DEA Issues Immediate Suspension Order and Five Orders to Show Cause
WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration announced administrative actions against six DEA-registered companies which, together, failed to account for more than a million doses of opioids. Under DEA initiative “Operation Bottleneck,” DEA served an Immediate Suspension Order and five Orders to Show Cause over a one-month period from Sept. 25 through Oct. 20, 2023.
“These companies have a legal obligation to account for every dose and every pill to protect the safety and health of the American people,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. “As we continue to face an unprecedented drug poisoning and overdose epidemic in the United States, which took 110,757 lives last year alone, DEA will continue using every available tool to prevent the diversion and misuse of opioids and other highly addictive controlled substances.”
During the week of Sept. 25, DEA served two Orders to Show Cause setting forth allegations against Inmar RX Solutions, Inc., a reverse distributor, and Ascent Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a pharmaceutical manufacturer.
During the week of Oct. 2, DEA served two Orders to Show Cause, which set forth allegations against Quantum Commerce, LLC, a pharmaceutical distributor, and Shrieve Chemical Company, LLC, a chemical distributor.
An Order to Show Cause is an administrative proceeding that requires a DEA registrant to demonstrate why the registration should not be denied, revoked, or suspended before such action is taken. When served an Order to Show Cause, the registrant has the opportunity submit a corrective action plan for DEA review before a determination is made. An Immediate Suspension Order is an immediate suspension of a DEA registration when it is determined there is "imminent danger to the public health or safety." Complete information on these actions and related processes is available here.