The Evidence Suggests the DEA Still Has Not Come Around on Rescheduling Marijuana
It looks like Attorney General Merrick Garland overrode the agency's recalcitrant drug warriors in deciding to reclassify the drug.

Just a few years ago, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) successfully fended off another in a series of petitions asking it reclassify marijuana under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). In that case, the DEA reiterated its long-standing position that removing marijuana from Schedule I, the most restrictive category, would require the sort of evidence that is necessary to win approval of a new medicine by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). In August 2021, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit dismissed a lawsuit challenging that position, saying the petitioners had failed to exhaust their administrative remedies.
Last week, when the DEA posted a proposed rule that would move marijuana to Schedule III, it looked like the agency had reconsidered its contentious interpretation of the CSA. But as Columbia University law professor David Pozen notes, several pieces of evidence suggest that is not the case. Instead it seems that Attorney General Merrick Garland overrode the DEA's resistance to achieve the outcome that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recommended last August. That recommendation was the result of a review that President Joe Biden ordered in October 2022, and it comported with his judgment that marijuana's Schedule I status "makes no sense."
Biden was right about that. To qualify for Schedule I, a drug is supposed to have "a high potential for abuse" compared to the drugs in Schedules III through V and, unlike Schedule II drugs, "no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States." Schedule I drugs are also supposed to be so dangerous that they cannot be used safely even "under medical supervision." As Biden noted in 2022, "we classify marijuana at the same level as heroin" and treat it as "more serious than fentanyl," which does not pass the laugh test.
Although the CSA lays out three criteria for Schedule I, the DEA maintained that marijuana had to stay in that category as long as it had no "currently accepted medical use." It defined that phrase narrowly, requiring actual FDA approval or research extensive and rigorous enough to meet the agency's criteria for safety and efficacy.
HHS rejected that test when it recommended that marijuana be moved to Schedule III, a category that includes prescription drugs such as ketamine, Tylenol with codeine, and anabolic steroids. Instead it relied on a definition of accepted medical use that took into account "widespread clinical experience associated with various medical conditions recognized by a substantial number of jurisdictions across the United States." It found "credible scientific support" for marijuana's use in the treatment of pain, nausea and vomiting, and "anorexia related to a medical condition."
HHS also noted that "the risks to the public health posed by marijuana are low compared to other drugs of abuse," such as heroin (Schedule I), cocaine (Schedule II), benzodiazepines like Valium and Xanax (Schedule IV), and alcohol (unscheduled). Although "abuse of marijuana produces clear evidence of harmful consequences, including substance use disorder," HHS said, they are "less common and less harmful" than the negative consequences associated with other drugs. It concluded that "the vast majority of individuals who use marijuana are doing so in a manner that does not lead to dangerous outcomes to themselves or others."
In light of the rescheduling proposal announced last week, you might surmise that the DEA has come around on all of these issues. But although the HHS recommendation was addressed to DEA Administrator Anne Milgram, the response is framed as a decision by Garland, who has direct authority to reschedule drugs under the CSA. The attorney general has traditionally delegated that authority to the DEA, which is part of the Justice Department. But in this case, Garland seems to have taken that power back in response to recalcitrant drug warriors.
The proposed rule was posted by the DEA, and it has a DEA docket number. But it is signed by Garland rather than Milgram, and it begins, "The Department of Justice ('DOJ') proposes…" As Pozen notes, scheduling changes usually are signed by the DEA administrator and begin, "The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) proposes…" He links to recent examples here, here, and here.
According to the proposed rule, "the Attorney General concurs with HHS's conclusion" that marijuana has currently accepted medical uses. "The Attorney General" also "concurs with" the assessment that "marijuana has a potential for abuse less than the drugs or other substances in schedules I and II." And "the Attorney General" agrees that "the abuse of marijuana may lead to moderate or low physical dependence, depending on frequency and degree of marijuana exposure."
Does the DEA agree with those propositions? Apparently not. "DEA has not yet made a determination as to its views of the appropriate schedule for marijuana," the proposed rule says.
All of these clues are consistent with reports that DEA officials were unhappy with the HHS recommendation. In March, for example, The Wall Street Journal reported that "federal officials are at odds over President Biden's push to loosen restrictions on marijuana, a move some in the White House hope to see ahead of an election in which he needs the support of younger voters." Citing "people familiar with the matter," the Journal said DEA officials were "resistant, saying the drug's medicinal benefits remain unproven and that it has a high potential for abuse." Those internal arguments help explain why nine months elapsed between the HHS recommendation and its official acceptance.
On the same day that Garland proposed moving marijuana to Schedule III, Pozen notes, the Justice Department released an April 11 opinion from its Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) on the question of what qualifies as "accepted medical use." The opinion sides with HHS rather than the DEA. "The approach that the Drug Enforcement Administration currently uses to determine whether a drug has a 'currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States' under the Controlled Substances Act is impermissibly narrow," the OLC says. "An alternative, two-part inquiry proposed by the Department of Health and Human Services is sufficient to establish that a drug has a 'currently accepted medical use' even if the drug would not satisfy DEA's current approach."
Milgram would rather not discuss any of this. On May 7, a week after the Justice Department confirmed that it had accepted the HHS recommendation, Milgram declined to answer a congressional subcommittee's questions about marijuana's pending reclassification. "Since DEA is ultimately the decider of scheduling and rescheduling, and the DEA administrator is in that role," she said, "it would be inappropriate for me to make comments about this process or parts of that process."
In this case, it looks like the DEA was not "ultimately the decider." It is "pretty clear," Pozen thinks, that the DEA "has, in fact, continued to resist the rescheduling of marijuana."
Pozen argues that the DEA never should have been entrusted with scheduling decisions to begin with, because "it's an 'anti-drug' agency with a deep material and ideological investment in prioritizing criminal responses to drug problems." Although HHS is supposed to guide those decisions by making scientific determinations, the DEA is not required to accept its policy recommendations.
"The scientific and medical determinations that underlie HHS's 'currently acceptable medical use' recommendation are binding on DEA, but only until the initiation of formal rulemaking proceedings to schedule a drug," the OLC says. "Once DEA initiates a formal rulemaking, HHS's determinations no longer bind DEA, but DEA must continue to accord HHS's scientific and medical determinations significant deference, and the CSA does not allow DEA to undertake a de novo assessment of HHS's findings at any point in the process."
That leaves the DEA considerable leeway to decide where a given substance belongs. Although CSA criteria are ostensibly based on scientific assessments, the DEA's scheduling decisions are apt to be influenced by its anti-drug ideology. Otherwise it would be hard to explain why the DEA spent half a century stubbornly defending a classification that the president rightly says "makes no sense."
In acknowledging that point, of course, Biden was not driven purely, or even mainly, by respect for logic or scientific evidence. As the Journal noted, Biden is trying to motivate younger voters whose turnout could be crucial to his reelection, hoping his moves toward "marijuana reform" will encourage them to overlook his long record as a gung-ho drug warrior. Since those voters overwhelmingly favor marijuana legalization, which Biden opposes, that is a tough sell. Hence his hyperbole about the practical impact of rescheduling.
The HHS recommendation, which reversed the department's previously steadfast agreement with the DEA, and Garland's response to it, which fit his boss's preferences, likewise were clearly influenced by politics. After Biden decided, at least partly for political reasons, that marijuana did not belong in Schedule I, his underlings fell in line. Perhaps we should give the DEA credit for sticking to its anti-pot convictions, however gravely mistaken they may be.
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Another Biden failure.
*looks around*
Don't you mean another Biden success?
Man spent decades of his career as a major proponent of the drug war.
Seems like victory to me.
Your whole Biden Botch Bingo card is full. Mine too!
Perhaps we should give the DEA credit for sticking to its anti-pot convictions, however gravely mistaken they may be.
Nope
I second your nope.
Yeah, why should we be inclined to do that? At all?
I don't even use pot; it's not my thing - and I still think the government's position here is stupid. It clearly doesn't meet the definitions for these schedules anymore - probably never did.
Wait'll you see what the government did on COVID and vaccines!
" It defined that phrase narrowly, requiring actual FDA approval or research extensive and rigorous enough to meet the agency's criteria for safety and efficacy."
By that criteria, chicken soup is schedule one.
I probably shouldn't have said that.
Given the rampant anti-semitism these days, the DEA might just put grandma's remedy on the list.
I'll take the win. I had expected weed to be legalized by the time boomers were mostly running things, like 25 years ago. I was way off. But it's mostly legal now, even in Oklahoma.
So he grows a little garden in the backyard by the fence
He's consuming what he's growing nowadays in self defense
He get's out there in the twilight zone
Sometimes when it just don't make no sense
(Philosophy from David M. Bellamy)
I’ll take the win. I had expected weed to be legalized by the time boomers were mostly running things
Ha! I remember that sentiment back in the 1970s.
*flicks long hair behind shoulders* "Just wait 'til we're in charge, maaan!"
We'll do business deals over video games instead of golf. We'll wear blue jeans and T-shirts to work (although that came true in California) and just be judged on our merit (kinda had it that way for a while). We did keep up on the pot smoking, though.
Only leftists give credit to leftists. It this happened under Trump it would be totally different and worth giving credit to the president. But this is Biden. Can't give him credit for anything. That's leftist.
Just kill yourself.
You're a fucking joke.
Are you calling Jacob sullum a right wing partisan that is blindly accusing people of being leftists and refusing to give credit where it's due?
What a colossally stupid take.
sarc, maybe you missed it but this article IS giving credit to Biden. He and his underlings are forcing the DEA to abandon its war on marijuana. Most of us - including the author, apparently - approve of it. The fact that science has little to do with it is to be regretted, but that's not Biden's fault.
Biden’s DEA has reluctantly and strategically not rescheduled marijuana.
Once upon a time the US Constitution was the Supreme Law of the land and courts would rule that the FDA, HHS, DEA and hundreds of [Na]tional So[zi]alist arms/agencies of the Nazi-Empire were UN-Constitutional.
Course that was before the Nazi-Ideology conquered the USA.
It's the DEA, what do you expect? Their whole existence is about prohibiting drugs.
Fair.
The trouble is, none of the federal or state control schedules make sense for marijuana. The schedules make sense only for a pharmaceutical industry and its products when they are overwhelmingly for medical use, which is the opposite of the case for marijuana, which is overwhelmingly for recreational use, and which, even when used medicinally, is not purveyed by pharmacists with the expected packaging and labeling. At least Congress and state legislatures, anticipating such contradictions over 50 years ago, decided to exempt tobacco and liquor from the operation of the controls, for similar reasons. They also made most of the general control provisions moot for marijuana, superseding them with provisions specific to pot.
Nobody can understand what Biden's mumbling. He could be saying "Beagle eyes candy bus" for all we know.
The Reefer Madness ideology of the DEA was formed about a century ago and has remained frozen in time. It's about time the agency was overruled. It would be even better if the DEA was dissolved.
Politics got us into the idiotic War on Drugs, so politics may have to get us back out of it again. There is no science in any of the myriad bans and regulations that fill several bookshelves and gigabytes of data storage. Somebody in the deep state had a good laugh as the science was typed into the Code of Federal Regulations. If Fauci is typical of the “scientists” advising Federal legislators and regulators, that little is all we can expect.
one of the dirty little secrets that no one ever wants to admit to is the level of affinity and reinforcement that large, bureaucratic, and particularly narrowly mission-driven, organizations are prone to. immigration warriors have flocked to CBP. drug warriors have flocked to DEA. gun banners have populated ATF, and green warriors the EPA. not only does their livelihood depend on the fight continuing, but the organizational ethos is designed around reinforcing the true believers and pushing out the non-conformists. by comparison, State and Defense are exceptionally open-minded. both suffer from thinking that their primary tool (diplomacy and military force, respectively) is the only tool in the toolbox, but both acknowledge the multiple elements of national power and can be convinced that someone else should lead on a particular issue. those others have one perspective and refuse to entertain any other. the solution is likely to do away with those excess organizations that by nature have perverse incentives to take only one view of an issue and also to prolong the solving of it (this is my job!!!).
“It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his income depends on his not understanding it.”
Pretty sure that’s a quote from a card carrying socialist but… gotta admit it’s not wrong here.
Yet 'his' criminal 'income' will destroy civil society because 'Guns' don't make sh*t. It's a zero-sum resources game. It's impossible to have a cake and eat it too.
actually sounds like Phillip K Dick. not that it necessarily conflicts.
George Orwell, IIRC. A socialist who abhorred what socialists actually did, given enough power - and who recognized that Nazism was just another variety of extreme socialism.
State is open-minded unless the idea originates from someone outside the State Department. Then, it's likely dismissed out of hand.
well. another dirty little fedgov secret. every agency/department has a strong NIH bias. but hey, what do I know. just been working here for 40 years.
Rescheduling marijuana changes very little for the average marijuana consumer.
Dispensing marijuana under Federal law will require a doctor or a pharmacist acting pursuant to a prescription to dispense it. State-licensed dispensaries don't qualify and I doubt they will be licensed as registrants. Sale, possession for sale, and manufacture/production, as well as simple possession, will still be Federal felonies unless authorized by DEA. About the only thing that will change will be the involvement of the Office of Diversion Control in the enforcement process. Since marijuana hasn't been a Federal priority since the late '80s, even that will likely pass unnoticed.
If you want a significant change in marijuana controls, it will require an act of Congress to remove marijuana from the CSA.
or remove DEA from the picture, and then maybe there's a path to success ...