Drug Distributor Surrenders DEA License Over Opioid Sales

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

The nation’s largest independent pharmaceutical distributor has agreed to pay a $19 million fine and surrender one of its DEA licenses to settle long-standing charges that it ignored suspicious orders of opioid pain medication.

Louisiana-based Morris & Dickson delivers drugs to health systems, hospitals and independent pharmacies in 27 states. In 2018, the DEA suspended the company’s licenses to distribute opioids and other controlled substances, but delayed making a final decision on revoking them until last year. Morris & Dickson vowed to fight the revocation, saying it was “unwarranted and unjustified” and would essentially put the company out of business.   

After nearly a year of talks with the DEA, the two sides reached a settlement. In addition to the $19 million fine, Morris & Dickson “admitted to all wrongdoing” and agreed to surrender one of its two DEA Certificates of Registration. The company also promised to continue a heightened compliance system to flag suspicious orders of controlled substances.

“Drug distributors like Morris & Dickson have a responsibility to protect the safety and health of customers and maintain effective controls against diversion of highly addictive controlled substances,” DEA spokesperson Katherine Pfaff said in a press release. “At the height of the opioid crisis, Morris & Dickson failed to uphold that responsibility, and turned a blind eye as thousands of unusually large orders for hydrocodone and oxycodone went out the door. Today, Morris & Dickson takes an important first step by admitting wrongdoing and paying for its misconduct.”

In a brief statement on its website, Morris & Dickson acknowledged no wrongdoing and gave no indication of how its business operations would be impacted by the loss of one of its DEA licenses.

“Today’s announcement recognizes our extensive and voluntary efforts to improve and enhance our compliance system over the past five years. In fact, following our efforts, our state-of-the-art compliance program has been repeatedly acknowledged as impressive and above reproach by outside parties,” the company said. “We are very proud that throughout discussions with the DEA, we have continued to provide the highest levels of service.”

The DEA delayed revoking Morris & Dickson’s registration until the Associated Press reported last year that the company was still shipping opioids, despite a judge’s recommendation that its licenses be revoked for “cavalier disregard” of suspicious orders.

Complicating the case is that a top DEA official who retired from the agency in 2017 went to work as a consultant for Morris & Dickson and led efforts to improve its compliance system. Louis Milione “unretired” in 2021 and went back to work at the federal agency as the top deputy to DEA Administrator Anne Milgram. Milione resigned soon after the AP story was published, citing “person reasons.” He is now consulting again for the pharmaceutical industry.   

In fiscal year 2023, DEA said it took 143 administrative actions against doctors, pharmacies, drug makers and drug distributors for violations of the Controlled Substances Act, which regulates the prescribing, dispensing and distribution of opioids and other potentially addictive drugs.

In 2022, the nation’s three largest drug distributors – McKesson, AmerisourceBergen and Cardinal Health — agreed to strict limits on the amount of opioids and other controlled substances they sell as part of a $21 billion opioid litigation settlement.

Collectively, these various actions have led to tight supplies of opioid pain medication. In a recent survey of nearly 3,000 pain patients by PNN, over 90% of those with an opioid prescription said they experienced delays or problems at a pharmacy getting their medication. Nearly 20% of patients were unable get their prescriptions filled.