Sen. McCaskill seeks repeal of law that limited DEA amid opioids crisis

In this June 6, 2017, file photo, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee ranking member Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., asks a question during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)Sen. McCaskill seeks repeal of law that limited DEA amid opioids crisis

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/oct/16/mccaskill-seeks-repeal-law-limited-dea/

Red-state Democrats cried foul Monday over a 2016 law that made it harder for federal agents to freeze suspicious shipments of pain pills, saying Congress and the Obama administration goofed by approving what turned out to be an industry-friendly bill, rather than the stiff crackdown they’d wanted.

The law, which cleared both chambers of Congress with no real opposition, was intended to make sure legitimate pharmaceutical shipments weren’t stopped by federal investigators.

But the result was that it is now “virtually impossible” for the Drug Enforcement Administration to suspend orders of narcotics that could fall into the hands of corrupt doctors or illicit pharmacies, according to internal agency documents used in a Sunday report by The Washington Post and CBS’s “60 Minutes” program.

Now lawmakers who supported the bill last year say they were misled. One of them — Sen. Joe Manchin III, West Virginia Democrat — said the revelations should force President Trump to scuttle his nomination of Rep. Tom Marino to lead the White House’s drug policy office, after the Pennsylvania Republican championed the bill.

Mr. Trump responded by saying he will investigate the issue as he prepares for a major announcement next week to declare the opioids crisis a national emergency.

“We’re going to look into the report. We’re going to take it very seriously,” the president said in the White House Rose Garden.

Mr. Trump called Mr. Marino, an early backer of his campaign, a “good man,” though he added: “We’re going to be looking into Tom.”

Mr. Manchin, who must defend his seat next year, said he was “horrified” by the Post investigation, which described the bill as the “crowning achievement” of drug company lobbyists who teamed with select members of Congress to overcome early opposition from corners of the DEA.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, Missouri Democrat also facing reelection, said she will push to repeal the law.

“Media reports indicate that this law has significantly affected the government’s ability to crack down on opioid distributors that are failing to meet their obligations and endangering our communities,” said Ms. McCaskill, the top-ranking Democrat on the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

The opioids crisis is killing more people than car crashes do in some parts of the country, sparking a scramble in Washington to devise policies that expand treatment options and the use of overdose-reversing drugs, while stemming the flow of powerful opioids to U.S. communities.

Congress, though, has struggled to find a starring role in what is mostly a problem for local authorities.

One new law last year pushed for wider use of naloxone, medication that can combat an overdose.

But Congress also passed the Ensuring Patient Access and Effective Drug Enforcement Act, designed to make sure legitimate pain suffers got their treatment. The bill breezed through Congress without significant opposition, clearing the Senate by unanimous consent.

Language in the law says the DEA has to demonstrate that flagged drug shipments pose a “substantial likelihood of an immediate threat” of death, serious bodily harm or drug abuse before it issues an immediate suspension on distributors or manufacturers.

Previously, it could freeze shipments that appeared to pose an “imminent danger.”

Richard C. Ausness, a University of Kentucky law professor who tracks the opioids issue, said the Post investigation “proves once again that many politicians are unduly influenced by campaign contributions from lobbyists,” while some didn’t bother to pry into the details.

“My guess is that most members of Congress did not know what was in the bill, did not read it, and relied on party leader and others for their information,” he said. “Either that, or they just did not care what the bill would do to DEA enforcement if enacted.”

The Post said the Obama administration had initial concerns but didn’t pursue them because neither the Justice Department nor the DEA objected to the final text.

Some DEA officials told the newspaper they reluctantly relented to get the best result possible in the face of pressure from bill sponsors and industry players, though Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, a Utah Republican who helped craft the law last year, said the goal was to strike a balance between government enforcers and patients who rely on drug companies to manage their pain.

“Not one senator, a member of the House, opposed this bill. Do you know why? Because DEA, the very agency the bill impacts, the very agency that supposedly can no longer do its job because of this legislation, agreed to let it go forward,” Mr. Hatch said.

In 1914 a Democratic Controlled Congress passed the Harrison Narcotic Act  and signed into law by Pres Woodrow Wilson… this created the “black drug market”…  in 1917 our judicial system declared that opiate addiction was a CRIME and not a DISEASE and any doc found to be treating/maintaining a addict would be arrested and put into jail…

In 1970, a democratically controlled Congress passed the Controlled Substance Act which was signed into law by Pres Nixon.

Some claim that a function of socialism is for a bureaucracy to create a problem and then create another bureaucracy to address/solve the issues created by the first bureaucracy.

2 Responses

  1. To who ever it concerns thank you so much. please feel free to publicly post and use this my story and grief of this horrible malady and the the Hell the now uninformed Public and some of the Media are putting us legitimate Chronic Pain Sufferers through! It is no more than local emotional Abuse ( and border line Domestic Emotional Terrorism )!on a scale with only Biblical proportions!To the Editor and Associates I have taken this opportunity to share my heartbreaking story in hopes these witch hunting Opiate ill informed skeptics will read and understand that we as Millions Of Legitimate Chronic Pain Sufferers would have no life without Medically prescribed Opiates by a physicians care and strictly monitored monthly urine and blood test. Please remember that An Opinion Before A Thorough Investigation Is The Epitome Of Ignorance! And that a little more compassion from the Medical Field and its representatives could have saved my beautiful Stepdaughters life. Let me say this! A person who has a addictive personality will abuse anything that helps them feel better. I have taken Oxycontin for 12 years , I have had 20 major surgery’s in 9 years. I have so much physical pain I can not even get out of bed with out pain meds and when I run out I run out and just lay in bed praying the Lord relieve me of this horrible condition and I pray God you pain med skeptics never go through what I go through everyday of my life when the only thing you have to do is threaten what help I get, Shame on them! There will always be drug abuse and as the so called war on drugs has failed all this will! All you do is stoke and aid the drug pushers business to knew heights in the Black Market of Heroin while trying to deprive folks as me to this horrible movement! My Stepdaughter committed suicide 4 years ago because of being treated like a drug addict by her family and doctors when all along she suffered from Lupus and Fibromyalgia which I believe was brought on by a deadly car crash at 18 , she told me between that which I was being put through and what they were putting her through she was not going to be able to live her life in such a hell brought on by people like the Biased Uniformed Skeptics that are on a witch hunt to out law Opiates and pain meds that give us some sort of a life . As a retired Police officer and worked indirectly close to the DEA, you people do not have a clue how thrilled you are making the illegal opiate trade and think of my Late Stepdaughter as you continue on with this 2017 Version of the ( 1940s Propaganda Film named REEFER MADNESS )movement to outlaw opiates! Just like the slaughter of children at Sandy Hook if there would have just been gun laws , my God they were Gun Laws , the guns that murdered all those 20 children were all registered and owned by a school teacher! You fight Drug Addiction in Elementary education by teaching all children the dangers of Booze and Tobacco which if these witch hunters want for us to know the real truth but they do not. I miss my Stepdaughter so much and some of us will continue on the fight to protect our right to feel better and function without fear of these witch hunters trying to convince us to commit suicide . And they are trying to do exactly THAT and are now being successful in this under the table practice of Human Genocide!
    The under line real truth it seems THESE witch hunters would rather us Chronic Pain sufferers commit suicide are and DRINK all the BOOZE we can drink! The Federals legalized it ( ALCOHOL) knowing its a more deadly drug than Strychnine. And just because the DEA has miserably failed with their witch hunt type movement on drugs why do they continuous fully deprive us sick people of our Constitutional Rights to be Happy in that pursuit of with Professional Physicians to take meds that give us relief of this horrible malady of Chronic Pain ! May God have mercy on their miserable souls they that seek to destroy us Chronic Pain Sufferers only and little hope of temporary relief of this horrible sickness.
    Sincerely,
    Wayne S. Swanson II

    • Thank you Wayne for this reply. I am a fellow cpp, due to ongoing disabilities brought on by an underride MVA in 1998.
      I had taken various opiates over the years and during the last 6 years have been prescribed oycontin 60 mgs./ 2x”s/ d.
      This analgesic opiate medication moderated my pain which allowed me to function semi productively on a daily basis.
      I agree that this is a poorly executed witch-hunt targeting and profiling all persons depending on daily prescribed opiate analgesics.
      It is in reality, a follow the money issue.

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