No, That Isn't 'Rainbow Fentanyl' in Your Kid's Candy Stash
"I'm skeptical that [dealers] would try to target children where there is not an existing market," says Sally Satel.
"I'm skeptical that [dealers] would try to target children where there is not an existing market," says Sally Satel.
Plus: FIRE sues to stop the Stop WOKE Act, processing times for skilled immigrants skyrocket, and more...
The unanimous decision will rein in prosecutions that have long had a chilling effect on pain treatment.
The Supreme Court is considering what standard should apply to prescribers accused of violating the Controlled Substances Act.
"If I do my job right, you should barely know I'm here."
Patients suffer when physicians who prescribe opioids in good faith can face decades in prison.
It should not matter whether would-be ayahuasca drinkers sincerely believe in shamanism or simply believe they will derive mental health benefits from the experience.
Despite civil asset forfeiture reforms in Florida, police are still finding ways to take people's stuff.
A drug that treats opioid addiction may also be abused. That’s not a good reason to restrict access.
Keddins Etienne's experience shows that bullies who seize innocent people's property tend to back down when their victims put up a fight.
Federal prosecutors agreed to drop a civil asset forfeiture case against Kermit Warren's $28,000 in cash, which he said he was trying to buy a tow truck with.
In the DEA's view, the fact that most states allow patients to use marijuana for symptom relief is irrelevant.
The case is the latest example of people who say their savings were seized in airports, despite it being perfectly legal to fly domestically with large amounts of cash.
Plus: 88,000 New Jersey marijuana cases dismissed, Slate looks inside the conservative publishing industry, and more...
The puzzle of marijuana's Schedule I status invites a reconsideration of the agency's vast discretion to decide which substances should be prohibited.
Former Assistant Secretary for Health Brett Giroir says former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb's support for a ban was based on "embarrassingly poor evidence."
In 2014, Reason reported on the misbehavior of Rod Ponton, who has suddenly risen to internet stardom after being unable to turn off an adorable filter during an online legal case.
Government bullies empowered by civil forfeiture laws often back down, but only when their victims can afford a fight.
The lawsuit argues that the DEA is violating the Fourth Amendment by seizing money from travelers without evidence of criminal activity.
The Justice Department concluded in 2018 that an anti-drug treaty requires stricter controls than the DEA originally planned.
A class-action lawsuit is now challenging the DEA's habit of seizing large amounts of cash from travelers without evidence of any crime.
CTPharma's collaboration with Yale researchers seems to be the first clinical trial involving U.S.-grown marijuana that is not supplied by the federal government.
Former DEA special agent Chad Scott has been convicted of perjury, obstruction of justice, and falsifying government records.
The agency takes one small, mostly symbolic step for kind bud.
After nearly three years of ghosting research cannabis applicants, the DEA has 30 days to explain its inaction.
An ACLU brief bolsters the state's case, arguing that people reasonably expect information about the medications they take will be kept confidential.
Philadelphia's innovative treatment program for incarcerated opioid users is failing. Is it because doctors don't want to treat opioid addicts?
The number of past-month users was up last year from 2016, but it was still lower than in several previous years.
The FDA approved Epidiolex in June, and today the DEA made it a Schedule V drug, the least restrictive classification for controlled substances.
Does anyone actually call weed "shoe"?
Two years after accepting applications, the DEA has yet to grant licenses to growers.
The attorney general claims that approving new producers of cannabis might violate anti-drug treaties.
The latest data underline the folly of tackling the "opioid crisis" by restricting access to pain pills.
It's time we unleashed non-physicians to help opioid addicts.
"DEA's use of proceeds acquired through civil asset forfeiture to expand marijuana enforcement makes the already unacceptable practice even worse."
"This use of secret evidence may be occurring regularly in cases throughout the country."
The DEA's investigation of Forest Tennant tries to criminalize differences of opinion about pain treatment.
Search warrant lists probable cause for distribution and possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance and health care fraud.
Gottlieb isn't a perfect harm reduction advocate, but he's a hell of a lot better than the D.C. status quo.
Do the pain relief benefits of prescription opioids outweigh their addiction risks?
Seize the drugs. Sell the drugs. Arrest the buyers. Repeat.
Acting DEA Administrator Chuck Rosenberg reportedly resigned in part over the Justice Department's obstruction of marijuana research.
"I take the Hippocratic oath seriously that my job is to relieve pain and suffering," says Dr. Forest Tennant, a California pain specialist who patients from across the nation are flocking to see.