The Blurry Legal Line Between Doctors and Drug Dealers
Xiulu Ruan, a pain specialist, was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison for prescribing opioid analgesics "outside the usual course of professional medical practice."

Xiulu Ruan, a board-certified Alabama pain specialist, was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison for prescribing opioid analgesics "outside the usual course of professional medical practice." According to the appeals court that upheld his 2017 conviction, it did not matter whether he sincerely believed he was doing what a physician is supposed to do.
That ruling, which is the focus of a case the Supreme Court heard in March, conflates negligence with criminal liability, invites the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to usurp state medical regulators, and encourages prosecutions that have a chilling effect on pain treatment. If it is allowed to stand, doctors who already face intense pressure to curtail opioid prescriptions will be even more inclined to elevate drug control above pain control.
Ruan's trial featured the usual battle of experts. Defense witnesses portrayed him as a conscientious physician doing his best to serve patients in dire need, while prosecution witnesses portrayed him as careless and blind to "red flags" indicating abuse or diversion of the drugs he prescribed.
Some of this disagreement stemmed from dueling interpretations of Ruan's practices and lapses. Some of it stemmed from ongoing debates on issues such as the risks and benefits of long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain and, more generally, how to balance patients' needs against the government's demand that physicians prevent misuse of pain medication.
That demand puts doctors in a difficult position, since pain cannot be objectively verified. If they trust their patients, some people will take advantage of that trust; if they reflexively treat their patients with suspicion, some people will suffer needlessly from pain that could have been relieved safely and effectively.
The threat of regulatory sanctions and malpractice lawsuits already forces clinicians to weigh the risk to their licenses and livelihoods if they make questionable prescribing decisions. The threat of criminal prosecution ups the ante because it means that doctors also can lose their liberty if they make decisions that the DEA, a law enforcement agency with no medical expertise, views as medically inappropriate.
Criminal penalties traditionally are reserved for people who knowingly break the law. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has held that a physician's "good faith belief that he dispensed a controlled substance in the usual course of his professional practice is irrelevant" to the question of whether he violated the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Based on that reading of the law, the 11th Circuit rejected Ruan's argument that he was entitled to a jury instruction precluding a guilty verdict if the evidence indicated that he honestly thought his prescriptions were "for a legitimate medical purpose" and that he was "acting in the usual course of his professional practice," as required by CSA regulations.
As the appeals court saw it, Ruan could be sent to prison for decades even if he unintentionally fell short of those ambiguous standards. In a case that was consolidated with Ruan's, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit likewise held that good faith does not matter in deciding whether a prescription was written in "the usual course of professional practice," which must be determined "objectively."
Several justices seemed dismayed by the idea that prescribers can be accidentally guilty of drug trafficking. Justice Stephen Breyer argued that the CSA should be read to require that prosecutors prove a doctor "knowingly or intentionally" broke the law.
"The doctor may have violated that objective standard but might have legitimately thought that the standard was somewhat different," Justice Brett Kavanaugh noted. He added that the phrase "legitimate medical purpose" is "very vague language in my estimation, and reasonable people can disagree."
Even in "an extremely close case," Justice Neil Gorsuch noted, a defendant facing "20 years to maybe life in prison" is, according to the 11th Circuit, "unable to shield himself behind any mens rea requirement." Justice Clarence Thomas likewise emphasized that "quite significant criminal penalties" can be imposed on physicians for what amounts to a regulatory infraction: violating the conditions of their DEA registration.
As two health law professors noted in a brief supporting Ruan's appeal, uncertainty about which practices may provoke federal prosecution hurts patients as well as physicians. It provides yet another reason to turn away or abandon patients who already are suffering from the indiscriminate crackdown on pain medication, sacrificing their welfare on the altar of the war on drugs.
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Power pig judges and politicians leave those in pain with suicide for pain control, as one of their few remaining options! I guess another one is illegal drugs... Illegal drug dealers are no doubt celebrating these kinds of decisions! As are also, the pro-suicide commenters here on these pages! Here's looking at YOU, Mother's Lament, with a heart of cement, and a "brain" totally spent! Whose comments aren't worth a cent!
That demand puts doctors in a difficult position, since pain cannot be objectively verified.
Discharge non-compliant patients after 3 warnings by their physicians when they fail to change their lifestyle habits. These include gluttony, smoking, drug/alcohol addiction, slothfulness, etc. If the patient expects the physician to fix their self-induced chronic problem, while refusing to adopt self-corrective measurable measures, that patient is a non-compliant red-flag pain in the rear. Tell them to find another physician. Works like a charm!
Pain of the severity that opiates would be required for rarely results from those lifestyle habits. The problem may have been in some cases self-induced, like an injury incurred during the course of voluntary activity (usually the antithesis of slothfulness), but that's a one-time thing rather than a product of an ongoing lifestyle.
"These include ..., slothfulness, etc."
And if a particular patient can barely stand and walk a dozen steps due to severe knee pain, what lifestyle change do you expect them to make?
Suicide?
Knee replacement?
1. Depends on the source of the knee pain.
2. How is that a lifestyle change?
Try having half your spine crushed because a car decided to drive through a stop sign and into you as you crossed the street in a crosswalk. Next see more than 60 doctors/specialists, take endless MRIs/X-rays/etc and do everything the experts suggest even doubtful nonsense like acupuncture or aqua physical therapy (therapist admitted she had no exercises that could help) but find that opioids are the only things that allow you to partially mitigate the daily pain. Next find out that your access to life saving opioids is at risk because a different group of people chose to abuse the drugs and are now dying of overdoses. Watch as other chronic pain patients you know die after they are "force tapered" off of opioids because of scientifically inaccurate CDC guidelines misapplied. They die from either trying to replace their prior safe meds with street drugs and overdosing or from suicide to avoid a life with two bad choices: dangerous acquisition of street drugs or unrelenting untreated pain. You seem like a callous jerk who might get empathy if you were put in my circumstance but I wouldn't even wish this fate on my worst enemy.
Quelle surprise. Authoritarians of all stripes want the government to dictate to doctors how to practice medicine.
Hmm, is "sincere belief" really a valid criteria? What if I sincerely believe that good parenting justifies keeping my kids in a pit in the basement? What right do others have to contradict me?
The difference is that lots of doctors and pain specialists agree with more liberal prescribing of opioids. Zero pediatricians and child development experts agree with keeping kids in a pit in the basement. It's not just a "sincere" belief that prescribing opiates is necessary for many, it's a reasonable one, based on objective evidence.
invites the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to usurp state medical regulators
This has been going on for quite some time
It's all about monopolizing every in-demand human resource.....
Food, Housing, Healthcare, Knowledge......
Only the Over-Lords can grant human resources....
Because that's what Nazi's (National Socialists) live for; taking complete control (The Property) of every man-made resource..
Can't have a slavery nation with people being able to keep what they created.
Exactly correct. This is bringing our foreign policy home.
Do what we say, we shower you with money.
Don't do what we say, we lock you up and throw away the key.
https://simulationcommander.substack.com/p/the-scorpion-and-the-frog
Thank you for "The Scorpion and the Frog" post, I read it.
I couldn't help but to notice the graffiti picture "If abortions aren't safe, you aren't either" (along those lines, maybe not precisely transcribed here). The writer seems to equate that with "terrorism", but maybe it's not! Maybe it simply means "then YOU aren't safe from Nosenheimers, Buttinskies, and over-reaching Government Almighty, either, even if you and yours don't need an abortion RIGHT NOW!" Or maybe it means that you aren't safe from “Leisure Suit Larry the Lying Lothario in the Land of the Lounge Lizards”, or “Lying Lothario” for short. “Lying Lothario” wants to steal a LOT of baby-making power via deception, and "help" us humans to evolve towards beasts like harem-fighting elephant seals! Abortion is "veto power" against “Lying Lothario”!
To see full details of this, go to http://www.churchofsqrls.com/Jesus_Validated/ , bottom section labelled (indexed) as "The Sociobiology of Abortion".
I know of a pain clinic doctor who was investigated due to a sudden increase in prescriptions for opiod medications. Luckily, someone with a bit of common sense was assigned to the matter and soon figured out it was because the pain clinic down the street had closed at the end of 2021. This doctor took on a large number of their patients so naturally his number of opiod prescriptions had increased.
All drugs should be OTC and available to anyone over 19.
Why do you hate grandma (and everyone else)?
Why do you hate the paychecks of doctors, the FDA, the DEA, and the AMA?
Minus your first one ..... Because they VIOLATE Individual Liberty and Justice... duh.... Why are you such a fan of Nazism?
Sarcasm... I believe in medical freedom! Separation of medicine and state would be GREAT!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Rush#Controversy_regarding_quotations
Founding-father-doctor warned us about this? Controversy over it, apparently... From the above source...
George Seldes includes in his widely recognized book "The Great Quotations" (1960) a quote by Rush:
"The Constitution of this Republic should make special provision for medical freedom. To restrict the art of healing to one class will constitute the Bastille of medical science."[80]
The book includes a detailed depiction of sources and methodologies used by Seldes to gather the quotes. However Thomas Szasz in recent years has claimed to believe this is a false attribution, while avoiding to mention Seldes' book: "...Not a single author supplies a verifiable source for it. Hence, I believe this false attribution, depicting Rush as a medical libertarian, needs to be exposed as bogus."[81]
"Medical libertarian" does run contrary to the usual assessments I've read of Benjamin Rush.
Could someone link is to the actual story about what happened?
It’s hard to believe they prosecuted the doctor prescribing in good faith.
Especially considering they just sent all us doctors a notice that they are liberalizing opioid recommendations and specifically said state laws should not slavishly follow the guidelines.
I do still urge all reason readers to hoard whatever opiates they have..
Our Florida state regulations are extremely strict on post operative narcotics, and are not sufficient for the great majority of postoperative pain.
The Harrison Act, passed on the strength of NYT "cocaine negroes" hysteria, was promptly used to indict and intimidate physicians less than wholehearted in their support of it. The Schaffer Library of Drug Policy bristles with examples nos so different from the "example" the State of Alabama is making of this physician. "The Alabama Citizen" in Google News Archives also sheds light on how laws are made there.
Details of Dr. Ruan's prescribing history are conspicuously absent from this article. See CNBC's February 19, 2016 post "Former sales rep for painkiller company pleads guilty" for some of that history. Dr. Ruan's pharmacy filled all of the prescriptions for Subsys Fentanyl written by Dr. Ruan's and his partner Dr. Couch. Dr. Ruan urged the pharmaceutical company Insys to hire as a sales representative a woman to whom he was romantically attracted. The sales representative stated as part of a plea agreement that she was hired as an inducement for Dr. Ruan to write more prescriptions for Subsys Fentanyl. By the way, the sales rep made more than $700,000 in commissions in two years, and, if the CNBC quote of the plea bargain is correct, that's only from the prescriptions written by Drs. Ruan and Couch.
That’s far more like it.
It’s hard to believe they would prosecute a a Doctor Who was legitimatey writing prescriptions for pain medicines.
You can argue that some patients should be on long-term narcotics for chronic injuries, or if adjunctive treatment has any place for these patients, or to consult with doctors who specialize in administering chronic narcotics.
But hiring your girlfriend as a consultant to a pharmaceutical company and she gets hundreds of thousands of dollars in commissions on the narcotics you write is not the sign of a legitimate doctor.
I think this is a libertarian magazine, and would expect it to point out that this wouldn't be an issue if all drugs were legal like they were before 1906 when a child could walk into a drug store and purchase some heroin. It wasn't a problem then, other than the ongoing abuse of opium among a small segment of the population, since it was used nearly 5000 years ago by the Sumerians.
The libertarian position is that drug laws make our lives worse.
That misuse of the word "the."
The drug culture fringe only pretends they support libertarianism. In truth, they support authoritarianism and chemical slavery. They're not supporters, they're users.
The plain fact is, a two party system is prone to polarization and extremism. Drug culture are a gaggle of evil slime. If they actually gave the first dawn about their supposed "the libertarian" position they'd seek to free antibiotics up the publics discretionary use.
When was the last time you heard, "deregulate penicillin?"
Weed was deregulated in places because those places were heroin/meth addicts. Smoking weed with either of those two is counter productive. No one could sell weed I'm those places any other way, lol.
When obiden needs someone to throw under his afghan pederast heroin cartel bus, there's you, lol.