration. See, e.g.,
Leonard F. Faymore, 48 FR 32886,
32887 (1983) (collecting cases). As the
Thorn decision further explained:
DEA has consistently interpreted the
Controlled Substances Act to preclude a
practitioner from holding a DEA registration
if the practitioner is without authority to
handle controlled substances in the state in
which he/she practices. This prerequisite has
been consistently upheld.
*
*
*
*
*
The Acting Deputy Administrator finds
that the controlling question is not whether
a practitioner’s license to practice medicine
in the state is suspended or revoked; rather
it is whether the Respondent is currently
authorized to handle controlled substances
in the state. In the instant case, it is
undisputed that Respondent is not currently
authorized to handle controlled substances in
the [state in which she practices medicine].
Therefore . . . Respondent is not currently
entitled to a DEA registration.
62 FR at 128438 (citing and quoting 21
U.S. C. 823(f) and 802(21) and collecting
cases). Accordingly, in Thorn, the
Agency rejected the Respondent’s
contention that her registration should
be suspended rather than revoked.
As for Respondent’s contention that
section 824(a) ‘‘gives a choice of
remedies and clearly contemplates the
exercise of administrative discretion,’’ it
is acknowledged that the opening
sentence of section 824(a) provides that
a registration ‘‘may be suspended or
revoked by the Attorney General’’ upon
the Attorney General’s finding that one
of the five grounds set forth exists. 21
U.S. C. 824(a). However, this general
grant of authority in imposing a
sanction must be reconciled with the
CSA’s specific provisions which
mandate that a practitioner hold
authority under state law in order to
obtain and maintain a DEA registration.
See Gozlon-Peretz v. United States, 498
U.S. 395, 407 (1991) (‘‘A specific
provision controls over one of more
general application.’’); see also Bloate v.
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United States, 130 S.Ct. 1345, 1354
(2010) (quoting D. Ginsberg & Sons, Inc.,
v. Popkin, 285 U.S. 204, 208 (1932)
(‘‘General language of a statutory
provision, although broad enough to
include it, will not be held to apply to
a matter specifically dealt with in
another part of the same enactment.’’)).
Indeed, Respondent’s argument has
previously been tried and rejected. See
James L. Hooper, 76 FR 71371 (2011),
pet. for rev. denied, Hooper v. Holder,
481 F. App’x 826 (4th Cir. 2012)
(unpublished). As the Fourth Circuit
explained in Hooper:
Section 824(a) does state that the DA may
‘‘suspend or revoke’’ a registration, but the
statute provides for this sanction in five
different circumstances, only one of which is
loss of a State license. Because § 823(f) and
§ 802(21) make clear that a practitioner’s
registration is dependent upon the
practitioner having state authority to
dispense controlled substances, the DA’s
decision to construe § 824(a)(3) as mandating
revocation upon suspension of a state license
is not an unreasonable interpretation of the
CSA.
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Id. at 828.
Moreover, while Respondent points to
the fact that the suspension imposed by
the Board is ‘‘temporary’’ and only ‘‘for
ninety (90) days,’’ Respondent’s Resp. at
3, the Board’s order was non-final.
Thus, while Respondent may prevail
before the Board, the Board may also
impose an additional period of
suspension or revoke her license and
prescribing authority.
Accordingly, consistent with the
Agency’s longstanding precedent,
revocation remains warranted.2 See Gary
Alfred Shearer, 78 FR 19009 (2013)
(holding that revocation is warranted
even where a state order has summarily
suspended a practitioner’s controlled
substances authority and the state
agency’s order remains subject to
challenge in either administrative or
judicial proceedings); Winfield Drugs,
Inc., 52 FR 27070 (1987) (revoking
registration based on state emergency
suspension order notwithstanding state
order was under appeal, noting that the
‘‘[r]espondent is not currently
authorized to handle controlled
substances in the [s]tate’’ and that ‘‘[a]s
a matter of law, the [DEA] does not have
statutory authority . . . to issue or
maintain a registration for a practitioner
2 As for Respondent’s contention that the
temporary suspension of her license ‘‘does not
render her ‘no longer authorized by State law’ to
dispense controlled substances,’’ under Indiana
law, ‘‘[a] person who . . . practices nursing during
the time the person’s license issued under this
chapter . . . is suspended or revoked commits a
Class B misdemeanor.’’ Ind. Code § 25–23–1–27(5).
Thus, Respondent is not currently authorized to
dispense controlled substances.
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if the applicant or registrant lacks [s]tate
authority to dispense controlled
substances’’).
Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me
by 21 U.S. C. 824 as well as 28 CFR
0.100(b), I order that DEA Certificate of
Registration MD2249161 issued to
Karen S. Dunning, N.P., be, and it
hereby is, revoked. This Order is
effectively immediately.3
Dated: May 1, 2015.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Administrator.
Michelle F. Gillice, Esq., Paul A. Dean, Esq.,
for the Government.
Lakeisha C. Murdaugh, Esq., Scott L. King,
Esq., for the Respondent.
ORDER GRANTING THE GOVERNMENT’S
MOTION FOR SUMMARY DISPOSITION
AND FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS
OF LAW, AND RECOMMENDED DECISION
OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE
Administrative Law Judge Christopher B.
McNeil. On January 9, 2015, the
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration issued an Order to Show
Cause and Immediate Suspension of
Respondent’s DEA Certificate of Registration,
No. MD2249161. The Order affords
Respondent the opportunity to show cause
why Respondent’s DEA registration should
not be revoked pursuant to 21 U.S. C. 824(a),
on the grounds that Respondent’s continued
registration would be inconsistent with the
public interest. The Order also seeks to deny
any pending applications for registration,
renewal or modification pursuant to 21 U.S.
C. 823(f). In addition, the Administrator
immediately suspended Respondent’s
registration pursuant to 21 U.S. C. 824(d),
upon finding Respondent’s continued
registration constitutes an imminent danger
to the public health and safety.
According to the Government’s Notice of
Service, Respondent was personally served
with the Order to Show Cause on January 14,
2015. On February 18, 2015, the Office of
Administrative Law Judges received
Respondent’s Request for Hearing, dated
February 13, 2015. On February 19, 2015,
this Office issued an Order for Prehearing
Statements and Order Setting the Matter for
Hearing.
On February 20, 2015, this office received
Government’s Motion for Summary
Disposition and Motion to Stay Proceedings.
The Government asserted that the Indiana
State Board of Nursing ordered an emergency
suspension of Respondent’s nursing license
and her advanced practice nurse prescriptive
authority, effective immediately. Citing this
lack of state authority, the Government
requested that the matter be forwarded to the
Administrator for a Final Order and that in
3 Based on the same findings that led me to
conclude that Respondent’s continued registration
during the pendency of the proceeding constitutes
an imminent danger to public health and safety, I
conclude that the public interest necessitates that
this Order be effective immediately. 21 CFR
1316.67.
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the interest of efficiency, I grant a Motion to
Stay the Proceedings and continue the
deadlines pending the resolution of the
Motion for Summary Disposition. In response
to the Government’s filing, I issued an Order
for Stay and for Respondent’s Response to
Allegations Concerning Respondent’s Lack of
State Authority. In the Order, I required
Respondent to file a response to the
Government’s Motion for Summary
Disposition no later than February 27, 2015.
Additionally, I stayed the matter and held all
deadlines in abeyance.
On February 27, 2015, I received
Respondent’s Response to the Government’s
Motion for Summary Disposition.
Respondent first cites 21 U.S. C. 824(a)(3) to
demonstrate that the Administrator has the
choice of authorizing suspension or
revocation of Respondent’s registration.
Respondent then asks that I consider
suspending her registration based on the
premise that the 90 day suspension of her
advanced practice nurse prescriptive
authority is not equivalent to the indefinite
suspensions in the case law cited by the
Government.
The substantial issue raised by the
Government rests on an undisputed fact. The
Government asserts that Respondent’s DEA
Certificate of Registration must be revoked
because Respondent does not have a nursing
licensed issued by the state in which she
practices. Under DEA precedent, a
practitioner’s DEA Certificate of Registration
for controlled substances must be summarily
revoked if the applicant is not authorized to
handle controlled substances in the state in
which she maintains her DEA registration.1
Pursuant to 21 U.S. C. 823(f), only a
‘‘practitioner’’ may receive a DEA
registration. Under 21 U.S. C. 802(21), a
‘‘practitioner’’ must be ‘‘licensed, registered,
or otherwise permitted, by the United States
or the jurisdiction in which he practices or
does research, to distribute [or] dispense . . .
controlled substance[s.]’’ Given this statutory
language, the DEA Administrator does not
have the authority under the Controlled
Substances Act to maintain a practitioner’s
registration if that practitioner is not
authorized to dispense controlled
substances.2
1 See 21 U.S. C. 801(21), 823(f), 824(a)(3); see also
House of Medicine, 79 FR 4959, 4961 (DEA 2014);
Deanwood Pharmacy, 68 FR 41662–01 (DEA July
14, 2003); Wayne D. Longmore, M.D., 77 FR 67669–
02 (DEA November 13, 2012); Alan H. Olefsky,
M.D., 72 FR 42127–01 (DEA August 1, 2007); Layfe
Robert Anthony, M.D., 67 FR 15811 (DEA May 20,
2002); George Thomas, PA–C, 64 FR 15811–02
(DEA April 1, 1999); Shahid Musud Siddiqui, M.D.,
61 FR 14818–02 (DEA April 4, 1996); Michael D.
Lawton, M.D., 59 FR 17792–01 (DEA April 14,
1994); Abraham A. Chaplan, M.D., 57 FR 55280–
03 (DEA November 24, 1992). See also Bio
Diagnosis Int’l, 78 FR 39327–03, 39331 (DEA July
1, 2013) (distinguishing distributor applicants from
other ‘‘practitioners’’ in the context of summary
disposition analysis).
2 See Abraham A. Chaplan, M.D., 57 FR 55280–
03, 55280 (DEA November 24, 1992), and cases
cited therein. In Chaplan, DEA Administrator
Robert C. Bonner adopts the ALJ’s opinion that ‘‘the
DEA lacks statutory power to register a practitioner
unless the practitioner holds state authority to
handle controlled substances.’’ Id.
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Respondent alternatively asks that I
consider suspending her registration instead
of revoking her registration. This exact issue
was addressed in James L. Hooper, M.D.;
Decision and Order.3 Dr. Hooper was subject
to a one-year suspension of his state license
to practice medicine after which his license
would be automatically reinstated.4 In
comparison to Hooper, Respondent in this
case has a less persuasive case as there is no
guarantee that her advanced practice nurse
prescriptive authority will be restored after
90 days. Dr. Hooper sought a suspension of
his DEA Registration for the same time
period his medical license was suspended.
DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart
agreed with Chief Administrative Law Judge
John J. Mulrooney, II who did not find Dr.
Hooper’s argument persuasive. Administrator
Leonhart, like Respondent in the case at
hand, cited to Anne Lazar Thorn, M.D.5
Administrator Leonhart cites the Acting
Deputy Administrator’s statement in Thorn
that ‘‘the controlling question is not whether
a practitioner’s license to practice medicine
in the state is suspended or revoked; rather,
it is whether the Respondent is currently
authorized to handle controlled substances in
the state.’’ 6 In Hooper, Administrator
Leonhart concludes that ‘‘even where a
practitioner’s state license has been
suspended for a period of certain duration,
the practitioner no longer meets the statutory
definition of a practitioner.’’ 7 As detailed
above, only a ‘‘practitioner’’ may receive a
DEA registration. Therefore, I cannot and will
not recommend the suspension of
Respondent’s DEA registration, but will
instead recommend the registration be
revoked.
Order Granting the Government’s Motion for
Summary Disposition and Recommendation
I find there is no genuine dispute regarding
whether Respondent is a ‘‘practitioner’’ as
that term is defined by 21 U.S. C. 802(21),
and that based on the record the Government
has established that Respondent is not a
practitioner and is not authorized to dispense
controlled substances in the state in which
she seeks to practice with a DEA Certificate
of Registration. I find no other material facts
at issue. Accordingly, I GRANT the
Government’s Motion for Summary
Disposition.
Upon this finding, I ORDER that this case
be forwarded to the Administrator for final
disposition and I recommended that
Respondent’s DEA Certificate of Registration
should be REVOKED and any pending
application for the renewal or modification of
the same should be DENIED.
Dated: March 9, 2015
Christopher B. McNeil,
Administrative Law Judge
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3 James L. Hooper, M.D.; Decision and Order, 76
FR 71371–01, 71371 (DEA Nov. 17, 2011).
4 Id.
5 Anne Lazar Thorn, Revocation of Registration
M.D, 62 FR 12847, 12848 (DEA Mar. 18, 1997).
6 Id. at 12848.
7 Hooper, 76 FR at 71372.
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
Bobby D. Reynolds, N.P., Tina L.
Killebrew, N.P. and David R. Stout,
N.P.; Decision and Orders
On November 25, 2013, the Deputy
Assistant Administrator, Office of
Diversion Control, Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued Orders to Show
Cause to Bobby D. Reynolds, N.P.
(hereinafter, Reynolds), of Limestone,
Tennessee; Tina L. Killebrew, N.P.
(hereinafter, Killebrew), of Kingsport,
Tennessee; and David R. Stout, N.P.
(hereinafter, Stout), of Morristown,
Tennessee. GXs A, B, & C.
With respect to Applicant Reynolds,
the Show Cause Order proposed the
denial of his application for registration
as a practitioner, on the ground that his
registration ‘‘would be inconsistent with
the public interest’’ as evidenced by his
repeated violations of state and federal
law in prescribing controlled substances
to seven patients while employed as a
nurse practitioner at the Appalachian
Medical Center (AMC), a clinic located
in Johnson City, Tennessee. GX A, at 1–
2 (citing 21 U.S.C. 823(f)(2), (4) & (5)).
The Show Cause Order alleged that he
had made unintelligible entries in the
medical records of three patients (N.S.,
T.H., and A.W.), that he had violated
state law by referring N.S. to an
unlicensed mental health counselor,
that he had violated state law by making
false entries in N.S.’s chart, that he had
failed to maintain complete records for
T.H., and that he failed to properly
maintain the patient record of C.S. to
accurately reflect nursing problems and
interventions. GX A, at ¶¶ 5, 6, 7, 11, 12,
and 15.
With respect to Applicant Killebrew,
the Show Cause Order proposed the
denial of her application for registration
as a practitioner, on the ground that her
registration ‘‘would be inconsistent with
the public interest’’ as evidenced by her
repeated violations of state and federal
law in prescribing controlled substances
to three patients while employed as a
nurse practitioner at the AMC. GX B, at
1–2 (citing 21 U.S.C. 823(f)(2)(4) & (5)).
With respect to Registrant Stout, the
Show Cause Order proposed the
revocation of his practitioner’s
registration and the denial of his
pending application to renew his
registration on two grounds. GX C, at 1–
2. First, the Order alleged that
Respondent had materially falsified his
renewal application when he failed to
disclose that on March 10, 2010, the
Tennessee Board of Nursing had
summarily suspended his nurse
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
28643
practitioner’s license and his Certificate
of Fitness to prescribe legend drugs in
Tennessee. GX C, at 13–14; see also 21
U.S.C. 824(a)(1). The Show Cause Order
further alleged that Registrant Stout had
failed to disclose that on September 3,
2010, he had entered into a Consent
Order with the State Board, pursuant to
which the suspension was terminated,
but he was placed on probation for two
years, his multistate privilege to practice
in other party states was voided for the
period of his probation, he was ordered
to pay a civil penalty of $8,000, and
other probationary terms were imposed.
GX C, at 14. Second, the Show Cause
Order alleged that Registrant Stout had
‘‘committed such acts as would render
his registration inconsistent with the
public interest,’’ in that he had violated
state and federal law in prescribing
controlled substances to five patients
while employed as a nurse practitioner
at the AMC.1
Following service of the Show Cause
Orders, all three individuals timely
requested a hearing on the allegations of
the respective Order. The matters were
then placed on the docket of the
Agency’s Office of Administrative Law
Judges, and assigned to the Chief
Administrative Law Judge, who
consolidated the matters and proceeded
to conduct prehearing procedures.
However, after extensive prehearing
litigation, each of the parties filed
written notices waiving his/her
respective right to a hearing, see GXs
LL, MM, and PP, and the ALJ
terminated the proceeding.2
1 Each Show Cause Order made extensive and
detailed allegations specific to each Applicant’s
conduct, as well as to Registrant Stout’s conduct,
in prescribing to the various patients. See GX A, at
2–26 (Reynolds OTSC); GX B, at 2–9 (Killebrew
Order); GX C, at 2–14 (Stout Order). In its Request
for Final Agency Action, the Government pursued
only the allegations of unlawful prescribing by the
three practitioners, as well as the allegations (which
were raised in its prehearing statements) that
Applicant Reynolds had made material false
statements to a DEA Investigator.
2 On March 27, 2014, NP Stout, through counsel,
submitted a written request to the Government’s
counsel seeking to withdraw his application to
renew his registration. GX RR. Government Counsel
promptly forwarded the request to the Deputy
Assistant Administrator. GX SS. According to
Government Counsel, no action had been taken on
the request as of September 16, 2014, the date on
which the record was forwarded to this Office. Id.
Nor has this Office been subsequently notified of
any action having been taken on the request.
I conclude that granting Stout’s request to
withdraw would be contrary to the public interest
and that he has otherwise failed to show good
cause. Here, the Government has expended
extensive resources in investigating the allegations,
preparing for a hearing, and in engaging in prehearing litigation; it was also fully prepared to go
to hearing on the allegations when Stout waived his
right to a hearing. Moreover, Stout’s counsel has
made no offer as to how long he would wait before
E:\FR\FM\19MYN1.SGM
Continued
19MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 96 (Tuesday, May 19, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 28640-28643]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-12020]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Drug Enforcement Administration
[Docket No. 15-11]
Karen S. Dunning, N.P.; Decision and Order
On January 9, 2015, I, the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement
Administration, issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate Suspension
of Registration to Karen S. Dunning, N.P. (hereinafter, Respondent) of
Kouts, Indiana. The Order to Show Cause and Immediate Suspension of
Registration proposed the revocation of Respondent's DEA Certificate of
Registration MD2249161, pursuant to which she was authorized to
dispense controlled substances in schedules II through V as a
practitioner, and the denial of any application to renew or modify her
registration, on the ground that she has committed acts which render
her ``continued registration inconsistent with the public interest.''
Show Cause Order, at 1.
More specifically, the Order alleged that Respondent, who is an
Advanced Practice Nurse licensed by the Indiana State Board of Nursing,
is not authorized under state law ``to prescribe controlled substances
in Schedules III and IV for the purpose of weight reduction or to
control obesity.'' Show Cause Order, at 1. The Order then alleged that
``between August 2007 and March 2014,'' Respondent issued
prescriptions, ``on multiple occasions,'' for phendimetrazine, a
schedule III controlled substance, and phentermine, a schedule IV
controlled substance, for ``the purpose of weight loss or to control
obesity, in violation of state and federal law.'' Id. at 2 (citing Ind.
Code Sec. Sec. 35-48-3-11; 25-22.5-8-2(a); 21 CFR 1306.03 &
1306.04(a)). The order then set forth specific allegations regarding
Respondent's prescribing of the aforesaid controlled substances to nine
patients. Id. at 2-4.
The Order also alleged that ``beginning in February 2014 and for
several months thereafter,'' Respondent had violated federal law by
issuing controlled substance prescriptions for weight loss medications
that had been pre-signed by her collaborating physician, as well as
that between February and August 2014, she issued controlled substance
prescriptions ``without a collaborative agreement'' having been filed
with the Indiana Board of Nursing. Id. at 4 (citing 21 CFR 1306.05 and
1306.03(a)(1); 848 Ind. Admin. Code Sec. 5-1-1(a)(7)). The Order
further alleged that Respondent had dispensed Bontril (phendimetrazine)
to
[[Page 28641]]
a patient at an unregistered location. Id. Finally, the Order alleged
that Respondent had failed to keep various records as required by DEA
regulations. Id. at 5. Based on the totality of Respondent's
misconduct, I concluded that her continued registration during the
pendency of the proceeding ``would constitute an imminent danger to the
public health and safety'' and therefore ordered that her registration
be immediately suspended. Id. at 6-7.
Following service of the Order, Respondent timely requested a
hearing on the allegations. The matter was placed on the docket of the
Office of Administrative Law Judges and assigned to Administrative Law
Judge (ALJ) Christopher B. McNeil, who proceeded to conduct pre-hearing
procedures.
However, the next day, the Government moved for summary disposition
and to stay the proceeding, asserting that the Indiana State Board of
Nursing had ordered the emergency suspension of Respondent's nursing
license and advanced practice nurse prescriptive authority, and that
she was without authority to dispense controlled substances and to
possess a DEA registration in the State. Mot. For Summ. Disp., at 1-3.
As support for its Motion, the Government attached a printout from a
license verification Web page maintained by the State of Indiana. See
id. at Attachment A. The printout showed that Respondent's Indiana
Advanced Practice Nurse Prescriptive Authority license was the subject
of an emergency suspension.\1\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Subsequently, the Government also filed a copy of the
Summary Suspension Order issued to Respondent by the Indiana State
Board of Nursing. See Notice of Filing of Written Suspension Order
(Exhibit A).
I take official notice of the registration records of this
Agency, which establish that Respondent's registration will not
expire until June 30, 2016. See 21 CFR 1316.59(e). Respondent may
refute this fact by filing a properly supported motion for
reconsideration no later than ten (10) business days from the date
of issuance of this Decision and Order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upon review of the Government's Motions, the ALJ issued an Order
for Stay and for Respondent's Response to Allegations Concerning
Respondent's Lack of State Authority. R.D. at 2. Thereafter, Respondent
timely filed her Response, in which she did not dispute that her
license was suspended but asserted that section 824(a)(3) ``authorizes
suspension or revocation of a DEA registration based on the loss of
State privileges'' and thus ``gives a choice of remedies and clearly
contemplates the exercise of administrative discretion.'' Respondent's
Response, at 1.
Respondent contends that the Nursing Board has only suspended her
license and advanced practice nurse prescriptive authority for ninety
(90) days. Id. at 3. She further argues that the prior cases in which
the Agency revoked a practitioner's registration based on a state's
suspension of prescribing authority involved suspensions that ``were of
indefinite rather than, as here, for a finite, definite, and limited
time'' and that ``[t]his indefiniteness was the gravamen of the
decisions holding revocation to be the appropriate remedy.'' Id.
(citing Anne Lazar Thorn, 62 FR 12847, 12848 (1997)).
Respondent also argues that the temporary suspension of her license
``does not render her `no longer authorized by State law' to dispense
controlled substances. It only temporarily restrains her from
dispensing controlled substances.'' Id. And she further argues that
suspending her registration ``mean[s] that she is not holding a DEA
Registration and would fully satisfy statutory requirements.'' Id. She
thus contends that revoking her registration would be ``arbitrary,
capricious, a clear abuse of discretion and not in accordance with the
law.'' Id. at 4.
The ALJ correctly rejected these contentions, explaining that the
CSA defines the term ``practitioner'' to ``mean[] a physician, dentist,
veterinarian . . . or other person licensed, registered, or otherwise
permitted, by the United States or the jurisdiction in which [s]he
practices to distribute [or] dispense a controlled substance in the
course of professional practice,'' 21 U.S. C. 802(21), and that under
section 823(f), only a person who is authorized to dispense controlled
substances and is therefore a practitioner within the meaning of the
Act can be registered. R.D., at 3; see also 21 U.S. C. 823(f) (``The
Attorney General shall register practitioners . . . to dispense . . .
controlled substances . . . if the applicant is authorized to dispense
. . . controlled substances under the laws of the States in which he
practices.'').
Respondent contends, however, that the decision in Anne Lazar
Thorn, M.D., 62 FR 12847 (1997), stands for the proposition that the
Agency's consistent practice of revoking registrations based on a loss
of state authority ``rests on the indefinite nature of a State
suspension.'' Respondent's Resp., at 2-3. Respondent quotes the
following passage from Thorn:
[T]he Acting Deputy Administrator recognizes that he has
discretionary authority to either revoke or suspend a DEA
registration. However, given the indefinite nature of the suspension
of Respondent's state license to practice medicine, the Acting
Deputy Administrator agrees with [the ALJ] that revocation is
appropriate in this case.
Id. at 3 (quoting 62 FR at 12848).
Notwithstanding the implication of the above passage, no decision
of this Agency has held that a suspension (rather than a revocation) is
warranted where a State has imposed a suspension of a fixed or certain
duration. To the contrary, in the case of practitioners, DEA has long
and consistently interpreted the CSA as mandating the possession of
authority under state law to handle controlled substances as a
fundamental condition for obtaining and maintaining a registration.
See, e.g., Leonard F. Faymore, 48 FR 32886, 32887 (1983) (collecting
cases). As the Thorn decision further explained:
DEA has consistently interpreted the Controlled Substances Act
to preclude a practitioner from holding a DEA registration if the
practitioner is without authority to handle controlled substances in
the state in which he/she practices. This prerequisite has been
consistently upheld.
* * * * *
The Acting Deputy Administrator finds that the controlling
question is not whether a practitioner's license to practice
medicine in the state is suspended or revoked; rather it is whether
the Respondent is currently authorized to handle controlled
substances in the state. In the instant case, it is undisputed that
Respondent is not currently authorized to handle controlled
substances in the [state in which she practices medicine]. Therefore
. . . Respondent is not currently entitled to a DEA registration.
62 FR at 128438 (citing and quoting 21 U.S. C. 823(f) and 802(21) and
collecting cases). Accordingly, in Thorn, the Agency rejected the
Respondent's contention that her registration should be suspended
rather than revoked.
As for Respondent's contention that section 824(a) ``gives a choice
of remedies and clearly contemplates the exercise of administrative
discretion,'' it is acknowledged that the opening sentence of section
824(a) provides that a registration ``may be suspended or revoked by
the Attorney General'' upon the Attorney General's finding that one of
the five grounds set forth exists. 21 U.S. C. 824(a). However, this
general grant of authority in imposing a sanction must be reconciled
with the CSA's specific provisions which mandate that a practitioner
hold authority under state law in order to obtain and maintain a DEA
registration. See Gozlon-Peretz v. United States, 498 U.S. 395, 407
(1991) (``A specific provision controls over one of more general
application.''); see also Bloate v.
[[Page 28642]]
United States, 130 S.Ct. 1345, 1354 (2010) (quoting D. Ginsberg & Sons,
Inc., v. Popkin, 285 U.S. 204, 208 (1932) (``General language of a
statutory provision, although broad enough to include it, will not be
held to apply to a matter specifically dealt with in another part of
the same enactment.'')).
Indeed, Respondent's argument has previously been tried and
rejected. See James L. Hooper, 76 FR 71371 (2011), pet. for rev.
denied, Hooper v. Holder, 481 F. App'x 826 (4th Cir. 2012)
(unpublished). As the Fourth Circuit explained in Hooper:
Section 824(a) does state that the DA may ``suspend or revoke''
a registration, but the statute provides for this sanction in five
different circumstances, only one of which is loss of a State
license. Because Sec. 823(f) and Sec. 802(21) make clear that a
practitioner's registration is dependent upon the practitioner
having state authority to dispense controlled substances, the DA's
decision to construe Sec. 824(a)(3) as mandating revocation upon
suspension of a state license is not an unreasonable interpretation
of the CSA.
Id. at 828.
Moreover, while Respondent points to the fact that the suspension
imposed by the Board is ``temporary'' and only ``for ninety (90)
days,'' Respondent's Resp. at 3, the Board's order was non-final. Thus,
while Respondent may prevail before the Board, the Board may also
impose an additional period of suspension or revoke her license and
prescribing authority.
Accordingly, consistent with the Agency's longstanding precedent,
revocation remains warranted.\2\ See Gary Alfred Shearer, 78 FR 19009
(2013) (holding that revocation is warranted even where a state order
has summarily suspended a practitioner's controlled substances
authority and the state agency's order remains subject to challenge in
either administrative or judicial proceedings); Winfield Drugs, Inc.,
52 FR 27070 (1987) (revoking registration based on state emergency
suspension order notwithstanding state order was under appeal, noting
that the ``[r]espondent is not currently authorized to handle
controlled substances in the [s]tate'' and that ``[a]s a matter of law,
the [DEA] does not have statutory authority . . . to issue or maintain
a registration for a practitioner if the applicant or registrant lacks
[s]tate authority to dispense controlled substances'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ As for Respondent's contention that the temporary suspension
of her license ``does not render her `no longer authorized by State
law' to dispense controlled substances,'' under Indiana law, ``[a]
person who . . . practices nursing during the time the person's
license issued under this chapter . . . is suspended or revoked
commits a Class B misdemeanor.'' Ind. Code Sec. 25-23-1-27(5).
Thus, Respondent is not currently authorized to dispense controlled
substances.
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Order
Pursuant to the authority vested in me by 21 U.S. C. 824 as well as
28 CFR 0.100(b), I order that DEA Certificate of Registration MD2249161
issued to Karen S. Dunning, N.P., be, and it hereby is, revoked. This
Order is effectively immediately.\3\
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\3\ Based on the same findings that led me to conclude that
Respondent's continued registration during the pendency of the
proceeding constitutes an imminent danger to public health and
safety, I conclude that the public interest necessitates that this
Order be effective immediately. 21 CFR 1316.67.
Dated: May 1, 2015.
Michele M. Leonhart,
Administrator.
Michelle F. Gillice, Esq., Paul A. Dean, Esq., for the Government.
Lakeisha C. Murdaugh, Esq., Scott L. King, Esq., for the Respondent.
ORDER GRANTING THE GOVERNMENT'S MOTION FOR SUMMARY DISPOSITION AND
FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND RECOMMENDED DECISION OF THE
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW JUDGE
Administrative Law Judge Christopher B. McNeil. On January 9,
2015, the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration
issued an Order to Show Cause and Immediate Suspension of
Respondent's DEA Certificate of Registration, No. MD2249161. The
Order affords Respondent the opportunity to show cause why
Respondent's DEA registration should not be revoked pursuant to 21
U.S. C. 824(a), on the grounds that Respondent's continued
registration would be inconsistent with the public interest. The
Order also seeks to deny any pending applications for registration,
renewal or modification pursuant to 21 U.S. C. 823(f). In addition,
the Administrator immediately suspended Respondent's registration
pursuant to 21 U.S. C. 824(d), upon finding Respondent's continued
registration constitutes an imminent danger to the public health and
safety.
According to the Government's Notice of Service, Respondent was
personally served with the Order to Show Cause on January 14, 2015.
On February 18, 2015, the Office of Administrative Law Judges
received Respondent's Request for Hearing, dated February 13, 2015.
On February 19, 2015, this Office issued an Order for Prehearing
Statements and Order Setting the Matter for Hearing.
On February 20, 2015, this office received Government's Motion
for Summary Disposition and Motion to Stay Proceedings. The
Government asserted that the Indiana State Board of Nursing ordered
an emergency suspension of Respondent's nursing license and her
advanced practice nurse prescriptive authority, effective
immediately. Citing this lack of state authority, the Government
requested that the matter be forwarded to the Administrator for a
Final Order and that in the interest of efficiency, I grant a Motion
to Stay the Proceedings and continue the deadlines pending the
resolution of the Motion for Summary Disposition. In response to the
Government's filing, I issued an Order for Stay and for Respondent's
Response to Allegations Concerning Respondent's Lack of State
Authority. In the Order, I required Respondent to file a response to
the Government's Motion for Summary Disposition no later than
February 27, 2015. Additionally, I stayed the matter and held all
deadlines in abeyance.
On February 27, 2015, I received Respondent's Response to the
Government's Motion for Summary Disposition. Respondent first cites
21 U.S. C. 824(a)(3) to demonstrate that the Administrator has the
choice of authorizing suspension or revocation of Respondent's
registration. Respondent then asks that I consider suspending her
registration based on the premise that the 90 day suspension of her
advanced practice nurse prescriptive authority is not equivalent to
the indefinite suspensions in the case law cited by the Government.
The substantial issue raised by the Government rests on an
undisputed fact. The Government asserts that Respondent's DEA
Certificate of Registration must be revoked because Respondent does
not have a nursing licensed issued by the state in which she
practices. Under DEA precedent, a practitioner's DEA Certificate of
Registration for controlled substances must be summarily revoked if
the applicant is not authorized to handle controlled substances in
the state in which she maintains her DEA registration.\1\ Pursuant
to 21 U.S. C. 823(f), only a ``practitioner'' may receive a DEA
registration. Under 21 U.S. C. 802(21), a ``practitioner'' must be
``licensed, registered, or otherwise permitted, by the United States
or the jurisdiction in which he practices or does research, to
distribute [or] dispense . . . controlled substance[s.]'' Given this
statutory language, the DEA Administrator does not have the
authority under the Controlled Substances Act to maintain a
practitioner's registration if that practitioner is not authorized
to dispense controlled substances.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 21 U.S. C. 801(21), 823(f), 824(a)(3); see also House of
Medicine, 79 FR 4959, 4961 (DEA 2014); Deanwood Pharmacy, 68 FR
41662-01 (DEA July 14, 2003); Wayne D. Longmore, M.D., 77 FR 67669-
02 (DEA November 13, 2012); Alan H. Olefsky, M.D., 72 FR 42127-01
(DEA August 1, 2007); Layfe Robert Anthony, M.D., 67 FR 15811 (DEA
May 20, 2002); George Thomas, PA-C, 64 FR 15811-02 (DEA April 1,
1999); Shahid Musud Siddiqui, M.D., 61 FR 14818-02 (DEA April 4,
1996); Michael D. Lawton, M.D., 59 FR 17792-01 (DEA April 14, 1994);
Abraham A. Chaplan, M.D., 57 FR 55280-03 (DEA November 24, 1992).
See also Bio Diagnosis Int'l, 78 FR 39327-03, 39331 (DEA July 1,
2013) (distinguishing distributor applicants from other
``practitioners'' in the context of summary disposition analysis).
\2\ See Abraham A. Chaplan, M.D., 57 FR 55280-03, 55280 (DEA
November 24, 1992), and cases cited therein. In Chaplan, DEA
Administrator Robert C. Bonner adopts the ALJ's opinion that ``the
DEA lacks statutory power to register a practitioner unless the
practitioner holds state authority to handle controlled
substances.'' Id.
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[[Page 28643]]
Respondent alternatively asks that I consider suspending her
registration instead of revoking her registration. This exact issue
was addressed in James L. Hooper, M.D.; Decision and Order.\3\ Dr.
Hooper was subject to a one-year suspension of his state license to
practice medicine after which his license would be automatically
reinstated.\4\ In comparison to Hooper, Respondent in this case has
a less persuasive case as there is no guarantee that her advanced
practice nurse prescriptive authority will be restored after 90
days. Dr. Hooper sought a suspension of his DEA Registration for the
same time period his medical license was suspended. DEA
Administrator Michele M. Leonhart agreed with Chief Administrative
Law Judge John J. Mulrooney, II who did not find Dr. Hooper's
argument persuasive. Administrator Leonhart, like Respondent in the
case at hand, cited to Anne Lazar Thorn, M.D.\5\ Administrator
Leonhart cites the Acting Deputy Administrator's statement in Thorn
that ``the controlling question is not whether a practitioner's
license to practice medicine in the state is suspended or revoked;
rather, it is whether the Respondent is currently authorized to
handle controlled substances in the state.'' \6\ In Hooper,
Administrator Leonhart concludes that ``even where a practitioner's
state license has been suspended for a period of certain duration,
the practitioner no longer meets the statutory definition of a
practitioner.'' \7\ As detailed above, only a ``practitioner'' may
receive a DEA registration. Therefore, I cannot and will not
recommend the suspension of Respondent's DEA registration, but will
instead recommend the registration be revoked.
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\3\ James L. Hooper, M.D.; Decision and Order, 76 FR 71371-01,
71371 (DEA Nov. 17, 2011).
\4\ Id.
\5\ Anne Lazar Thorn, Revocation of Registration M.D, 62 FR
12847, 12848 (DEA Mar. 18, 1997).
\6\ Id. at 12848.
\7\ Hooper, 76 FR at 71372.
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Order Granting the Government's Motion for Summary Disposition and
Recommendation
I find there is no genuine dispute regarding whether Respondent
is a ``practitioner'' as that term is defined by 21 U.S. C. 802(21),
and that based on the record the Government has established that
Respondent is not a practitioner and is not authorized to dispense
controlled substances in the state in which she seeks to practice
with a DEA Certificate of Registration. I find no other material
facts at issue. Accordingly, I GRANT the Government's Motion for
Summary Disposition.
Upon this finding, I ORDER that this case be forwarded to the
Administrator for final disposition and I recommended that
Respondent's DEA Certificate of Registration should be REVOKED and
any pending application for the renewal or modification of the same
should be DENIED.
Dated: March 9, 2015
Christopher B. McNeil,
Administrative Law Judge
[FR Doc. 2015-12020 Filed 5-18-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-09-P