Court Opinion

ID: 6221534
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-14 19:01:00.815354+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:22.611529
License: Public Domain

USCA11 Case: 20-14626     Date Filed: 02/14/2022       Page: 1 of 17

                                           [DO NOT PUBLISH]
                            In the
         United States Court of Appeals
                 For the Eleventh Circuit

                  ____________________

                         No. 20-14626
                   Non-Argument Calendar
                  ____________________

SUNTREE PHARMACY AND
SUNTREE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, LLC,
                                                        Petitioners,
versus
DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION,

                                                       Respondent.
                  ____________________

            Petition for Review of a Decision of the
              Drug Enforcement Administration
               Administration No. 17-09 / 17-10
                   ____________________
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2                         Opinion of the Court                     20-14626

Before NEWSOM, LUCK, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
       Suntree Pharmacy and Suntree Medical Equipment, LLC
petition for review of the Acting Administrator of the Drug En-
forcement Administration’s decision to revoke their registrations
to dispense controlled substances and to deny their pending re-
newal applications. See Suntree Pharmacy & Suntree Med. Equip.,
LLC, 85 Fed. Reg. 73753 (Nov. 19, 2020). The Acting Administra-
tor revoked and denied Suntree Pharmacy’s and Suntree Medical’s
registrations and pending renewal applications after an administra-
tive hearing revealed that Suntree Pharmacy had filled prescrip-
tions for controlled substances outside of the usual course of prac-
tice and in violation of federal and state law. 1 Suntree argues that
the Acting Administrator’s revocation of its registrations was arbi-
trary and capricious and that the length of the administrative pro-
ceedings violated its procedural due process rights. We deny the
petition for review.

1
  Suntree Pharmacy and Suntree Medical consented to a consolidated hearing.
The administrative law judge concluded that it was appropriate to treat Sun-
tree Pharmacy and Suntree Medical “as one integrated enterprise” because of
“the obvious commonality of ownership, management, and operations.” The
Acting Administrator agreed and concluded that Suntree Pharmacy and Sun-
tree Medical “are essentially one and the same.” Suntree Pharmacy and Sun-
tree Medical do not challenge this part of the Acting Administrator’s order on
appeal. So we refer to them together as “Suntree.”
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20-14626                Opinion of the Court                         3

  FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
                  The Controlled Substances Act
       We briefly summarize the relevant statutory framework be-
fore turning to the facts of this case. The Controlled Substances
Act “creates ‘a closed regulatory system making it unlawful to man-
ufacture, distribute, dispense, or possess any controlled substance
except in a manner authorized by the [Act].’” Jones Total Health
Care Pharmacy, LLC v. Drug Enf’t Admin., 881 F.3d 823, 827 (11th
Cir. 2018) (quoting Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1, 13 (2005)). The
Act requires pharmacies that dispense prescriptions for controlled
substances to obtain proper registration from the Attorney Gen-
eral. Id.
       The Act places “the responsibility for the proper prescribing
and dispensing of controlled substances, which must be for ‘a legit-
imate medical purpose,’ . . . on the prescribing practitioner, ‘but a
corresponding responsibility rests with the pharmacist who fills the
prescription.’” Id. (quoting 21 C.F.R. § 1306.04(a)). Pharmacists
therefore “have a ‘corresponding responsibility’ to refuse to fill pre-
scriptions that are not issued for a legitimate medical purpose.” Id.;
see United States v. Hayes, 595 F.2d 258, 261 (5th Cir. 1979) (“The
pharmacist is not required to have a ‘corresponding responsibility’
to practice medicine. What is required of him is the responsibility
not to fill an order that purports to be a prescription but is not a
prescription within the meaning of the statute because he knows
that the issuing practitioner issued it outside the scope of medical
practice.”).
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4                      Opinion of the Court                 20-14626

        The Attorney General has delegated his authority to deny,
revoke, or suspend pharmacy registrations to the Drug Enforce-
ment Administration. Jones, 881 F.3d at 827. The Administration
may revoke an existing registration or deny an application for reg-
istration if the registration is or would be “inconsistent with the
public interest.” Id. at 829 (quoting 21 U.S.C. §§ 824(a)(4), 823(f)).
When the Administration proposes to revoke an existing registra-
tion, it must serve an “order to show cause” on the registrant and
provide the registrant an opportunity for a hearing before an ad-
ministrative law judge in order to contest the proposed action. Id.
at 827 (citing 21 U.S.C. § 824(c)). After the administrative law judge
certifies the record to the Administrator, he or she must publish a
final order with findings of fact and conclusions of law. See 21
C.F.R. §§ 1316.65, .67. The final order must be published “[a]s soon
as practicable after the [administrative law judge] has certified the
record to the Administrator.” Id. § 1316.67.
              Suntree and the Order to Show Cause
        Suntree Pharmacy and Suntree Medical were registered re-
tail pharmacies in Florida. On October 5, 2016, the Administration
issued an order to show cause why Suntree’s registrations
shouldn’t be rescinded and its pending renewal applications
shouldn’t be denied because Suntree’s “continued registrations are
inconsistent with the public interest.” The Administration alleged
that, from October 2013 to March 2015, Suntree filled more than
two hundred controlled substances prescriptions “outside the usual
course of pharmacy practice” and “in contravention of [its]
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20-14626                Opinion of the Court                         5

‘corresponding responsibility.’” Specifically, the order to show
cause alleged that Suntree violated its corresponding responsibility
by: (1) filling prescriptions for patients without resolving red flags
that the prescriptions were not for a legitimate medical purpose;
(2) filling prescriptions for a doctor that he wrote for himself in vi-
olation of state law; and (3) filling prescriptions for “office use” in
violation of federal law.
        As to the prescriptions for patients, the order to show cause
alleged that Suntree “repeatedly filled controlled substances pre-
scriptions that contained multiple red flags of diversion and/or
abuse without addressing or resolving those red flags, and under
circumstances indicating that [Suntree was] willfully blind or delib-
erately ignorant of the prescriptions’ legitimacy.” As to the pre-
scriptions written by the doctor for himself, the order to show
cause alleged that the prescriptions “were written in violation of
Florida law . . . which prohibits a physician from ‘prescribing, dis-
pensing, or administering any’ drug in Schedule II-VI ‘by the phy-
sician to himself.’” And as to the prescriptions for “office use,” the
order to show cause alleged that Suntree “dispensed testosterone
on at least fourteen different occasions pursuant to invalid prescrip-
tions which indicated the ultimate user was an ‘office,’ in violation
of 21 C.F.R. [section] 1306.04(b).”
             The Administrative Law Judge’s Decision
      An administrative law judge held a hearing on the order to
show cause in April 2017. At the hearing, the Administration pre-
sented the testimony of its expert witness, Dr. Tracey Gordon,
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6                      Opinion of the Court                 20-14626

Pharm.D., its diversion investigator, James Graumlich, an em-
ployee of Suntree Medical, Michael Peterson, and the owner of
Suntree, Dr. Diahn Clark, Pharm.D. Suntree presented the testi-
mony of its expert witness, Dr. Wayne Grant, Pharm.D., Suntree
Pharmacy’s regulatory attorney, Darren Meacham, and Dr. Clark.
       On August 15, 2017, the administrative law judge issued his
findings of fact and conclusions of law, recommending that the Act-
ing Administrator revoke Suntree’s registrations and deny its pend-
ing renewal applications. The administrative law judge credited
Dr. Gordon’s testimony that Suntree filled multiple prescriptions
for controlled substances to twenty-two patients that had one or
more “red flags”—indicia that the prescriptions were not issued for
a legitimate medical purpose—and should not have been filled
without first investigating and resolving the red flags.
       Dr. Gordon testified that the usual course of professional
practice in Florida required a pharmacist to investigate and resolve
red flags before dispensing a controlled substance. Dr. Gordon
identified more than a dozen red flags that Suntree ignored in filling
prescriptions, including: (1) patients traveling long distances—
some as far as 170 miles—to obtain prescriptions; (2) “groups” of
patients traveling to the same physicians on the same days to ob-
tain similar prescriptions which Suntree frequently filled at the
same time; (3) patients making cash payments; (4) patients obtain-
ing prescriptions for well-known, highly diverted and abused con-
trolled substances; (5) patients obtaining prescriptions for the high-
est dosages; (6) patients obtaining repeated prescriptions for highly
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20-14626               Opinion of the Court                        7

abused drug “cocktails”; (7) patients obtaining early refills of pre-
scriptions; (8) patients obtaining prescriptions for two immediate
release opioids that do the same thing; and (9) physicians prescrib-
ing outside the scope of their usual practice.
        The administrative law judge credited Dr. Gordon’s testi-
mony and found that “[w]hen a red flag is resolved, it must be doc-
umented before the prescription is dispensed” and that “[i]f a red
flag cannot be resolved, under the standard practice [of] a phar-
macy in Florida, the medication should not be dispensed.” The ad-
ministrative law judge also credited Dr. Gordon’s testimony and
found that “nothing in the record resolves the red flags raised by
prescriptions dispensed” by Suntree. The administrative law judge
found that the “blatant” unresolved red flags were “sufficient cir-
cumstantial evidence” to establish that the prescriptions were not
written for a legitimate medical purpose. And the administrative
law judge reasoned that, “while nothing in the [Administration’s]
regulations specifically requires a pharmacist to document the res-
olution of a red flag, Florida laws specifically require that a phar-
macist maintain records that include discussions with licensed
health care practitioners and information about a patient’s drug
therapy and information peculiar to a specific patient,” and that,
“[i]n light of these requirements, the absence of such documenta-
tion is circumstantial evidence that those requirements were not
met.” Based on these factual findings, the administrative law judge
sustained the Administration’s allegations that Suntree violated its
corresponding responsibility in dispensing prescriptions written for
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8                      Opinion of the Court                 20-14626

patients because it “dispensed highly abused controlled substances
to many of its customers without resolving numerous red flags
raised by the prescriptions.”
        The administrative law judge also sustained the Administra-
tion’s allegations that Suntree violated its corresponding responsi-
bility by filling prescriptions that a prescribing physician wrote for
himself because: (1) the prescribing physician violated Florida law
by prescribing a controlled substance to himself; and (2) “filling
such a prescription would not be in the usual course of the profes-
sional practice of a pharmacy.” But the administrative law judge
didn’t sustain the Administration’s allegation that Suntree violated
its corresponding responsibility by filling prescriptions for “office
use” because “these ‘prescriptions’ were issued to physicians” and
the Administration didn’t prove that the physicians “were going to
be dispensing the controlled substances to patients.”
        Having sustained the Administration’s allegations that Sun-
tree violated its corresponding responsibility by filling red-flagged
prescriptions for patients and by filling prescriptions that the pre-
scribing physician wrote for himself, the administrative law judge
found that that the government had met its burden to establish a
prima facie case that revocation of Suntree’s registrations was in
the public interest. The administrative law judge then addressed
whether Suntree had put forward sufficient evidence to show that
it could be trusted not to engage in future misconduct. The admin-
istrative law judge concluded that Suntree hadn’t done so because
it hadn’t accepted responsibility for its violations.             The
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20-14626               Opinion of the Court                       9

administrative law judge therefore recommended the revocation
of Suntree’s registrations and the denial of its pending renewal ap-
plications.
             The Acting Administrator’s Final Order
        In September 2017, Suntree filed exceptions to the adminis-
trative law judge’s recommendation and the administrative law
judge certified the record to the Acting Administrator. Three years
later, the Acting Administrator issued an eighty-five-page final or-
der concluding that there was substantial evidence that Suntree’s
continued registrations would be inconsistent with the public in-
terest.
       Relying on Dr. Gordon’s testimony, the Acting Administra-
tor determined that Suntree had a corresponding responsibility to
resolve red flags before filling prescriptions for controlled sub-
stances. The Acting Administrator agreed with the administrative
law judge and found that Suntree failed to exercise its correspond-
ing responsibility by filling hundreds of prescriptions for patients
without resolving red flags.
        The Acting Administrator did “not find it necessary to find”
whether Suntree violated Florida law by failing to document the
resolution of red flags because Dr. Gordon’s “testimony [was] in-
dependently credible that documentation of the resolution of red
flags [was] a requirement of the practice of pharmacy in the State
of Florida.” The Acting Administrator also agreed with the admin-
istrative law judge that Suntree violated its corresponding
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10                      Opinion of the Court                  20-14626

responsibility by filling prescriptions that a prescribing physician
had written for himself because, even if the prescribing physician
hadn’t violated Florida law in writing the prescriptions, “the fact
that there was even a question about whether the prescriptions vi-
olated Florida law presented . . . a red flag” that Suntree didn’t re-
solve. And the Acting Administrator did “not consider the allega-
tion related to the prescriptions issued for ‘office use’” because the
Administration had “not adequately established a legal basis for . . .
finding . . . a violation.”
       Based on his findings, the Acting Administrator determined
that “it would be inconsistent with the public interest to permit
[Suntree] to maintain its registration[s].” And Suntree couldn’t be
entrusted with a registration, the Acting Administrator concluded,
because it had neither accepted responsibility for its violations nor
offered any remedial measures. The Acting Administrator there-
fore revoked Suntree’s registrations and denied its pending renewal
applications.
                     STANDARD OF REVIEW
        We may set aside an agency’s final decision if it is “arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance
with the law.” Jones, 881 F.3d at 829 (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)).
“The arbitrary and capricious standard is exceedingly deferential.”
Id. (citation omitted). We “may not substitute our judgment for
that of the agency so long as its conclusions are rational and based
on the evidence before it.” Id. We may, however, “set aside a de-
cision as ‘arbitrary and capricious when, among other flaws, the
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20-14626               Opinion of the Court                       11

agency has relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to
consider, entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the
problem, [or] offered an explanation for its decision that runs coun-
ter to the evidence before the agency.’” Id. (citation omitted).
       The Acting Administrator’s factual findings “are conclusive
if supported by substantial evidence.” Id. (citing 21 U.S.C. § 877).
“Substantial evidence is less than a preponderance of the evidence,
but rather such relevant evidence as a reasonable person would ac-
cept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Id. The Acting Admin-
istrator’s factual findings are supported by substantial evidence
even if “two inconsistent conclusions [could be drawn] from the
evidence.” Id. (citation omitted).
                           DISCUSSION
        Suntree contends that the Acting Administrator’s final order
must be set aside for two reasons. First, it argues that the Acting
Administrator’s decision was arbitrary and capricious because the
government failed to prove that the red-flagged prescriptions were
not issued for a legitimate medical purpose. Second, it contends
that the four years between the order to show cause and the final
order, and the three years between the administrative law judge’s
certification of the record and the Acting Administrator’s entry of
the final order, violated its procedural due process rights. Neither
argument has merit.
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12                     Opinion of the Court                20-14626

                      Revocation and Denial
       Suntree does not challenge the Acting Administrator’s fac-
tual finding that Suntree failed to resolve red flags raised by pre-
scriptions for controlled substances before it dispensed them. It ar-
gues instead that the Acting Administrator erroneously determined
that this failure amounted to a violation of Suntree’s corresponding
responsibility because there was “no evidence that the prescrip-
tions in question lacked a legitimate medical purpose” and the ille-
gitimacy of a prescription must be established before finding that
Suntree was willfully blind to the prescription’s validity. According
to Suntree, “[t]he mere showing of dispensing prescriptions in the
face of ‘red flags’” is insufficient to demonstrate a violation of a
pharmacist’s corresponding responsibility because the correspond-
ing responsibility is not “triggered” unless a prescription lacked a
legitimate medical purpose.
      Suntree’s argument is based almost entirely on a footnote in
the Acting Administrator’s decision in Hills Pharmacy, LLC, 81
Fed. Reg. 49816 (July 28, 2016). That footnote reads,
      Respondent argues that the Government cannot es-
      tablish that a pharmacist has violated his correspond-
      ing responsibility unless it first establishes that the
      prescription lacked a legitimate medical purpose and
      that the issuing physician acted outside of the usual
      course of professional practice. It argues that “neither
      the fact of this corresponding responsibility nor the
      pharmacist’s performance of his corresponding
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20-14626              Opinion of the Court                        13

      responsibility affects whether the prescription was, in
      the first place, issued to the patient for a legitimate
      medical purpose by an individual practitioner acting
      in the usual course of his professional practice.” And
      it further argues that “the test for the proper dispens-
      ing of a controlled substances remains at its founda-
      tion a medical question” and that “the Government
      provided not one scintilla of evidence to prove that
      the prescriptions at issue were issued for other than a
      legitimate medical purpose.”
      Respondent is mistaken. While it is true that a phar-
      macist cannot violate his corresponding responsibility
      if a prescription was nonetheless issued for a legiti-
      mate medical purpose, Respondent ignores that the
      invalidity of a prescription can be proved by circum-
      stantial evidence. I find that to be the case here. For
      similar reason, I reject Respondent’s contention that
      the Government failed to meet its burden because
      Mr. Parrado is a pharmacist with “no medical training
      or experience that would have allowed him to evalu-
      ate the legitimacy of a physician's prescribing.”
                          *        *     *
      Here . . . the Government relied on the circumstantial
      evidence that the prescriptions lacked a legitimate
      medical purpose. Accordingly, I reject Respondent’s
      contention that “the Government provided not one
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14                        Opinion of the Court                     20-14626

       scintilla of evidence to prove that the prescriptions . . .
       were issued for other than a legitimate medical pur-
       pose.”
Id. at 49836 n.33 (citations omitted and emphasis added).
       Suntree repeatedly quotes the portion of the sentence in ital-
ics that “it is true that a pharmacist cannot violate his correspond-
ing responsibility if a prescription was nonetheless issued for a le-
gitimate medical purpose.” But, like the respondent in Hills Phar-
macy, Suntree ignores “that the validity of a prescription can be
proved by circumstantial evidence.”2
       Contrary to Suntree’s assertion, the Administration “has
long interpreted [21 C.F.R. section 1306.04(a)] as prohibiting a
pharmacist from filling a prescription for a controlled substance
when he either ‘knows or has reason to know that the prescription
was not written for a legitimate medical purpose.’” JM Pharmacy
Grp., Inc., d/b/a Farmacia Nueva & Best Pharma Corp., 80 Fed.
Reg. 28667, 28670 (May 19, 2015) (citation omitted and emphasis
added); see also Hayes, 595 F.2d at 261 n.6 (“[A] pharmacist can

2
  This sentence from Hills Pharmacy was quoted in Pharmacy Doctors Enter-
prises d/b/a Zion Clinic Pharmacy, 83 Fed. Reg. 10876 (Mar. 13, 2018). As in
Hills Pharmacy, the Acting Administrator in Pharmacy Doctors Enterprises
rejected the respondent’s argument “that the Government’s case must fail be-
cause the [diversion investigator] did not meet with any prescriber or speak
with any customer” to establish that the prescriptions were not issued for a
legitimate medical purpose because “Agency precedent has made clear that
[the respondent’s] argument is mistaken.” 83 Fed. Reg. at 10899 & n.36 (citing
Hills Pharmacy, 81 Fed. Reg. at 49836 n.33).
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20-14626               Opinion of the Court                        15

know that prescriptions are issued for no legitimate medical pur-
pose without his needing to know anything about medical sci-
ence.”). When confronted with red flags, “a pharmacist may not
intentionally close his eyes and thereby avoid positive knowledge
of the real purpose of the prescription, and thereafter fill the pre-
scription ‘with impunity.’” JM Pharmacy Grp., 80 Fed. Reg. at
28670 (citation omitted).
       Here, the Acting Administrator found that circumstantial
evidence—the “blatant” red flags identified by Dr. Gordon and ig-
nored by Suntree—showed that the prescriptions were not issued
for a legitimate medical purpose. And the Acting Administrator
found that Suntree violated its corresponding responsibility by fill-
ing the prescriptions even though it knew—or was willfully blind
to—the prescriptions’ illegitimacy. The Acting Administrator’s
finding that Suntree violated its corresponding responsibility is sup-
ported by substantial evidence, and it is therefore conclusive. See
21 U.S.C. § 877; Jones, 881 F.3d at 830 (finding that “[t]he record
supports the [Administration’s] determination that [the pharmacy]
unlawfully filled numerous controlled substance prescriptions that
were not issued for a legitimate medical purpose” where “the evi-
dence showed that [the pharmacy] . . . filled over one-hundred pre-
scriptions that had at least one red flag that [the pharmacy] did not
attempt to resolve and that could not have been resolved” and
“[t]he government also put forward other substantial evidence in-
dicating that the controlled substances dispensed by [the phar-
macy] were being diverted for improper use”).
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16                         Opinion of the Court                        20-14626

       Based on his finding that Suntree violated its corresponding
responsibility by filling prescriptions for controlled substances
without resolving obvious red flags that the prescriptions lacked a
legitimate medical purpose, the Acting Administrator’s decision to
revoke Suntree’s registrations and to deny its pending renewal ap-
plications was not “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
otherwise not in accordance with law.” 3 See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
                           Administrative Delay
       Suntree also argues that the four years between the order to
show cause and the final order, and the three years between the
administrative law judge’s certification of the record and the Acting
Administrator’s entry of the final order, violated its procedural due
process rights. But Suntree had the opportunity to object to the
Administration’s delay, see, e.g., 5 U.S.C. § 706(1); 21 C.F.R.
§ 1316.67, and it didn’t take it.
       Despite having the opportunity, Suntree never raised the de-
lay issue before petitioning for review of the Acting Administra-
tor’s decision. Because Suntree raises the delay issue for the first
time here, the issue is waived. See United States v. L.A. Trucker
Truck Lines, Inc., 344 U.S. 33, 36–37 (1952) (“We have recognized

3
  Because we conclude that substantial evidence supported the Acting Admin-
istrator’s finding that Suntree violated its corresponding responsibility by fill-
ing prescriptions for patients without first resolving red flags, we do not need
to reach the issue of whether Suntree violated Florida law by dispensing pre-
scriptions from a prescribing physician to himself or by failing to document
the resolution of red flags.
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20-14626               Opinion of the Court                        17

in more than a few decisions, and Congress has recognized in more
than a few statutes, that orderly procedure and good administra-
tion require that objections to the proceedings of an administrative
agency be made while it has opportunity for correction in order to
raise issues reviewable by the courts.” (footnotes omitted)); Pol-
ypore Int’l, Inc. v. Fed. Trade Comm’n, 686 F.3d 1208, 1219 n.13
(11th Cir. 2012) (“Polypore [didn’t] raise[] this issue before the
Commission . . . so the issue is waived.”); Nuclear Energy Inst., Inc.
v. Env’t Prot. Agency, 373 F.3d 1251, 1297 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (“It is a
hard and fast rule of administrative law, rooted in simple fairness,
that issues not raised before an agency are waived and will not be
considered by a court on review.”).
       PETITION DENIED.