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Testimony before the U.S. Senate
Statement
of Hon. Dianne Feinstein, U.S. Senator from California
U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary
May 16, 2008 Senator
Feinstein: [Presiding.] We will reconvene the hearing and continue
on. Mrs. Haight, I just want to say welcome. It is wonderful to
have you here again. As you know, it was the death of your son that
really brought my attention to this issue. And as Mr. Califano has
continued on with it, we see how extensive it is and how many people
are able to really receive drugs that otherwise would require the
prescription of a physician. So I thank you, and although Ryan is
not with us, he has made a major contribution to this effort. I
want you to know that.
Mr. Califano,
I think your report is excellent. I would certainly recommend it
to everyone to take a look at this and read it. And Senator Sessions
and I have put forward a bill which, as you say, does certain basic
things. I believe I would be supportive of adding that banner that
you spoke of, Mr. Heymann, to the legislation, and I will talk with
Senator Sessions about doing that, see if we can do it. As you know,
we have changed some sentences in this.
I think you
have raised what for me is a very disturbing part of this, and that
is, the world community is now such that the Internet facilitates
all kinds of criminal enterprises as well as legitimate enterprises,
and Government becomes not able to regulate. I had to leave to vote,
and it was a big vote. This is a vote on Iraq. If any of you have
any other suggestions of how Senator Sessions and I might tighten
up our legislation, the floor would be open to you. I will start
with you, Dr. Heymann.
Mr. Heymann:
Thank you very much, Senator Feinstein. Of our recommendations,
the banner is in some sense the least important. Again, our total
focus is on the international aspect. That is where we think it
is going, where it substantially is, and we think that is the growth
area, and we are very anxious, careful to urge you not to close
one of two doors and just let the traffic go through the second
door. That will not reduce anything.
Our most important
recommendation is that a monitoring group inform MasterCard, Visa,
American Express, Paypal whenever it finds their logos at the bottom
of an offer to sell a prescription drug over the Internet without
prescription.
Senator Feinstein:
In other words, that our bill create this group and empower this
group to at least inform—is this what you are saying?
Mr. Heymann:
We think that one the financing companies are informed, present
Treasury regulations require them to take action to stop the transaction
and to report the transaction to law enforcement, the purported
transaction.
Mr. McLellan:
And they do it every day.
Mr. Heymann:
And they do it. But they say—we do not believe that they know
who it is—they are not monitoring the website with the rigor—the
websites, the Internet, with the rigor that they have to if we are
going to make it dangerous for someone to sell in exchange for a
credit card payment.
So we would
like perhaps Treasury to make it perfectly clear that that is required
whenever they get information, a lead that someone is selling narcotics
without a prescription over the Internet using their credit card,
and we would like to have an organization, a very small one—we
called it an Internet monitoring group— whose full-time business
it would be to monitor the Internet and, with the push of a button,
send to the credit card companies, to Paypal—to the Internet
service providers, too, because we want something from them—information
about who is offering to sell without a prescription.
Senator Feinstein:
I would invite Senator Sessions to become involved in this, too,
and sort of open it up. My concern is the term ‘‘monitoring
group,’’ which is not an official organ of Government,
that it seems to me it would be the responsibility of a Government
agency to do this and be empowered with authority to even shut down
the site?
Mr. Heymann:
Shutting down the site is, let’s say, our second most important
option. But that will be less useful because it will quickly be
replaced. And to monitor sites even now will require a medium sophisticated
program because apparently most of the sites are hijacked websites.
I was working on it with Mathea Falco a month or two ago, and we
played it out, and the site turns out to be the University of Oregon.
Somebody has just hacked into the University of Oregon, put up there
an offer to sell drugs, and so you have to get behind that offer,
which will only, I am told, last for hours. It is a hijacked front.
You have to get behind that to who is the real seller, and for that
it takes a medium sophisticated program.
Senator Feinstein:
Yes, sir, would you like to add something? Then Mr. Califano.
Mr. McLellan:
If I could just add to that, the Treatment Research Institute has
worked with Drug Strategies and Harvard in doing this, and we think
the simplest of all strategies is to simply follow the money. The
reflex impulse is to close something down and have a Government
action. Please keep in mind now 88 percent of these sites and the
figures behind the sites are offshore in countries where it is not
necessarily illegal for them to sell drugs to Americans. It is illegal
for us to buy. Please keep in mind also that there are issues of
entrapment and less than perfect boundaries about authority for
the Government agencies. That is why we specifically suggested a
nongovernmental group provide actionable evidence. If you had somebody
going on a site and actually attempting to purchase and the credit
card number were exercised by that company, that is actionable evidence.
And in hearings that were conducted by Professor Heymann, we have
heard nothing but support from the credit card companies, the delivery
agencies, the whole chain of supply, the money supply. So we think
that may be the strongest, if imperfect, way of bringing this to
a restricted end.
Senator Feinstein:
Mr. Califano, did you want to say something?
Mr. Califano:
I share your concern. I would not have it as an independent agency.
I think if something like this is going to be done, it should be
done by Government that is going to be responsive, not a private
agency. I do want to second something that Phil said, though. If
you notice in our CASA report, just on the sampling of sites we
took, of the 152 sites we identified in 2004, by 2005 all but 29
of them were gone. As we have done this in that 210-hour period,
in the course of just those 210 hours, sites disappear and pop up
again. So that is a very difficult problem. I do think that it should
be against the law to have on the Internet any pharmacy that has
not been certified, and I think that alone can have a substantial
impact here. And there is a system in place for certifying pharmacies,
and that can be helpful. I think the other parts of your law are—I
think it is a good statute, and my instincts would be to give a
good portion of this authority to the DEA, which is the right agency
to go after this stuff. I think it is terribly important. And I
also think there is an education campaign here that is important,
that we need, whether through the Internet or other places, to educate
parents and children about the dangers of abusing these prescription
drugs. That is one thing. I think we need to have the Food and Drug
Administration be required to press these pharmaceutical companies
to formulate these drugs in ways that make them much harder to abuse.
OxyContin, all you have to do is crush it, and you could snort it,
and you have got your heroin high. That is an inexcusable kind of
approval, and I think also when there are addictive drugs that are
being allowed to come on the market, before they come on the market,
the Food and Drug Administration should have a plan—require
the pharmaceutical company to have a detailed plan about what to
do on the first indication of abuse. That was not true with respect
to OxyContin. The plan came afterwards. Aside from all the criminal
conduct of those individuals, I think things like that are necessary
as well.
Senator Feinstein:
Thank you. Mr. Rannazzisi, do you have a comment to make on this,
specifically whether it be a Government responsibility or some private
entity?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Well, ma’am, we reviewed that proposal, and at this moment
in time we are not prepared to provide a recommendation or comment.
But I would like to get back to something that we have discussed
before with certification in the pharmacies. We look at this as
two separate problems. There is a our domestic problem and our international
problem. Obviously, we have no regulatory control over international
pharmacies, and most of these are not even pharmacies. They are
just storefront operations. But we do have regulatory control over
the domestic pharmacies, and as we talked about certifying, DEA
does not certify pharmacies to operate on the Internet. DEA registers
pharmacies to procure and dispense controlled substances pursuant
to a legitimate or valid prescription. If you look at the first
placard up there, that is a comparison of a brick-and-mortar pharmacy,
your normal brick-and-mortar pharmacy that operates in your community
every day. That is an average number. They dispense about 88,000
tablets of hydrocodone a year, hydrocodone combination products.
Now, if you look at the 2.9 million, that is a rogue Internet pharmacy.
Now, remember, a rogue Internet pharmacy is a DEA registrant. Somewhere
down the line on that Internet site, they are going to have to get
their drugs, if they are domestic, from a brick-and-mortar pharmacy
that is servicing that Internet site. The 2.9 million is the average.
We took 34 known and suspected Internet pharmacies and looked at
their purchase records for 2006. Nearly 99 million hydrocodone combination
products were sold out of those pharmacies 99 million. So you could
see the great difference. If you look at the second placard, the
cyber pharmacies, as compared to the brick-and-mortar pharmacies,
your average brick-and mortar pharmacy does about 89 percent of
noncontrolled substances as compared to 11 percent of controlled
substances. Now, if you look at those cyber pharmacies, about 95
percent—they are not full-range pharmacies 95 percent of their
sales are controlled substance sales as compared to about 5 percent,
about 425 prescriptions a day. So you could see there is a major
difference between the brick-and-mortar cyber pharmacies and—
Senator Feinstein:
What are you saying? I mean, do not mince words. What are you saying?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
What I am saying is that those are rogue pharmacies that are dispensing
outside the scope of good practice. They are doing something illegally.
Senator Feinstein:
So are you saying do not worry about them, just let them continue?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
No. I am saying that we have to do something about, yes, absolutely,
and we are.
Senator Feinstein:
I am sorry. I am not aware of what you are doing.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
OK. For starters, we are starting to look at their purchase records.
Every Internet pharmacy that we have seen has a purchase footprint.
We know based on their sales that they are Internet pharmacies.
So what are we doing? In addition to going after them criminally,
we are also going after them—we are taking their registrations—
Senator Feinstein:
How many have you gone after criminally?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Organization-wise, I could not tell you the exact number. I could
get back to you on the exact number.
Senator Feinstein:
Yes, we would like to have the number.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Absolutely. But I can tell you that we have been shutting these
pharmacies down using our regulatory authority and immediate suspension
authority. We have gone after them and immediately taken their registration
so they cannot dispense and procure controlled substances.
Senator Feinstein:
Let me just say something. I introduced this bill with Senator Sessions
in 2004. We have heard nothing from you. There is no comment on
the bill, there are no suggestions, there is nothing—which
indicates to me that it is an agency that is not taking this very
seriously, to be very candid with you.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Well, I take exception to that, ma’am. We do take it seriously.
In fact, you know, as you can see, using our regulatory authority,
we are shutting these down. We are going after the distributor instead
of the—
Senator Feinstein:
I would like to know how many you have shut down, and today you
cannot answer that question.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
I will give you an exact number.
Senator Feinstein:
I appreciate that. Senator Sessions, would you like to take over?
I know a second vote has been called. Or perhaps we should recess
again?
Senator Sessions:
I may not be able to come back after this vote, so I would appreciate
the opportunity to share a few thoughts with the panel.
Senator Feinstein:
You go ahead.
Senator Sessions:
And thank you for your work on this legislation, your commitment
to it. These charts up here are stunning to me. I thought it was
bad, but it is worse than I thought.
Senator Feinstein:
It is.
Senator Sessions:
That is a stunning, stunning chart, and I really should not be surprised
based on the experience that I have had in which you see people
want these drugs, they learn how to make money off of them, they
may be personally addicted to them, they just want to try them,
whatever.
Senator Feinstein:
Senator, will you continue then?
Senator Sessions:
Yes.
Senator Feinstein:
I will go and vote and try and come back. Senator Leahy may be back
in the interim.
Senator Sessions:
Thank you.
Senator Feinstein:
Thank you.
Senator Sessions:
[Presiding.] All right. Let me ask this. Mr. Rannazzisi, you talked
about—I believe, Mr. Heymann, you served as Deputy Attorney
General. I remember him here a number of times, know his experience.
He has indicated that there are sites up all over saying ‘‘OxyContin
without a prescription.’’ Now, how can you get OxyContin
without a prescription? I mean, how can this be? Publicly or all
over the Internet, hundreds of sites, apparently.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
From our experience, those sites are probably operating overseas
because OxyContin or oxycodone products are Schedule II. The level—
Senator Sessions:
Which means they have to have a—
Mr. Rannazzisi:
A written prescription.
Senator Sessions:
And if you go to a physician and the pharmacy, they account for
every single pill.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
That is absolutely correct.
Senator Sessions:
Everything is done to the nth degree. The prescriptions have to
be maintained and kept so your people can—now, Mr. Secretary,
Mr. Heymann, you have been through this Government rigmarole over
the years. Both of you have. I am aware of how hard it is for the
DEA to get a foreign country to cooperate or move quickly against
these sites. It is just a nightmare for agencies. Could the State
Department, if they made it a high priority, a condition of good
relations or trade, is it a feasible thing to think that we could
pressure these companies in the foreign countries?
Mr. Califano:
I think the odds of the State Department giving this a high priority
are very, very low, and I will just give you— I go all the
way back to the Johnson years. When we first saw heroin coming out
of the ghettos and into broader society, I talked to Dean Rusk,
and I said, you know, ‘‘We have got to do something
with Turkey.’’ That is where all the heroin was coming
from in 1967. And he said, ‘‘Well, we have to be very
careful about Turkey. We need Turkey as an ally in the cold war,
and we have to be very measured in our response.’’
The same attitude
existed when I was Secretary of HEW. In that 21/2 years, trying
to get the State Department—with someone as distinguished
and as special as Cyrus Vance being the Secretary— we could
not get the State Department to give this subject any priority.
Senator Sessions:
Secretary Shultz was not very interested in it, either.
Mr. Califano:
Secretary Shultz was not interested in it. And I dare say that if
you went to Condoleezza Rice and said, you know, ‘‘We
are getting killed by all this stuff coming in’’—it
is prescription drugs. It is all illegal drugs, the marijuana, the
heroin, the cocaine pouring in here, heroin from Afghanistan. We
are going to have the cheapest heroin in the history of the country
because of what is happening, the way it is coming out of there.
If you said, ‘‘Make that a priority,’’ I
do not think it is real. That is why I think we need something like
this statute—
Senator Sessions:
Now, you think it is impractical—Dr. McLellan, you nodded,
and I think Professor Heymann—to expect that we could solve
this problem in that fashion. We probably should not go into the
details of it because our time is short. But is it being shipped
from these foreign countries?
Mr. McLellan:
One of the things that is being missed is it is not just registered
pharmacies in Afghanistan. Remember, they are called ‘‘rogue
pharmacies.’’ These are little factories that are making
Vicodin and OxyContin knock-offs. By all means, they have opiate
in them, but they are very difficult to regulate, too. And as Phil
said, they pop up and they shut down. I repeat, taking nothing away
from all the typical Federal ways to go at this, I suggest right
now follow the money. Get the source of the dollars and squeeze
that neck with the cooperation of existing— and they are very
cooperative. The credit card companies, the banks behind those companies,
and the delivery agencies want to stop this.
Senator Sessions:
Well, we have a group of people—a small group, maybe—who
think the Internet is a crime-free zone; that is, nothing is a crime
on the Internet. And it is religion with them and that to mess with
it at all is a heresy of some kind, a sinful act. But do not want
to mess up the Internet and turn it into a lawsuit creating mishmash
of regulations and all. Professor Heymann, your idea was that the
credit card companies could work with this in a way that they would
be happy with?
Mr. Heymann:
The answer, Senator, is yes. But we simply do not think that law
enforcement—we think DEA has the least chance of being effective
as a law enforcement agency operating in the Ukraine or in Somalia
because it would require an extradition for DEA to make a case.
So, first of all, we will not get any cooperation. Second of all,
DEA’s concern is making a case before an American court.
The State Department
will also have difficulty, but now and then it may very well be
able to press the Ukraine or Somalia to bring a case against a rogue
seller in those places. But we think the problem is one of scale.
My calculation is that every year, just OxyContin and Vicodin are
going to more than half a million high school students. Every year.
Senator Sessions:
A half a million?
Mr. Heymann:
Half a million. And so we have to find a way to deal with that problem
with scale. One case is not going to help much. That is why we want
the credit card companies to systematically go after everybody who
is—and they are trained to do this. They are doing it under
money-laundering legislation that you have passed, and they are
very good at it, and they are very accustomed to it. We want them
to track down which is the bank that is making payment to a dealer.
And if they find the bank, they can have a contract, which it is
very hard for us to regulate a bank, the United States to regulate
a bank in the Ukraine.
Senator Sessions:
My vote time has expired. I hope I have not missed it. If you do
not mind, we will return, I am sure.
Mr. Heymann:
I would appreciate that, Mr. Sessions.
[Recess at 11:28
a.m. to 11:46 a.m.]
Chairman Leahy:
[Presiding.] You know, it is interesting. This is an example of
C–SPAN. While I was on the floor voting—and this last
vote is still going on—I had two or three Senators in both
parties come up to me and talk about this hearing and what they
have been seeing, some of the information they are getting and saying,
‘‘We have got to talk with you and with Senator Feinstein
and Senator Sessions about this.’’ They did not realize
what the problem is. So in case you are wondering, even with this
back and forth whether it carries, it does.
Now, we have
learned today—and this is a question for everybody on the
panel. We have learned today about online rogue pharmacies. They
are using electronic forms rather than in-person consultations to
give out bogus prescriptions for prescription drugs, including highly
addictive painkillers. And it appears that one of the loopholes
used by what are, I think we would all agree, unscrupulous online
pharmacies that allow access to drugs illegally on the Internet.
I want to emphasize that the drug store my family and I go to, and
others, if you have tight controls in there, it can be very helpful,
both to be able to go online or to call and use a touch-tone phone.
But what Senator Feinstein has done is introduce legislation to
require in-person consultation with doctors for any purchase of
controlled drugs over the Internet. I cannot imagine how that would
in any way inconvenience—it certainly would not inconvenience
anybody in our family. I think Senator Feinstein’s legislation
could be a first step in attacking the serious problem. So let me
ask the person from DEA, do you support legislation to require in-person
consultations for prescriptions used to buy controlled drugs over
the Internet?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
DEA, the Department of Justice, and the administration are looking
at all different measures that could be implemented. At this point
in time, we are not prepared to make a recommendation of a specific
measure.
Chairman Leahy:
When will you be?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
I cannot give you an answer right now, sir. I could tell you right
now that all levels of the Department, the Domestic Policy Council,
HHS, we are all looking at this together. We are having regular
meetings to discuss these issues.
Chairman Leahy:
Do you have any recommendations that have been made?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Not at this point in time, sir, no.
Chairman Leahy:
Thank you. Secretary Califano?
Mr. Califano:
Let me just note—and it is in our CASA report we are releasing
today. This is the American Medical Association. ‘‘Physicians
who prescribe medications via the Internet shall establish or have
established a valid patient-physician relationship. The physician
shall obtain a reliable medical history and perform a physical examination
on the patient.’’
Chairman Leahy:
So by this you would agree with Senator Feinstein?
Mr. Califano.
There is no question about that. The four elements of a doctor-patient
relationship are that the patient has a medical complaint, that
a medical history is taken, that a physical examination has been
performed, and that some logical connection exists between the medical
complaint, the medical history, the physical examination, the drug
prescribed. So it is right on. And the Federation of State Medical
Boards agrees with you, too, Senator Feinstein.
Chairman Leahy:
Professor Heymann?
Mr. Heymann:
As I remember Senator Feinstein’s proposal, it requires at
least one meeting, one live meeting with a doctor. That seems to
me to be exactly right.
Chairman Leahy:
Ms. Haight?
Ms. Haight:
Yes, I agree with that totally. That is how it has always been in
hospitals.
Chairman Leahy:
Dr. McLellan?
Mr. McLellan:
Well, I think it is completely appropriate for all legitimate pharmacies,
all legitimate physicians, and especially those in the United States.
I remind you that more than 80 percent of everything we are talking
about has essentially nothing to do with the United States—
Chairman Leahy:
I understand. I am trying to figure out, though, what kind of laws
are in place that make it easier to block those others, which goes
to what Professor Heymann has said about the First Amendment things.
You are going to have to have certain legal requirements if you
are going to block activity which then becomes illegal and do it
constitutionally.
Mr. Heymann:
Senator Leahy, our answer to that was to have Internet access blocked
for sellers of prescription narcotics only at the request of the
households. In other words, any Internet service provider would
have to ask every household to which it provides Internet service,
‘‘Do you want this to be blocked?’’ If they
said yes, they would then block any further offers to sell drugs.
Chairman Leahy:
How many did you find on Mother’s Day when you went on?
Mr. Heymann:
Well, they have not done that yet, but I literally— you know,
the Google number at the top—
Chairman Leahy:
Someone has a BlackBerry nearby.
Senator Feinstein:
Me. Sorry.
Chairman Leahy:
You are getting a lot of supportive testimony,
Senator Feinstein:
Do not block that.
[Laughter.]
Chairman Leahy:
Go ahead.
Mr. Heymann:
The google number at the top was 800,000. I looked and my search
was for ‘‘Buy OxyContin without prescription.’’
It was not Vicodin. It was not steroids. It was a single drug, though
many of them would overlap. And I only looked at the first 20 or
30, but each of them looked to me like a purchase—like an
offer to sell a highly addictive narcotic to anybody without bothering
with a prescription.
Chairman Leahy:
Well, the thing that gets me—I mean, I want to find some way
to stop it. I think everybody agrees, parents would agree, we do
not want pornography to go to our kids. But kids can move around
pretty quickly, usually a lot better than parents can, on the Internet
because they live on it. I told the story of a 4-year-old grandson
wanting to do an interactive—I think it was Disney or something
like that, a perfectly appropriate thing where you could draw pictures,
do interactive things. He wanted to use the computer to do it. And
I said, ‘‘Fine, but I have to get the site for you,’’
because I wanted to make sure that is exactly the site. The site
came up, and he said, ‘‘Yes, that is the one,’’
took the mouse out of my hand and said, ‘‘I better take
over now because it gets very complicated.’’
[Laughter.]
Chairman Leahy:
You mentioned OxyContin. We know how they misrepresent how addictive
their drugs were in marketing and advertising. The press has been
full of this, especially the last couple of weeks. According to
court records, the makers of the drug, Purdue Pharmaceuticals, agreed
to pay more than $600 million in fines and penalties. And three
of its top executives admitted they were responsible for misleading
those who bought and prescribed the drugs. Do we need to change
how we regulate these kinds of painkillers? We will go one, two,
three, four, five. Go ahead, Mr. Califano.
Mr. Califano:
I would make a note of a couple of things. One, a quarter of these
sites we know claim to be in the United States. That has been consistent
over the 4 years we have done this sample. About half of them say
they are overseas, and about a quarter of them are unknown origin.
So there are sites in the United States.
Two, with respect
to what happened with Purdue Pharma, my own view is if those guys
had been street drug dealers, they would be in jail, and they did
just as much damage as street drug dealers. So they walked.
And, last, vis-a-vis
Senator Feinstein’s point, I would like to quote—we
have a quote from Joe Rannazzisi in our report that we are releasing
today, and let me read it. ‘‘A legitimate doctor-patient
relationship includes a face-to-face consultation where a licensed
physician can examine the physical symptoms reported by a patient
before making a diagnosis and authorizing the purchase of a prescription
medicine. Filling out a questionnaire, no matter how detailed, is
no substitute for this relationship.’’ And I realize
he does not have authority to support in a formal way what you propose
in your bill, but that certainly supports it.
Mr. Heymann:
We think that there has to be somewhere—and I am about ready
to concede to Senator Feinstein and to Joe that perhaps it should
be a governmental responsibility. There has to be someone who is
monitoring the Internet to see if somebody—to see the long
list of people who are offering to sell prescription narcotics without
a prescription.
Once that is
done—and I suggest you put it in the Office of Justice Programs,
Senator Feinstein. I do not think it is DEA because it is not law
enforcement, and the law enforcement is the focus for DEA. And Mr.
Califano has already commented on the likelihood that the State
Department would be very vigorous. It will not be very vigorous.
I would give it to OJP, the Office of Justice Programs, and tell
them to set up a small unit. We are talking about five, ten people.
A few thousand dollars will create the programs, and then whenever
they get information, send it to the credit card companies and expect
the credit card companies to cutoff the credit and track down who
is getting it, and send it to the Internet service providers and
expect the Internet service providers to add it to their list that
is cutoff from any family that does not want these ads coming into
their house.
Chairman Leahy:
I have actually gone beyond my time. I am on Senator Feinstein’s
time. I am going to hand it over to her. Does anybody wish to add
very, very briefly to what was said?
[No response.]
Chairman Leahy:
OK. Thank you. Senator Feinstein, I cannot thank you enough for
bringing up this subject, and I can assure you we will work on it,
and the Committee will followup on it.
Senator Feinstein:
[Presiding.] Well, thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and thank
you for having the hearing because I think it was very constructive.
I myself think that we have to develop this second part of it, and
we will proceed to do so. I do not know what is wrong with DEA,
but something is. All during the methamphetamine discussion, which
has gone on for 10 years from when I introduced the first bill in
1996 to the last bill that we did with Senator Talent, I have asked
for DEA help, and DEA is nowhere. And now once again, on this issue,
which clearly by your own chart is a big issue and clearly by the
statement that Secretary Califano read, you have got to agree with
it. And yet I do not know whether it is partisan or what it is,
but I cannot get help on these matters from DEA. So I would like
to just publicly ask for help. I would welcome DEA’s suggestions.
I know Senator Sessions will as well. We would like to make this
as strong a bill as possible; that people who sell drugs illegally
over the Internet without a physician’s prescription, without
a physician visit, should be prevented from doing so; and if they
continue, shut down. That is my view, and we are trying to get as
close to that as we possibly can.
I do not know
that the Internet should be able to facilitate acts which are not
legal in this country. But when you have young people who, as Senator
Leahy testified and Mrs. Haight testified with her son, are so facile
on the Internet, are young, want to try any- thing, can have exposure
to a whole illegal field of very powerful drugs, it is extraordinarily
dangerous. Dr. Heymann, I am amazed. This was on Mother’s
Day that you pulled up 800,000 sites? Or was it hits?
Mr. Heymann:
Let me send you what I pulled up, Senator Feinstein.
Senator Feinstein:
Well, could you define for me again what it was?
Mr. Heymann:
I put into Google, ‘‘Buy OxyContin without prescription.’’
I believe the number was 800,000 hits. In an instant, 800,000 hits.
I looked through the first 20 to make sure we were not picking up
a lot of other things, and the first 20 were overwhelmingly offers
to sell OxyContin using a credit card to whoever pushed a button
on that website.
Senator Feinstein:
Do you remember how many of these were in country as opposed to
out of country?
Mr. Heymann:
You cannot tell from the website, though Dr. McLellan has some judgment
on that.
Mr. McLellan:
Yes, in fact, our group was the group that discovered this. Dr.
Robert Forman had the first article about this, and we have been
tracking it scientifically since then. And, by the way, 800,000
is about the same number for that substance since 2002. And I say
that because, to the credit of DEA and the credit of a lot of law
enforcement, there have been a lot of busts in this country, and
they have knocked out huge rings, and it does not stop because they
pop up just as fast. The market is overwhelming. There is a very
brisk business in this, and it is not going to go away simply by
local law enforcement. You can tell the registry of a site by digging
into, you know, where it is—that takes a lot more work. It
is almost not worth it because literally tomorrow, if you stopped
my website today, literally tomorrow, and in another country, in
the snap of a finger, I would have another one up.
Senator Feinstein:
And the drug, Dr. Heymann, that you were looking for was OxyContin?
Mr. Heymann:
It was OxyContin, and Vicodin would have been many more, I suspect.
Many more than 800,000. It was OxyContin.
Senator Feinstein:
All right. Does—
Mr. McLellan:
Two million nine hundred thousand.
Senator Feinstein:
Two million nine hundred thousand?
Mr. McLellan:
For Vicodin.
Senator Feinstein:
Hits for Vicodin?
Mr. McLellan:
If you put ‘‘No prescription Vicodin’’—
Senator Feinstein:
Would you turn on your microphone, please?
Mr. McLellan:
Sorry. If you put the words ‘‘No prescription Vicodin’’
in Google, right here, right now, you will have no less than 2,500,000
hits.
Senator Feinstein:
So, clearly, I mean—
Mr. McLellan:
And 88 percent of them are direct offers to sell. I should just
say one quick thing. Remember, a telephone is a computer. Now it
is clear that if you have a purchase and you give them your website,
they will text message you. Some of these pharmacies will text message
you, ‘‘Need a refill?’’ And if the kid says
‘‘Yes,’’ you get billed in ring tones, almost
as though they are trying to make it impossible for Mom and Dad
to check as to what is actually being bought.
Senator Feinstein:
Clearly, there is a big problem, and clearly, DEA ought to be producing
some solutions. I would like to ask for those solutions. I would
like to ask, respectfully, for DEA’s views, any suggestions
you might have as to how we can take actions which can effectively
stop this. I just hate to think that we have to throw up our hands
and say it cannot be stopped.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Ma’am, if I may, we have never said that it cannot be stopped,
and we will provide any technical advice that you need, and I think
we have to your staff in the past. But the fact remains that when
you do a search like that, most of those are portals or information
sites. When you get right down to it, when you get right down to
the anchor sites that are selling the drugs, there are far fewer
than 800,000, or whatever the number is. And domestically those
sites are being serviced by one pharmacy or two pharmacies or a
hundred pharmacies. Each pharmacy is servicing—I do not know
how many.
They could be servicing 30, 40, 50 websites. So the key is not the
sites. The key is those pharmacies. The key is to hit the pharmacies
and to shut them down. The sites are going to regenerate.
Senator Feinstein:
Well, then, why doesn’t DEA shut them down in this country?
Mr. Rannazzisi:
We are. We are using our regulatory authority—
Senator Feinstein:
Again, I have asked you how many have you shut down, and you cannot
give me a number.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
And I told you, ma’am, I will give you an exact number that
we have shut down.
Senator Feinstein:
I was just handed your written remarks, which during 2006, SOD has
coordinated over 90 investigations resulting in the arrest of 64
individuals and the seizure of approximately 14 million dosage units
of controlled substances and approximately $30.9 million in United
States currency.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Yes, ma’am. You wanted the number of pharmacies.
Senator Feinstein:
So at least you were doing something.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Well, in all of our investigations, we follow the money, and we
put people in jail. That is what our job is. But you wanted an exact
number of pharmacies that we shut down, and I told you I would get
back to you on that.
Senator Feinstein:
OK. Fair enough. Fair enough.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
OK.
Senator Feinstein:
I think the other thing is any suggestions DEA might have for legislation
which is aimed at shutting them down. I recognize the Constitution,
I recognize the difficulties, but we have to find a way to do this.
Mr. Rannazzisi:
Yes, ma’am.
Senator Feinstein:
I think that is probably it, unless somebody else has something
that they would like to say. I would like to thank you all very
much. I know some of you came from long distances, and it is very
much appreciated. So thank you, and this hearing is adjourned.
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