Current:Home > StocksTop U.S. drug agency a notable holdout in Biden’s push to loosen federal marijuana restrictions -WealthRoots Academy
Top U.S. drug agency a notable holdout in Biden’s push to loosen federal marijuana restrictions
Indexbit View
Date:2025-04-07 15:09:21
In an isolated part of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration headquarters known as the 12th-floor “bubble,” chief Anne Milgram made an unusual request of top deputies summoned in March for what she called the “Marijuana Meeting”: Nobody could take notes.
Over the next half hour, she broke the news that the Biden administration would soon be issuing a long-awaited order reclassifying pot as a less-dangerous drug, a major hurdle toward federal legalization that DEA has long resisted. And Milgram went on to reveal another twist, according to two people familiar with the private meeting who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity, that the process normally steered by the DEA had been taken over by the U.S. Justice Department and the action would not be signed by her but by Attorney General Merrick Garland.
Milgram didn’t give aides a reason for the unprecedented omission and neither she nor the DEA has explained since. But it unfolded this past week exactly as laid out in that meeting two months ago, with the most significant drug policy change in 50 years launched without the support of the nation’s premier narcotics agency.
“DEA has not yet made a determination as to its views of the appropriate schedule for marijuana,” reads a sentence tucked 13 pages into Garland’s 92-page order last Thursday outlining the Biden administration proposal to shift pot from its current Schedule I alongside heroin and LSD to the less tightly regulated Schedule III with such drugs as ketamine and some anabolic steroids.
Internal records accompanying the order indicate the DEA sent a memo to the Justice Department in late January seeking additional scientific input to determine whether marijuana has an accepted medical use, a key requirement for reclassification. But those concerns were overruled by Justice Department attorneys, who deemed the DEA’s criteria “impermissibly narrow.”
Several current and former DEA officials told the AP they believe politics may be at play, contending the Justice Department is moving forward with the marijuana reclassification because President Joe Biden wants to use the issue to woo voters in his re-election campaign and wasn’t willing to give the DEA time for more studies that likely would have dragged beyond Election Day.
Those officials also noted that while the Controlled Substances Act grants the attorney general responsibility for regulating the sale of dangerous drugs, federal law still delegates the authority to classify drugs to the DEA administrator.
“It’s crystal clear to me that the Justice Department hijacked the rescheduling process, placing politics above public safety,” said Derek Maltz, a retired agent who once headed the DEA’s Special Operations Division. “If there’s scientific evidence to support this decision, then so be it. But you’ve got to let the scientists evaluate it.”
Former DEA Administrator Tim Shea said the striking absence of Milgram’s sign-off suggests she was backing “the DEA professionals.”
“If she had supported it she would have signed it and sent it in,” said Shea, who served in the Trump administration. “DEA was opposed to this and the politics entered and overruled them. It’s demoralizing. Everybody from the agents in the streets to the leadership in DEA knows the dangers this brings.”
The White House did not respond to a request for comment but Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre previously said Biden was committed to fulfilling a 2020 campaign promise. “He said no person, no American who possesses marijuana should go to jail. It is affecting communities across the country, including communities of color.”
Justice Department attorneys defended Garland’s decision to proceed without Milgram’s backing, saying in a separate memo that the action was prompted by “sharply different views” between DEA and the Department of Health and Human Services. The HHS last year recommended reclassifying marijuana, deeming it less risky to public health than cocaine, heroin and oxycodone, and effective in treating anorexia, pain and other ailments.
HHS concluded in part that “although abuse of marijuana produces clear evidence of a risk to public health, that risk is relatively lower than” that posed by other drugs.
The DEA balked at those findings and Garland’s order cites at least 10 times when the drug agency requested additional information before blessing HHS’ medical findings. It did not respond to AP questions seeking further comment.
The Justice Department didn’t comment on internal differences but in a statement said that the proposal was “consistent with the scientific and medical determinations of HHS.”
The dissonance within the federal government underscores the continuing debate over the risks posed by cannabis, even as 38 states have legalized medical marijuana and 24 have legalized its recreational use. All the while, more voters — 70% of adults, according to a Gallup poll last fall — support legalization, the highest level yet recorded by the polling firm.
“The argument that marijuana is as dangerous as fentanyl, cocaine and meth is laughable,” said Matthew C. Zorn, a Houston-based attorney who writes a newsletter on cannabis regulation. “The DEA isn’t where most Americans are. They’re standing on the wrong side of history.”
But even HHS’ National Institute on Drug Abuse has come out with statements in apparent conflict with HHS’ recommendation to reclassify pot, saying the potency of marijuana has been steadily increasing over the years, resulting in higher numbers of emergency room visits to treat a wide range of physical and mental effects, from breathing problems and mental impairment to hallucinations and paranoia.
“Whether smoking or otherwise consuming marijuana has therapeutic benefits that outweigh its health risks is still an open question that science has not resolved,” Nora Volkow, a neuroscientist who leads NIDA, is currently quoted as saying on the institute’s website. She did not immediately respond to the AP’s request for comment.
The NIDA last performed a medical evaluation of marijuana in 2015 — a year before the Obama administration’s DEA rejected a similar request to reschedule the drug.
This time, after Biden ordered a review of the drug’s status in 2022, HHS adopted new criteria to reach its rescheduling conclusion, taking into account the states that have already legalized medical marijuana.
The rescheduling move, first reported by the AP last month, faces a potentially lengthy process. The DEA, which is not bound by HHS’ medical determinations at this point, will take public comment on the rescheduling plan before a review by an administrative judge and the publishing of a final rule. Federal prosecutions involving marijuana are already exceedingly rare but a Schedule III classification would still make pot a controlled substance subject to rules and regulations
For her part, Milgram has said little about her stance on marijuana and was not asked about it during her confirmation. When she took the helm of the agency in 2021, she privately told colleagues she considered the legalization debate a distraction from the far more serious fentanyl crisis, according to one of the people who spoke to the AP.
Milgram is known for a progressive, data-driven approach to law enforcement dating to her days as the Democratic attorney general of New Jersey. When the state’s governor, a close ally, signed a bill in 2010 making the state the 14th to make marijuana legal for medical purposes, she said only that the legislation was “workable.”
This past week, she was similarly opaque in a three-sentence announcement to DEA employees obtained by the AP.
“As required,” she wrote, “the DEA will post this notice and all attachments on our website.”
_____
Goodman reported from Miami, Mustian from New York.
_____
Contact AP’s global investigative team at [email protected] or https://www.ap.org/tips/
veryGood! (958)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Doncic’s 36 points spur Mavericks to NBA Finals with 124-103 toppling of Timberwolves in Game 5
- Just graduated from college? Follow these job-hunting tips from a career expert.
- Larry Bird Museum officially opens in Terre Haute
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Remains of US missionaries killed by criminal gang members in Haiti returned to family
- Michelle Troconis hears emotional testimony ahead of sentencing in Jennifer Dulos murder conspiracy
- Prosecutors unveil cache of Menendez texts in bribery trial: It is extremely important that we keep Nadine happy
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- South Carolina man pleads guilty to first-degree murder in Virginia police officer’s shooting death
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Another Michigan dairy worker has bird flu, the third US case this year
- Pam Grier is comfortable with being an icon
- Stock market today: Asian shares shrug off latest Wall St rout as Chinese factory activity weakens.
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Safety-net health clinics cut services and staff amid Medicaid unwinding
- Federal officials are investigating another close call between planes at Reagan National Airport
- Family of Utah man held in Congo coup attempt has no proof he’s alive
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
Domino's, Uber Eats team up to give away $10 million in free pizza: Here's how to get one
French security authorities foil a plan to attack soccer events during the 2024 Paris Olympics
Man who injured police officer during Capitol riot is sentenced to 5 years in prison
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
RFK Jr. plans to file lawsuit against Nevada over ballot access
Skeletal remains found in plastic bag in the 1980s identified as woman who was born in 1864
NCAA, states reach agreement in lawsuit to permanently allow multiple-transfer athletes to compete