[ Also see the Document Register ] 0001 1 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE 2 DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x 4 : In the Matter of: : 5 : LYLE E. CRAKER, Ph.D. : Docket No. 05-16 6 : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - x 7 VOLUME I 8 Monday, August 22, 2005 9 10 DEA Headquarters 11 600 Army Navy Drive 12 Hearing Room E-2103 13 Arlington, Virginia 14 15 The hearing in the above-entitled matter 16 17 convened, pursuant to notice, at 9:25 a.m. 18 19 BEFORE: 20 21 MARY ELLEN BITTNER 22 Chief Administrative Law Judge 0002 1 APPEARANCES: 2 On Behalf of the DEA: 3 BRIAN BAYLY, ESQ. Office of Chief Counsel 4 Drug Enforcement Administration Washington, D.C. 20537 5 IMELDA L. PAREDES, ESQ. 6 Senior Attorney Office of Chief Counsel 7 (202) 353-9676 8 CHARLES E. TRANT, ESQ. Associate Chief Counsel 9 Office of Chief Counsel (202) 307-8010 10 On Behalf of the Respondent: 11 JULIE M. CARPENTER, ESQ. 12 Jenner & Block LLP 601 13th Street, N.W. 13 Suite 1200 South Washington, D.C. 20005 14 (202) 661-4810 15 M. ALLEN HOPPER, ESQ. Senior Staff Attorney 16 Drug Reform Project American Civil Liberties Union Foundation 17 1101 Pacific Avenue, Suite 333 Santa Cruz, California 95060 18 (831) 471-9000 Ext. 14 19 ALSO PRESENT: 20 MATTHEW STRAIT Representative of the Government 21 Richard Doblin, Ph.D. 22 Representative of Respondent 0003 1 C O N T E N T S 2 WITNESS DIRECT CROSS REDIRECT RECROSS 3 Lyle E. Craker 12 -- -- -- 4 Irwin G. Martin 83 124 160 166 5 - - - 6 E X H I B I T S 7 EXHIBIT NOS. MARKED RECEIVED 8 ALJ 1 - 9 6 6 9 RESPONDENT'S EXHIBITS 10 3 14 14 11 11 84 84 12 43 51 51 13 14 44 68 Withheld 15 16 50 72 72 17 18 GOVERNMENT'S EXHIBITS: 19 20 2 24 24 21 22 3 32 32 0004 1 P R O C E E D I N G S 2 JUDGE BITTNER: This is a formal hearing 3 before the United States Department of Justice, 4 Drug Enforcement Administration, in the matter of 5 Lyle E. Craker, Ph.D., Docket No. 05-16. The 6 Administrative Law Judge presiding is Mary Ellen 7 Bittner. Would counsel please state your name and 8 address and phone number for the record? Mr. 9 Bayly. 10 MR. BAYLY: Yes, thank you, Judge Bittner. 11 Good morning. Brian Bayly. I'll spell the Bayly 12 because nobody spells it the way I do. It's B-A-Y-L-Y, 13 Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement 14 Administration, Washington, D.C. 20537. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. And anyone else 16 entering an appearance for the government? 17 MS. PAREDES: Good morning, Your Honor. 18 Imelda Paredes with Drug Enforcement 19 Administration. The same address as Mr. Bayly. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 21 MR. TRANT: Good morning, Your Honor. 22 Charles Trant, Associate Chief Counsel, Drug 0005 1 Enforcement Administration, same address. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you. For 3 Respondent? 4 MS. CARPENTER: Good morning, Your Honor, 5 Julie Carpenter from Jenner & Block, J-E-N-N-E-R, 6 B-L-O-C-K, 601 13th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 7 20005. 8 MR. HOPPER: Good morning, Your Honor. 9 Also for Respondent, Allen Hopper. It's A-L-L-E-N 10 H-O-P-P-E-R, and I'm with the ACLU's Drug Law 11 Reform Project, and that's at 1101 Pacific Avenue, 12 Suite 333, in Santa Cruz, California 95060. 13 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you very much. And 14 Dr. Craker is here? 15 MS. CARPENTER: He is, Your Honor. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you. The issue in 17 this proceeding is whether a preponderance of the 18 evidence establishes that granting Respondent's 19 application for registration as a manufacturer of 20 the Schedule I controlled substance marijuana would 21 be in the public interest, as that term is used in 22 21 U.S. Code Section 823(a). 0006 1 At this time, I would like to offer into 2 evidence the Administrative Law Judge Exhibits. 3 They are numbered 1 through 9. We prepared these 4 on Friday before Mr. Trant entered his appearance 5 so his appearance is not included in them, but he 6 did enter it. 7 Is there any objection to any of these 8 exhibits, Ms. Carpenter? 9 MS. CARPENTER: No, Your Honor. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly? 11 MR. BAYLY: No, Judge Bittner. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Then the ALJ 13 Exhibits 1 through 9 are received. 14 [ALJ Exhibits No. 1 - 9 were 15 marked for identification and 16 received in evidence.] 17 JUDGE BITTNER: I would have a few 18 preliminary matters. First of all, on August 11, 19 the Government filed a motion to file a third 20 supplemental prehearing statement to which 21 Respondent advised there was no objection. So I 22 grant that motion. 0007 1 On August 15, Respondent moved to file a 2 second supplemental prehearing statement to which 3 the Government has no objection, so that statement 4 is deemed filed. 5 And on August 18, the Government moved to 6 file a fourth supplemental prehearing statement, 7 and, Ms. Carpenter, I understand that you have no 8 objection. 9 MS. CARPENTER: That's correct, Your 10 Honor. 11 JUDGE BITTNER: So it is deemed filed. I 12 would also like to note that there is to be no 13 recording in the courtroom other than that made by 14 the official court reporter, and no cameras in the 15 courtroom, at least not on, and I understand that 16 the parties have agreed that we will not sequester 17 the witnesses, and that Dr. Doblin will act as 18 representative of Respondent for sitting at the 19 counsel table, and Mr. Strait will act as 20 representative of the Government. 21 Am I correct? 22 MS. CARPENTER: That's correct, Your 0008 1 Honor. 2 MR. BAYLY: Yes, Judge Bittner. 3 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Ms. Carpenter, 4 anything else before opening statements? 5 MS. CARPENTER: I don't think so, Your 6 Honor. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly, anything else 8 before opening statements? 9 MR. BAYLY: No, Your Honor. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Ms. Carpenter? 11 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Your Honor. I 12 really just have a very brief comment, a brief 13 statement, and that is that as the proceedings go 14 forward, there are three critical reasons that I 15 would like Your Honor to focus on why it's in the 16 public interest, as defined in 21 U.S.C. 823(a), 17 for the DEA to grant Dr. Craker's application for 18 registration as a bulk manufacturer of marijuana. 19 The first reason is the language of the 20 statute and the regulation. The statute and the 21 regulation specifically require, and I quote, 22 "adequately competitive conditions." 0009 1 Those are to ensure that there's an 2 adequate and uninterrupted supply of whatever the 3 Schedule I substance is, in this case marijuana, to 4 meet the legitimate medical, scientific, research 5 and industrial purposes. 6 Congress commonly uses the term 7 "competitive conditions" when it's talking about 8 markets. It uses it often in antitrust statutes, 9 and it refers to those conditions existing between 10 buyers and sellers in a particular industry or 11 particular market. 12 And we would submit that because the 13 evidence will show that there is one supplier of 14 marijuana currently in the United States, and that 15 one supplier is the government, so essentially a 16 government monopoly, it is almost as a matter of 17 law impossible for that to meet the statutorily 18 required "adequately competitive" conditions. 19 The second point is that because the 20 government monopoly can decide on its own when it 21 will and will not provide marijuana to researchers 22 and doctors without any market incentive to be 0010 1 responsive to the needs of those researchers and 2 doctors. The facts are that the current supply 3 with the government monopoly does not provide an 4 adequate and uninterrupted supply that's necessary 5 to meet legitimate needs of researchers and medical 6 and science. 7 The evidence will show here that NIDA has 8 refused to provide medical marijuana for FDA-approved 9 protocols and that they've refused to 10 provide marijuana to researchers attempting to help 11 develop new smokeless delivery devices to deliver 12 marijuana in a way that's less harmful than 13 smoking, and indeed the evidence will show that 14 NIDA itself makes clear that it believes it is not 15 its mission to further medical research into 16 marijuana or to facilitate bringing it to market. 17 The third point that I'd like Your Honor 18 to remember is that the statute also requires 19 consideration of whether or not the license will 20 promote technical advancements in the field. It 21 will in this case, and the evidence will show that 22 one of the primary purposes for which Dr. Craker 0011 1 seeks this license or this registration is to 2 assist researchers who want to develop a smokeless 3 delivery device which is exactly what another 4 branch of the government has called for in research 5 in the medical marijuana issue. 6 So for those reasons--because it will 7 further technical advancements in the manufacture 8 of marijuana and the delivery of new substances, 9 because the current supply is not adequate and 10 uninterrupted, and because almost as a matter of 11 definition, a supplier of one, a government 12 monopoly, cannot constitute adequately competitive 13 conditions--we believe the evidence will show 14 strongly that it is in the public interest for DEA 15 to grant the license to Dr. Craker in this matter. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you. Mr. Bayly. 17 MR. BAYLY: Your Honor, we are going to 18 reserve our opening argument, and at the time that 19 the Government puts on its rebuttal case, we will 20 then present the opening argument. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Ms. Carpenter, 22 we're ready for your first witness. 0012 1 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Your Honor. We 2 would call Dr. Lyle Craker. 3 JUDGE BITTNER: Doctor, if you would come 4 right up here, please. 5 DR. CRAKER: Thank you, Your Honor. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Good morning. Stand and 7 raise your right hand, please. 8 Whereupon, 9 LYLE E. CRAKER, PH.D. 10 was called as a witness and, having been first duly 11 sworn by the Administrative Law Judge, was examined 12 and testified as follows: 13 DIRECT EXAMINATION 14 BY MS. CARPENTER: 15 Q Good morning, Dr. Craker. 16 A Good morning. 17 Q Can you state your name and address for 18 the record? 19 A Certainly. My name is Lyle E. Craker. I 20 am a faculty member at the University of 21 Massachusetts at Amherst, and that's located in 22 Amherst, Massachusetts. My home address is 119 0013 1 Mount Warner Road in Hadley, Massachusetts. 2 Q Thank you. Dr. Craker, can you tell me--you 3 mentioned you were currently a faculty member, 4 and what department are you a faculty member? 5 A I'm a faculty member in the Department of 6 Plant, Soil and Insect Sciences. 7 Q Okay. 8 A The Insect Sciences was added this last 9 summer. 10 Q And is that part of your specialty? 11 A What? 12 Q Is that part of your specialty? 13 A No, it's not. 14 Q Dr. Craker, could I ask you to turn in the 15 book that's up there to Respondent's Exhibit 3? 16 A Yes. 17 Q Do you recognize that document? 18 A Yes, it's a resume that I've supplied. 19 Q Okay. And you prepared that and it 20 explains your experience and publications? 21 A Yes, this is a record of my education, my 22 duties at the university and part of the scientific 0014 1 articles that I have been responsible for editing, 2 writing, co-writing. 3 Q Okay. 4 A Editing, co-editing. 5 MS. CARPENTER: All right. I would move 6 the admission of Exhibit 3 into evidence. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Any objection, Mr. Bayly? 8 MR. BAYLY: No, Judge Bittner. 9 JUDGE BITTNER: Received. 10 [Respondent's Exhibit No. 3 11 was marked for identification 12 and received in evidence.] 13 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 14 BY MS. CARPENTER: 15 Q Dr. Craker, can you tell me a little bit 16 about your education? Where did you get your 17 undergraduate work? 18 A I did my undergraduate work at the 19 University of Wisconsin in the Department of 20 Agronomy. 21 Q And what is agronomy? 22 A Agronomy is the study of crop production. 0015 1 Q Okay. And did you-- 2 A And I did my doctorate degree at the 3 University of Minnesota. I got that degree in 4 agronomy also, studying crop production. 5 Q Okay. And what did you do your graduate 6 work in, what particular project? 7 A My project had to do with the wheat and 8 the absorption of radionucleotides into wheat 9 because of the government concern about nuclear 10 bombs contaminating our food chain. 11 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: What are radionucleotides? 13 THE WITNESS: The one we looked at was 14 Strontium 89. It's a mineral, mineral element that 15 has radioactive properties. 16 BY MS. CARPENTER: 17 Q What did you do after you got your Ph.D.? 18 A After I finished my doctorate degree, I 19 did a postdoctorate in the Department of 20 Horticulture where I worked on, studied the cold 21 hardiness. That is the ability of plants to 22 survive the winter and I worked there for six 0016 1 months and then after that I was called to active 2 duty in the United States Army Chemical Corps. 3 Q Okay. And what did you do in the Army? 4 A After training with the Chemical Corps in 5 Alabama, I was assigned to work in research 6 laboratories at the facility at Fort Detrick, 7 Maryland. 8 Q And what did you study there? 9 A At Fort Detrick, Maryland, I studied the--we did 10 work in the leaf abscission. 11 Q What is leaf-- 12 A Abscission is the process by which plants 13 lose their leaves and lose their fruit. 14 Q Why was the Army interested in wheat 15 abscission? 16 A The Army was interested in this because of 17 the use of foliage by enemy soldiers to hide 18 themselves and if they could remove the leaves from 19 trees, that would expose the enemy soldiers. 20 Q Okay. How long were you in the Army? 21 A I was in the Army for 25 months. 22 Q What was your rank there? 0017 1 A Captain when I left. 2 Q Okay. And what did you do after you left 3 the Army? 4 A After I left the service I was hired by 5 the--I got a position at the University of 6 Massachusetts, and I worked at the University 7 Experiment Station in Waltham, Massachusetts. 8 Q What kinds of projects did you work on 9 there? 10 A There my responsibilities were to study 11 the effect of air pollution on plant growth and 12 development. 13 Q Okay. And how long did you stay there? 14 A I was there from 1969 till 1976 when I 15 went on sabbatical to Cambridge, England for six 16 months and then I returned. I went to, they asked 17 me to come to the campus at Amherst and I've been 18 there since. 19 Q Okay. And are you a tenured professor? 20 A I'm a full professor, yes. 21 Q Okay. And what have you continued to do 22 at Amherst when you moved to the main campus? 0018 1 A In Amherst, I've worked on air pollution 2 for, continued working on air pollution for five or 3 six years, and have after that became interested in 4 medicinal plants, looking at this for a potential 5 crop for Massachusetts growers, and I've continued 6 working in that area since that time. 7 Q Okay. Can you talk about some of the 8 projects with regard to medicinal plants? 9 A With medicinal plants, we've worked with 10 probably a number of plants over the years. We've 11 had a study in Chinese medicinal plants. We've 12 looked at Black Cohosh quite extensively, and 13 currently we're working with spearmint. 14 Q Okay. And in those projects, did you grow 15 those plants? 16 A Yes. 17 Q Right there at the University of 18 Massachusetts? 19 A Yes, in the greenhouse, in environmental 20 chambers, and some of those were grown in the 21 field. 22 Q Okay. Who paid for that sort of work? 0019 1 A Well, we've had money from some federal 2 sources. We've had money from some foreign sources 3 that help support this, foreign governments, and I 4 think that's--some state money also, also goes into 5 these type of things, yes. 6 Q And what federal agencies have supported 7 your work? 8 A We've had money from the, well, for some 9 of our studies, we've had money from the 10 Environmental Protection Agency for our air 11 pollution work. We've had money from the SARE 12 grants which are federal money, sustainable 13 agriculture grants. We've had money from the 14 Experiment Station which comes through the Hatch 15 Act, federal money. 16 Q The SARE grants, is that from the 17 Department of Agriculture? 18 A Yes. 19 Q And the Hatch Act federal money would be 20 from the-- 21 A Yes. 22 Q --Department of Agriculture? Okay. And 0020 1 the medicinal plants that you worked with, I think 2 you mentioned Black Cohosh? 3 A Yes. 4 Q Would you tell us a little bit about what 5 that is and what it's used for? 6 A Black Cohosh is a native American plant, 7 and it has extensive use by women for relief of 8 menopausal symptoms. 9 Q Okay. And what did you do with regard to 10 that particular project? 11 A In the Black Cohosh we were concerned with 12 a few things. Number one is that currently the 13 Black Cohosh, primarily the Black Cohosh is 14 collected in the wild, and we are worried about 15 whether the wild population can sustain the market, 16 so that we wanted to check where populations were 17 growing and the size of those populations. So we 18 did a field inventory of the natural range of Black 19 Cohosh. 20 We wanted to in this think about bringing 21 this plant into cultivation in the U.S. We made 22 collections at all our populations. We brought 0021 1 those back to the Amherst facility. We have looked 2 at their DNA. We've looked at their morphology and 3 we've looked at their chemistry. 4 We grew those at the university in a plot 5 so they'd all have the same environment so when we 6 checked the chemistry, any change in chemistry 7 would be due to genetics as opposed to environment. 8 We then submitted those plant materials to the germ 9 plasm repository, at one of the germ plasm 10 repositories for the United States in Ames, Iowa, 11 where the populations we started are still being 12 grown and available to other researchers. 13 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 14 JUDGE BITTNER: How do you spell Cohosh? 15 THE WITNESS: C-O-H-O-S-H. 16 BY MS. CARPENTER: 17 Q Okay. And I think you also mentioned 18 spearmint that you're working with? What are you 19 doing-- 20 A Yes. We're working with spearmint. 21 Q Can you tell a little bit about that work? 22 A The spearmint we're using as a model to 0022 1 try and increase oil production, spearmint oil 2 production. The thought process is that in plants 3 there are two systems of metabolism, regular 4 glycolysis and the pentose phosphate shunt, which 5 is an alternative type of metabolism, and most of 6 the ingredients of essential oil come off the 7 shunt. 8 So if we could switch the plant from using 9 the regular glycolysis to the shunt, we would 10 supply more of the raw ingredients for the oil and 11 theoretically produce more oil. 12 Q Okay. And who is funding the spearmint 13 work? 14 A The spearmint work is being funded by--it's being 15 funded partially by the Egyptian 16 government and partially by USDA through the Hatch 17 Act. 18 Q Okay. Dr. Craker, you have submitted a 19 license, an application for registration to the DEA 20 to become a bulk manufacturer of marijuana; have 21 you? 22 A That's true. 0023 1 Q Okay. If you would turn to--there are 2 some loose exhibits up there. 3 A The what? 4 Q The loose exhibits there. 5 A Yes. 6 Q They're not in the book. But it's marked 7 Government's Exhibit 2. 8 A Yes. 9 Q Do you recognize that document? 10 A Yes, this document is a memorandum from--it's a 11 copy of a memorandum from me to Sharon Lick 12 at the Registration Unit at the DEA. 13 Q Okay. And the next document that's 14 attached to that? 15 A Yes. Yes, this is a memorandum from Carol 16 Sprague who is the, was the associate director, I 17 think now she's the Director of Office of Grant and 18 Contract Administration at the University of 19 Massachusetts Amherst. 20 Q Okay. And then the next two documents 21 attached to that, or pages, I guess? 22 A Yes. This is the application for 0024 1 registration that was submitted from the university 2 to the DEA for the manufacture of marijuana. 3 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. At this point, I'd 4 like to move the admission of Government's Exhibit 5 2 into evidence? 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly, any objection? 7 MR. BAYLY: That's two and three? 8 MS. CARPENTER: Not three yet. This is 9 just two. I'll get to three in just a few minutes. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Let's see. What I 11 have in two is an August 22, 2002 memorandum, a 12 June 25, 2001 letter, and an application which I 13 assume was double-sided originally; is that 14 correct, Mr. Bayly? So I have three documents. 15 MR. BAYLY: Yes, Your Honor. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 17 MR. BAYLY: That's what I have, and I have 18 no objection. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Received. 20 [Government Exhibit No. 2 was 21 marked for identification and 22 received in evidence.] 0025 1 BY MS. CARPENTER: 2 Q Before we talk more about the application 3 itself, Dr. Craker, can you tell me how you came to 4 file this application? 5 A I filed this application after I had 6 spoken with Dr. Doblin. He approached me about the 7 possibility of growing marijuana for use in 8 research trials. 9 Q Okay. Did he tell you why he wanted to 10 grow marijuana for use in research trials? 11 A At that time, we discussed the reasons for 12 the need for this material, the reasons for a need 13 for alternative source, and during that time, I 14 looked at this as something we did, grow medicinal 15 plants. 16 Q Okay. Did you talk with anybody at the 17 university about out? 18 A I'm sorry? 19 Q Did you speak with anybody at the--well, 20 what did you tell Dr. Doblin after-- 21 A Yes. 22 Q --you first met? 0026 1 A At that time, after I had spoken with Dr. 2 Doblin, I approached my administrative unit and 3 asked them if they had an objection to this type of 4 research and I spoke to my department head. I 5 spoke to my dean and I spoke to the Office of 6 Grants and Contracts, and I spoke to the Vice 7 Chancellor for Research at that time, and asked if 8 this was okay with all of them? 9 Q And what was their response? 10 A Their answer was that, yes, this was okay 11 with them. 12 Q Okay. So what did you do next? 13 A Well, the next thing was that we filed 14 the--I submitted the appropriate internal 15 processing forms and the form that we just looked 16 at to our Office of Grants and Contracts because 17 all proposals need to go through the Office of 18 Grants and Contracts at the university. 19 Q Okay. 20 A And for submission to the DEA. 21 Q Okay. And let me step back for just a 22 minute. 0027 1 A Yes. 2 Q And then we'll go back to where you were. 3 But when you spoke with Dr. Doblin, did he indicate 4 to you--what did he say to you why were the reasons 5 why he was not able to get the marijuana that he 6 needed to do research? 7 MR. BAYLY: Objection. I think that's 8 been asked and answered. 9 JUDGE BITTNER: No, I don't think so. 10 Overruled. 11 BY MS. CARPENTER: 12 Q Did he talk to you about particular 13 reasons that he was unable to get other marijuana? 14 A He may have. I don't really recall. It's 15 an initial meeting. It's a course of conversation 16 which probably lasted an hour and a half or so. 17 Q Okay. 18 A And we exchanged pleasantries. We talked 19 about the need. There may have been specific 20 conversation, but I don't recall. That's five 21 years ago or so. I don't recall. 22 Q Sure. Okay. So after you submitted the 0028 1 application, do you recall roughly when that was? 2 A The initial application was submitted, as 3 I recall, in the spring of 2001. 4 Q Okay. 5 A Late spring of 2001. 6 Q All right. If you would look at 7 Government's Exhibit 2, the second page of that, 8 the June 25, 2001 letter from Carol Sprague. 9 A Yes. That would be the cover letter that 10 went with the application. So I assume that's the 11 date that it was submitted. 12 Q Okay. And then if you turn to the next 13 page and look at the date stamp on the long side of 14 the page, not the short top. 15 A Yes. 16 Q What's the date stamp there? 17 A June 28, 2001, 3:51-- 18 Q Okay. All right. 19 A --in the afternoon. 20 Q So after you submitted the application 21 and sent it in, what happened next? 22 A Nothing. 0029 1 Q Okay. So what did you do? 2 A Well, I, after some time had gone by, 3 probably I would guess eight to nine months, I got 4 in contact with the DEA and I don't remember who my 5 initial contact, but I got referred to Ms. Lick, 6 and I spoke with her on several occasions about my 7 application. 8 At that time she told me that they had, 9 the DEA had not received the application, that I 10 should refile. 11 Q Okay. So what did you do? 12 A Well, I think that the memorandum in the 13 Exhibit 2 was that I resubmitted the application as 14 originally submitted. 15 Q At some point, did you receive something 16 back from DEA? 17 A Well, before this, I received my 18 application back from them after I talked to her, 19 and she said that they had not received it. I did 20 receive the application back from them. 21 Q Did it have anything attached to it? 22 A I got the application in a plain brown 0030 1 envelope with no return address. 2 Q All right. So what did you do after you 3 received the application back? 4 A After I received it, this was shortly 5 after I had spoken to her, probably within two or 6 three weeks after I had spoken to her, I called her 7 and asked her--she said they had not received it, 8 and I said that I had received it back from someone 9 and that indeed it was stamped as having been 10 received. 11 At that time, she told me that I had 12 incorrectly filled out the form, and that I should 13 submit a new form. I asked her to go through the 14 form with me and tell me where I had made my 15 mistake, and we went through the form line by line 16 and at that time, it looked like to me that 17 everything had been filled out correctly and I told 18 her I was going to resubmit the same form. 19 Q So she didn't have any corrections for you 20 to make on the form? 21 A Not that I recall. 22 Q Okay. So in the first letter on 0031 1 Government's Exhibit 2 is dated August 22, 2002; is 2 that-- 3 A That's when it was resubmitted, yes. 4 Q Okay. So you resubmitted the same form, 5 and then if you look at the form again, is there a 6 new date stamp on there? 7 A I see a new date stamp that says August 8 28, 2002 at 6:37 in the morning. 9 Q Okay. 10 A I sent the second one registered mail so 11 that I would be sure that they received it. 12 Q Okay. Great. Just to make sure this is a 13 clear, I think you said earlier, but what's the 14 date stamp, the first date stamp on the exhibit? 15 A The first date stamp was June 28, 2001. 16 Q Okay. Great. At the time that you spoke 17 with Ms. Lick, did she have any additional 18 questions for you from the DEA? 19 A She did have some additional, there were 20 additional questions that came up, and I responded 21 to those, yes. 22 Q Okay. And if you would look at what's 0032 1 been marked for identification as Government's 2 Exhibit 3. 3 A Yes. 4 Q It's a loose copy up there. Have you seen 5 that before? 6 A Yes, this is the response to the bulk 7 manufacture question. It appears to me that I 8 submitted to the DEA. 9 Q Okay. This was in the response to 10 questions from Ms. Lick? 11 A Yes. 12 MS. CARPENTER: So at this point I would 13 move admission of Government's Exhibit 3 into the 14 record. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly? 16 MR. BAYLY: No objection. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Received. 18 [Government Exhibit No. 3 was 19 marked for identification and 20 received in evidence.] 21 BY MS. CARPENTER: 22 Q If you would look at that, Government's 0033 1 Exhibit 3, Dr. Craker. 2 A Yes. 3 Q The first question says what is the 4 purpose of bulk manufacturer of controlled 5 substances. And then your answer follows that, I 6 guess. 7 A Yes. 8 Q Can you--do you recall what the purpose 9 was for your application for growing these? Can 10 you summarize it there or we could read it if you 11 prefer? 12 A Well, our purpose in growing, in asking 13 for a license to manufacture the marijuana was to 14 be able to supply a defined marijuana project, find 15 a defined marijuana product to investigators that 16 wanted to do clinical trials with marijuana. 17 Q Okay. And was this in particular to 18 further the drug development process? 19 A Yes. 20 Q And who was the organization that was 21 looking to do that? 22 A MAPS was the organization that Dr. Doblin 0034 1 heads was the one that approached me and the one 2 that was going to secure the funding for this, and 3 I guess I would say looked for, look at or be the 4 middle person for the clinical trials that would, 5 he would interact with those initially. 6 Q Okay. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Excuse me, doctor. Did 8 you say defined or refined process? 9 THE WITNESS: I said defined. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: What does that mean? 11 THE WITNESS: Well, defined means if we 12 want a particular level of in the case of marijuana 13 cannabinoids or something else, and that we would 14 supply a product with that level. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: So, in other words, is it 16 like grow to suit or? 17 THE WITNESS: Like what? 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Grow to suit. That you 19 could-- 20 THE WITNESS: Yes, that's right. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: That you could grow it to 22 meet certain criteria? 0035 1 THE WITNESS: Yes. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 3 THE WITNESS: Yes. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you. 5 BY MS. CARPENTER: 6 Q Was it your understanding that this 7 research or the marijuana that you would grow, 8 should the application for the registration be 9 granted, would be used in research regarding 10 vaporizer devices? 11 A Yes, this was new to me, a technology to 12 me, but this was the understanding that it would be 13 a new type of drug treatment. 14 Q Okay. Would it be a new type of drug 15 treatment or a new type of delivery device? 16 A New type of delivery device for use of 17 marijuana. 18 Q Okay. And what's your understanding of 19 what the differences would be between smoked 20 marijuana and vaporized marijuana, if any? 21 A Well, smoking marijuana has, in the 22 literature you can see that smoking marijuana has 0036 1 negative associations with the smoking in that the 2 smoking itself, the burning of the material can 3 cause adverse effects in patients. My 4 understanding of the vaporizer technology is it 5 will be below the threshold for burning, and so 6 that we will not have the same effects as smoking. 7 Q Okay. 8 A Same negative effects. 9 Q So essentially a different product would 10 be delivered through the delivery device? 11 A Yes. 12 Q In the second response to bulk 13 manufacturing questions, the question was please 14 describe the production process for these 15 controlled substances from start to finish. Can 16 you summarize generally what you would do to grow 17 the marijuana under the application? 18 A Certainly. We looked at marijuana as we 19 would do any other medicinal plant. The large 20 difference here, of course, is the security 21 requirements required for this type of plant 22 material to be sure that it's not diverted into the 0037 1 recreational market. So that we had extra 2 security, things which we've talked to DEA agents 3 about, but otherwise we generally grow plants 4 within a--start plants--seeds in a media, and then 5 transplant them into pots, and then we would grow 6 them in a controlled environment facility, a 7 greenhouse or a growth chamber, environmental 8 controlled chamber as necessary. 9 Q So would this growing be inside a room? 10 A This would be inside a room, yes. 11 Q Not field-- 12 A Locked room. 13 Q Okay. So it wouldn't be grown in a field, 14 for example? 15 A No. This is not for field growing. Not 16 under the current situation. It would be either-- 17 it would be a secure facility. 18 Q Okay. And would that allow greater 19 environmental controls by growing it in a room? 20 A Yes, that's the idea here is to control 21 the environment so that we can produce a defined 22 product. 0038 1 Q And I think you had mentioned before that 2 you would be, anticipate using different selections 3 or different strains of marijuana? What would be 4 the purpose of that? 5 A Well, the plant material that is available 6 varies quite considerably in the level of bioactive 7 constituents, and so what we would want to do would 8 be able to grow different strains of the plant 9 material which have been previously characterized 10 as to certain levels of the constituents. 11 Q Okay. And so you'd grow different types 12 of plants for different testing? 13 A Well, it would be the same type of plant. 14 It would be a little bit different strain of plant. 15 Q I understand. Get my botanical terms 16 clear. 17 A Yes. 18 Q The next question was what material would 19 be used to manufacture the controlled substances 20 and what quantities will be used? Can you just 21 briefly summarize? Maybe you've already said that. 22 A Yes, well, we're going to--we said we're 0039 1 going to grow them in some type of controlled 2 facility. 3 Q Okay. And you mentioned a growth chamber; 4 can you tell the Court what that is? 5 A Environmental growth chamber, yes. That's 6 a metal box where we can control the levels of 7 light, the temperature, humidity in order to ensure 8 the uniform plant growth around the year. 9 Q Okay. And why would it be important to 10 ensure uniform consistency between plants? 11 A Well, there are two things that affect the 12 active constituents in a plant, and that is the 13 genetics of the plant and the environment in which 14 the plant grows. As I mentioned before, with the 15 Black Cohosh study, we wanted to determine the 16 differences in genetics. We had to grow them in 17 all the same location with the same environment so 18 that any differences would be due to the genetics 19 as opposed to the environment. 20 Q Okay. And the question number six on 21 Exhibit 3 is what quantities of controlled 22 substance does your company anticipate producing 0040 1 and who are the interested customers? What's your 2 answer to that question? 3 A Well, in conversations with Dr. Doblin, it 4 was calculated approximately 25 pounds would be 5 needed in the first year. 6 Q Okay. And how much table space do you 7 think it would take to grow 25 pounds of marijuana? 8 A Well, since I'm not experienced in growing 9 this plant, I'm not exactly sure. I have talked 10 with other licensed growers and we have said that I 11 will talk with them to further determine the number 12 of plants we need. 13 Q Okay. But it would all fit in one room; 14 would it? 15 A I'm sure it will fit in one room, yes. 16 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Doctor, when you say dry 18 weight, do you mean after it's been dried or-- 19 THE WITNESS: Yes, after it's been dried. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 21 BY MS. CARPENTER: 22 Q Now, Dr. Craker, at some point, did you 0041 1 receive an opportunity from the DEA to bid on a 2 government contract to grow marijuana? 3 A Yes. I received the notice from the 4 government that they were taking bids on growing 5 marijuana, yes. 6 Q Okay. Were you interested in that 7 opportunity at all? 8 A I looked at the prospectus on it and 9 decided that there was little chance of the 10 university successfully bidding on this. 11 Q And why was that? 12 A Well, they were, first of all, we had 13 essentially no experience in producing the material 14 and whereas the current successful bidder has had 15 lots of experience. There was call for and 16 analyzing material that's brought off the street. 17 We were not exactly interested in that. 18 Q Okay. 19 A And in looking at it, I thought if I was, 20 you know, that it was not for us at that time. 21 Q Okay. So after you submitted the answers 22 to the questions, and resubmitted your original 0042 1 application in August of 2002-- 2 A Yes. 3 Q --what happened next? 4 A We had, next thing that came after we 5 resubmitted, I would say approximately--again, the 6 dates are approximate because I don't have them. 7 Q That's fine. 8 A But I would say probably within six to 9 eight weeks after that submission, we had, I had 10 two DEA agents visit the campus. 11 Q Okay. And what happened during that 12 visit? 13 A In the initial contact with the agents, 14 they asked that I come to a meeting along with my 15 department head, my dean, the Vice Chancellor for 16 Research, and the chancellor of the campus. 17 Q So all you all gathered together and met 18 and what did they have to-- 19 A The chancellor did not come, but the 20 department head, the dean, and the Vice Chancellor 21 for Research did attend along with me. We met with 22 the two agents. 0043 1 Q Okay. And what happened in that meeting? 2 A During that time, we met with the agents. 3 The agents, the primary purpose of the meeting to 4 me seemed to be that the agents were trying to 5 discourage the university from participating in the 6 research. They asked the, they asked especially 7 the Vice Chancellor for Research and my dean 8 whether this is something that they really wanted 9 the university working in, that the university 10 could get a bad reputation from growing this plant 11 material. 12 Q Okay. And what was the response from the 13 university? 14 A The response from my department head, my 15 dean and my Vice Chancellor for Research said this 16 was a research university and these are the type of 17 problems that we worked on. 18 Q Okay. Did those DEA investigators ask 19 questions at all about security or any issues like 20 that? 21 A Not that I recall. 22 Q Okay. 0044 1 A Not that I recall at that time. I had a 2 second visit by DEA agents to talk about security. 3 Q Okay. So the first visit focused solely 4 on whether or not the university would proceed with 5 this? 6 A Well, we, again, it's been-- 7 Q Okay. Primarily. 8 A --three years ago or so. That was the 9 primary focus of the meeting. We did not visit any 10 facilities. We did not walk around campus. We met 11 in a room and around a table and that was the 12 conversation as I recall. 13 Q Okay. And what happened at the second DEA 14 meeting? 15 A At the second DEA meeting when the agents 16 came to, one of the original and another agent came 17 to visit me from the DEA, we walked around campus; 18 we talked about where the material would be 19 growing, grown. They indicated some of their 20 requirements for growing the material. They wanted 21 to, I think, be sure that I understood the need for 22 security of this plant material, which I assured 0045 1 them that I did. We looked at--we looked at one 2 room where I had secured from the department, had 3 an agreement to use for growing the material. They 4 thought that room could be made secure with no 5 problems. 6 They wanted to know where I'd be drying 7 the material. I told them there was a small room 8 next which we would connect the growth room to the 9 small room where the plant would be dried so it 10 would all be contained in one facility. 11 Q Okay. Did any state investigators play a 12 role in this? 13 A The state investigators were the first to 14 come and see me. They came in 2001 immediately 15 after I had submitted the application. They walked 16 around campus with me at that time, discussed their 17 security requirements, and at the time they told me 18 that a state permit would depend upon a federal 19 permit being granted. 20 Q Did they indicate that if the federal 21 permit was granted, the state permit would be 22 granted? 0046 1 A That's what they indicated to me, yes. 2 Q Okay. So after these visits from the DEA, 3 what happened after that? 4 A Well, as I talked with the agents and 5 asked them what the next step would be, they said a 6 decision was going to be made. I expected shortly 7 but heard nothing for awhile, and so then we filed 8 a request or whatever it is for them to come to an 9 answer. 10 Q Okay. So let me just be clear. I 11 understand that you filed in August of 2002, and 12 the DEA agents came out within six or eight weeks 13 after that, so that would be-- 14 A No, we got, we got a response, final 15 response from the DEA, a negative response in 2004. 16 Q Right. I'm not there yet. 17 A Yes. 18 Q Back when you filed, you filed, you 19 refiled the application-- 20 A Yes. 21 Q --in August of 2002. Then I think you 22 said six or eight weeks after that, DEA agents came 0047 1 to visit? 2 A Yes. 3 Q So that would be fall of 2002? 4 A That's correct. 5 Q And then you didn't hear anything from the 6 DEA? 7 A I heard nothing from the DEA. 8 Q Until? 9 A Until 2004 essentially. 10 Q After you filed the lawsuit? 11 A I think the second DEA visit came probably 12 in the spring of 2004, summer of 2004. I can't 13 recall it at this time. 14 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Summer of 2004 or 2003? 16 THE WITNESS: 2004. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. So some time after 18 the first visit? 19 THE WITNESS: Yes. Something like that as 20 I recall. 21 BY MS. CARPENTER: 22 Q All right. And did a point come when you 0048 1 filed a lawsuit to try and get an answer from DEA? 2 A Yes, that was in 2004. 3 Q Okay. In the summer? 4 A Yes. 5 Q And let me just step back for one minute, 6 and do you recall whether in July 2003, notice was 7 published in the Federal Register of your 8 application? 9 A I'm sorry. I do not understand the 10 question. 11 Q Do you recall that in July of 2003 that 12 DEA published in the Federal Register a notice of 13 your application finally? 14 A Well, I knew that they did-- 15 Q Okay. 16 A --because of publicity that comes and 17 newspaper people calling and things like that. 18 Q Okay. So that in July 2004, you filed a 19 lawsuit? 20 A Yes. 21 Q And what was the result of that lawsuit? 22 A The result of that lawsuit was a decision 0049 1 to deny the license. 2 Q Okay. And do you recall when you received 3 that? 4 A In the fall of 2004. 5 Q Okay. Does December 2004 sound about 6 right? 7 A Sounds about right, yes. 8 Q All right. The lawsuit that you filed, 9 was that with the Court of Appeals in the District 10 of Columbia? You don't recall what court it was? 11 A I don't recall the court. 12 Q Do you recall whether the court ordered 13 the DEA to give an answer? 14 A Yes. 15 Q Okay. So basically about three and a half 16 years after you first applied, you got the denial; 17 does that sound about right? 18 A Well, the initial application was in 2001. 19 We got an answer, a denial in 2004. 20 Q Okay. Let me ask you to turn in the 21 notebook up there, after you get a drink, to 22 Exhibit 43. 0050 1 JUDGE BITTNER: And this is your Exhibit 2 43? 3 MS. CARPENTER: Respondent's Exhibit 43. 4 We're back to Respondent's Exhibits. 5 THE WITNESS: Yes. 6 BY MS. CARPENTER: 7 Q Okay. Do you recognize that document, Dr. 8 Craker? 9 A Well, this looks like a copy of a 10 memorandum that I must have gotten from the Drug 11 Enforcement Agency. 12 Q Okay. This is dated--what's the date on 13 there? 14 A December 10, 2004. 15 Q Okay. And to your knowledge, is this the 16 order that denied your application for registration 17 as a bulk grower of marijuana? 18 A Yes. 19 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. I would move the 20 admission of Respondent's Exhibit 43 into evidence. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly? 22 MR. BAYLY: Judge Bittner, it's already an 0051 1 ALJ exhibit so I don't know. I think it's like 2 redundant and superfluous so I don't-- 3 JUDGE BITTNER: I think the problem, 4 though, is that where we have redundant exhibits, 5 it usually turns out that either the witnesses or 6 counsel are used to referring to them by the 7 numbers that their counsel assigned them. So I've 8 tended to leave them in. So-- 9 MR. BAYLY: Okay. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: All right. No objection 11 then? 12 MR. BAYLY: No. 13 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Respondent 43, 14 which is extremely similar to ALJ-1, is received. 15 [Laughter.] 16 [Respondent's Exhibit No. 43 17 was marked for identification 18 and received in evidence.] 19 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Your Honor. 20 BY MS. CARPENTER: 21 Q Dr. Craker, I know it's been probably 22 awhile since you read this document, but if you 0052 1 could turn to page four of that document. And 2 there's three paragraphs there. Do you understand 3 those paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) at the top of the 4 page to be essentially the reasons why your 5 application for registration was denied? 6 A Yes, those are the three reasons that the, 7 as I understood, that the license was denied. 8 Q Okay. Could you read that first paragraph 9 there, paragraph (a)? 10 A Yes. Current marijuana research has not 11 progressed to Phase 2 of the clinical trials 12 because current research must utilized smoked 13 marijuana which ultimately cannot be the permitted 14 delivery system for any potential marijuana 15 medication due to the deleterious effects and 16 difficulty in monitoring the efficaciousness of 17 smoked marijuana. 18 Q Okay. So is your understanding of that 19 paragraph that they're saying you can't have a 20 license because smoked marijuana cannot be a 21 permitted delivery system? 22 A Yes. When I received this, this was 0053 1 curious to me because I don't think we had ever 2 asked about smoked marijuana. We had asked about 3 an alternative delivery system, the vaporizer. 4 Q And that was clear in your application; 5 was it? 6 A That was clear in my application. 7 Q That part of the reason to do this was 8 for-- 9 A Yes. 10 Q --working with the vaporizer? 11 A To do away from the smoked marijuana. 12 Q Okay. Could you read the second paragraph 13 there, paragraph (b)? 14 A As of January 2004, FDA has not received 15 any new drug application for the development of a 16 prescription drug containing marijuana or a 17 constituent of marijuana. Since the new drug 18 application process cannot take many years-- 19 MR. BAYLY: Sorry. I-- 20 THE WITNESS: Can take many years DEA 21 should not register another marijuana manufacturer 22 at this time on such a speculative basis. 0054 1 BY MS. CARPENTER: 2 Q Okay. And in the information that you 3 had, was it clear to you that there had to be an 4 FDA new drug application pending before you could 5 get a license? 6 A No, I saw nothing about that in the 7 guidelines of following the application. 8 Q Okay. And if you could read paragraph 9 number (c) on that same page? 10 A In accordance with the Single Convention, 11 the federal government has to limit marijuana 12 available for clinical research to one source. 13 Based upon this mandate of the Single Convention, 14 HHS through NIDA submits a contract to open bidding 15 every five years to determine which one enterprise 16 will be allowed to cultivate marijuana. Since this 17 HHS policy is consistent with the Single 18 Convention, DEA has no authority to overturn this 19 policy. Moreover, DEA agrees with HHS policy 20 inasmuch as DEA's interpretation of the Single 21 Convention, as noted previously, is that marijuana 22 available for clinical research must be limited to 0055 1 one source. 2 Q Okay. I'm just going to ask you--I think 3 you probably don't have any experience--but do you 4 have any experience with the Single Convention that 5 it refers to here? 6 A No. 7 Q Okay. Doctor--just a minute, Your Honor. 8 If you'd just turn to the next page there, page 9 five. 10 A Yes. 11 Q And it's paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of 12 paragraph 10. 13 A Yes. 14 Q If you look at paragraph (c), could you 15 just read that into the record, if you would? 16 A Starting with "This system"? 17 Q Yes, sir. 18 A This system has not unduly limited 19 clinical research with marijuana. Since the year 20 2000, there have been or are 11 approved clinical 21 trials utilizing smoked marijuana, three approved 22 clinical sub-studies on side effects of marijuana 0056 1 and four approved pre-clinical trials in laboratory 2 and animal modes. Current registered marijuana 3 researchers administer marijuana to almost 500 4 human subjects. Research with other Schedule I 5 controlled substances is not as extensive as it is 6 with marijuana at this time. 7 Q Okay. Do you understand what Phase 2 8 studies are, FDA Phase 2 studies? 9 A That's not in my specialty area. 10 Q Okay. All right. I'll move on. Dr. 11 Craker, are you familiar with the statutory factors 12 that help determine the public interest in terms of 13 whether or not your application is granted? 14 A Determine what? 15 Q That determine whether or not your-- 16 A Am I familiar with the statutes that do 17 that? 18 Q Let me start over. Are you familiar with 19 the statute that lays out the factors the Court 20 will consider in determining whether or not your 21 application for a registration will be granted? 22 A Only from a lay point of view. 0057 1 Q Okay. 2 A Again, that's not my specialty. 3 Q Okay. All right. The first factor, do 4 you recall that it is to ensure an adequate and 5 uninterrupted supply under adequately competitive 6 conditions? 7 A Well, I understand that-- 8 MR. BAYLY: Your Honor, excuse me. I'm 9 going to object. First of all, this is not within 10 the scope of the prehearing testimony of Dr. 11 Craker, and that would be in the Respondent's 12 Supplemental Prehearing Statement, pages, it looks 13 like the third through the fourth page. I don't 14 see where he's talking about the statutory factors. 15 Secondly, Dr. Craker has already informed 16 us on the stand that this is not something that 17 he's familiar with. He certainly has been 18 testifying about his qualification as a professor, 19 botany and growing, but certainly not in law or in 20 interpreting statutes. So I would say for all 21 those reasons, we shouldn't be allowing his 22 testimony. 0058 1 MS. CARPENTER: Your Honor, may I respond? 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Yes. 3 MS. CARPENTER: On the third paragraph, 4 first line, Dr. Craker will further testify that he 5 meets all the criteria for issuing a DEA license, 6 and then it proceeds to discuss. It doesn't say 7 specifically he'll talk about each factor, but it 8 clearly--obviously that's our burden of proof, and 9 if our applicant can't testify as to why he meets 10 his factor, I think we're not able to meet our 11 burden. 12 It says-- 13 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Did you have more? 14 MR. BAYLY: No. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. First of all, I 16 think, and we are just--make sure we're all 17 literally on the same page. We're talking about 18 Respondent's Supplemental Prehearing Statement 19 which was filed on July 26; right? 20 MS. CARPENTER: That's correct, Your 21 Honor. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: Page? 0059 1 MS. CARPENTER: Page three. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 3 MS. CARPENTER: I'm sorry that those pages 4 are not numbered. But it's subsection four. 5 JUDGE BITTNER: Yeah. I think that 6 reference to testifying that he meets the criteria 7 is sufficient given that there was no request to 8 expand upon it. 9 However, I have a different problem, and 10 that is that I think rather than have the statutory 11 factor described to the witness, he should have it 12 in front of him because that particular one is 13 rather long and involved and has subparts. 14 MS. CARPENTER: All right. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Would you like a copy of 16 the statute? 17 MS. CARPENTER: I was going to say I don't 18 have one. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Why don't you take mine. 20 Nicole, would you please give this to the witness? 21 MS. CARPENTER: I was cutting down on the 22 number of books I was bringing in and I should not 0060 1 have left that one. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: And I don't think he needs 3 to read it into the record. We're all familiar 4 with it. 5 MR. BAYLY: I need to find the reference 6 to--if we're going to go through all six criteria, 7 I need to find the reference, too, Judge Bittner, 8 if I may have a moment. 9 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Let's go off the 10 record. 11 [Discussion held off the record.] 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Back on the record. 13 BY MS. CARPENTER: 14 Q Dr. Craker. 15 A Yes. 16 Q If you would look at 21 U.S.C. Section 17 823(a), subsection (1). 18 A Yes. 19 Q And just read that to yourself, if you 20 would. 21 A Yes. 22 Q Do you see the language in there that 0061 1 refers to "adequately competitive conditions for 2 legitimate medical, scientific research"-- 3 A Yes, the last sentence there. 4 Q Yes--"and industrial purposes." 5 A Yes. 6 Q As far as you know, would granting your 7 license in your application for registration, would 8 that as far as you know improve competitive 9 conditions in manufacturing marijuana? 10 MR. BAYLY: Your Honor, I need to object 11 for the record. Again this is asking a question of 12 a witness that's not qualified to answer this. 13 JUDGE BITTNER: Ask him if he knows and 14 let's get a foundation here. 15 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 16 BY MS. CARPENTER: 17 Q Dr. Craker, do you know how many people or 18 how many people currently hold a license to bulk 19 manufacture marijuana? 20 A In the United States-- 21 Q In the United States. 22 A --only one that I'm aware of. 0062 1 Q Okay. And so do you know whether, as far 2 as you know, granting your application would 3 improve competitive conditions in the field of, in 4 the area of growing bulk marijuana? 5 MR. BAYLY: Your Honor, again, I don't 6 think that predicate question has covered the scope 7 of the objection. 8 JUDGE BITTNER: I'm sorry. I missed the 9 question. What was it? 10 MS. CARPENTER: He testified-- 11 MR. BAYLY: Well, the predicate question 12 was simply asking do you know how many other 13 manufacturers are and the answer I believe was yes, 14 just one, but that is--that's a fact. That's true, 15 but that kind of doesn't give you, I don't believe, 16 the necessary predicate to make a ruling on whether 17 this witness is qualified to answer such a 18 question. 19 MS. CARPENTER: Your Honor, this is a 20 question any lay witness. It's not a matter of 21 expertise. The question is whether adding one to a 22 field of one would improve competition? 0063 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Well, but, well, actually 2 I had a case about that once. 3 [Laughter.] 4 JUDGE BITTNER: It was really quite 5 interesting. Doctor, do you have any background in 6 economics or competition or any of these issues? 7 THE WITNESS: Well, only to the extent 8 that every college student takes a course in 9 economics and I do have an associate's degree in 10 business that I took on the GI bill. 11 JUDGE BITTNER: Do you know the 12 arrangements under which the one current 13 manufacturer of marijuana is manufacturing it and 14 the cost associated with it and the prices 15 associated with supplying it to researchers and so 16 on? 17 THE WITNESS: I have no idea on the costs 18 or the prices. The only thing I know that it's 19 produced under contract to NIDA. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: In that instance, then, I 21 think I'll sustain the objection. 22 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 0064 1 BY MS. CARPENTER: 2 Q Dr. Craker, can I ask you to turn to 3 Exhibit 44 in the book in front of you? That's 4 Respondent's Exhibit 44. 5 A Turn where? 6 Q I'm sorry. Respondent's Exhibit 44. 7 A Yes. 8 Q Have you seen that letter before? 9 A Yes, I have. 10 Q Okay. 11 A This is a copy of a letter that I received 12 a copy of the letter sent to by Senator Kennedy and 13 Senator Kerry to the Drug Enforcement 14 Administration. 15 Q And what's the date on that letter? 16 A The date on that letter was October 20, 17 2003. 18 Q Okay. Dr. Craker, could you read the 19 second and third paragraphs of that letter into the 20 record? 21 JUDGE BITTNER: I don't think he needs to 22 read it into the record. 0065 1 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Because if it's received 3 in evidence, I'll read it. 4 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. That's fine. Let 5 me just move the admission of Respondent's Exhibit 6 44 into evidence. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Is there a signed copy 8 somewhere? 9 MS. CARPENTER: I don't have one, Your 10 Honor. I think it was at the DEA. 11 JUDGE BITTNER: Do we know if it was sent 12 and signed? 13 MS. CARPENTER: It was sent and signed, 14 Your Honor, is my understanding. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Mr. Bayly? 16 MR. BAYLY: Yeah. Just, well, a couple of 17 things, Judge Bittner. First of all, the copy I 18 have, and maybe this can be cleared up with Dr. 19 Craker's counsel, but I've got October 20, 2003 as 20 the date, as one date, and then the very top, it's 21 got October 20, 2004. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: So does mine. Did you 0066 1 receive a copy of it at the time, Doctor? 2 THE WITNESS: I received a copy of it. I 3 would say it was probably 2003. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: But you're not certain? 5 THE WITNESS: No, I'm not certain. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 7 THE WITNESS: All dates are approximate. 8 I did not bring my calendar with me when various 9 things happened. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 11 MS. CARPENTER: I pulled this off a Web 12 site, as you can see at the bottom of the page. 13 JUDGE BITTNER: Uh-huh. 14 MS. CARPENTER: And I believe that that 15 line at the top is just, it's a mistake. It was a 16 title for the document on the Web site, and I think 17 they just typed the date wrong. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. I think before I 19 receive it, I'd like to know the date. 20 MS. CARPENTER: Can we get the original? 21 JUDGE BITTNER: So can I just withhold 22 ruling on this until we can determine the date and 0067 1 perhaps reach a stipulation on it? 2 MR. BAYLY: Yeah. I'm not going to 3 object. I think we can clear this date issue up. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 5 MR. BAYLY: So that's not a problem. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: So I'll allow you to 7 question the witness about it. I just don't want 8 to receive it when I don't know when it was 9 written. 10 MS. CARPENTER: Right. 11 MR. BAYLY: But I will object to having 12 this letter used as a predicate for the witness 13 because this letter is, yes, maybe the witness has 14 seen it, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's a 15 predicate for it. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Right. We're not 17 there yet. 18 MR. BAYLY: If the defense wants to admit 19 this on its own for whatever worth they think it 20 has, then I would not object on any other basis. 21 MS. CARPENTER: That's fine, Your Honor. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. So I'll just 0068 1 withhold ruling pending--I'll receive it once we 2 know when it was sent. 3 [Respondent's Exhibit No. 44 4 was marked for 5 identification.] 6 MS. CARPENTER: That sounds fine. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 8 BY MS. CARPENTER: 9 Q So just to back up for a moment, you 10 received a copy of this at the time it was-- 11 A Yes, I did. 12 Q Okay. And what's your understanding of 13 the reason that letter was written? 14 A Well, my understanding was that this was-- 15 MR. BAYLY: I'm sorry. I have to object 16 again. I don't think this is covered in the 17 prehearing statement as to why this letter was 18 written. There's no predicate that Dr. Craker has 19 contacted Senators Kennedy or Kerry. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Well, and the witness also 21 said that it was his understanding. Do you know? 22 Did you talk to the senators or their staff about 0069 1 this? 2 THE WITNESS: I have not talked to the, I 3 have not talked directly to either the two senators 4 about this. I have talked to staff of one of them. 5 I think it was Kennedy's staff, but I-- 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 7 THE WITNESS: Again, it's one of those 8 things that have fogged over. 9 JUDGE BITTNER: I think the letter has to 10 stand on its own. 11 MS. CARPENTER: That's fine. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 13 MS. CARPENTER: That's fine. 14 THE WITNESS: Their staff called me and 15 talked about the content of the letter. 16 BY MS. CARPENTER: 17 Q Okay. About this letter? 18 A Yes. 19 Q Okay. So you did have discussions with 20 them about the content of the letter? 21 A I had discussions with staff of one of the 22 two senators and I think it was Senator Kennedy's 0070 1 staff that contacted me. 2 Q Okay. All right. And do you know if they 3 wrote this letter in support of your application? 4 A I considered it in support of my 5 application, yes. 6 Q All right. Thanks. Do you know if in the 7 letter they referred to the necessity for adequate 8 competition in the field of manufacture? 9 MR. BAYLY: I have to object again. 10 MS. CARPENTER: I'm simply asking him 11 whether it's in the letter? 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Yeah, but the letter 13 speaks for itself. I'll read it. 14 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: So-- 16 MS. CARPENTER: That's fine, Your Honor. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: I really do read all this 18 stuff. 19 MS. CARPENTER: I take your word on that. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Well, I'm not sure I'm 21 going to read the entire Single Convention. I take 22 that back. 0071 1 [Laughter.] 2 BY MS. CARPENTER: 3 Q Dr. Craker, if I could ask you to turn to 4 Exhibit 50. Hopefully this exhibit will have fewer 5 issues. 6 A Yes. 7 Q Have you seen that letter before? 8 A Yes, this looks like a copy of the letter 9 that was sent to the Drug Enforcement 10 Administration by members of Congress from 11 Massachusetts. 12 Q Okay. And do you recall whether you saw 13 this letter at or around July 26, 2005? 14 A Again, the answer to that is yes, I 15 received a copy of this letter. The exact date I 16 cannot be sure, but somewhere around that time. 17 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. I move the 18 admission of Respondent's Exhibit 50 into the 19 record. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly? 21 MR. BAYLY: No objection. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: Received. 0072 1 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 2 [Respondent's Exhibit No. 50 3 was marked for identification 4 and received in evidence.] 5 JUDGE BITTNER: Doctor, do you know how 6 many--I'm embarrassed that I don't know this--how 7 many members of the House of Representatives 8 Massachusetts has? 9 THE WITNESS: I think there are ten or 11. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Do you know if any others 11 took a position on your application? 12 THE WITNESS: Not that have communicated 13 with me, no. 14 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 15 BY MS. CARPENTER: 16 Q If you would look back at the statute 17 again, Dr. Craker, in that big thick book. That 18 would be 21 U.S.C. 823 Subsection (a), the second 19 factor there. 20 A Yes. 21 Q Which reads "Compliance with Applicable 22 State and Local Law." 0073 1 A Yes. 2 Q Do you intend to comply with applicable 3 state and local law should you be granted the 4 registration you're seeking here? 5 A Certainly. 6 Q Will the cannabis grown under this license 7 be available to anyone other than those allowed to 8 obtain it in FDA approved research? 9 A No. 10 Q With regard to clinical studies, FDA 11 approved clinical studies? 12 A Yes, FDA approved clinical studies that 13 have permission to use this material in clinical 14 trials. 15 Q Okay. Would it also be available in some 16 circumstances to scientific users who do not intend 17 to use it in clinical trials but have legitimate 18 scientific, for example, vaporizer testing 19 techniques? 20 A Well, if they have the appropriate federal 21 permits. 22 Q Okay. 0074 1 A Just sending us a letter saying we'd like 2 some is not going to work. 3 Q Okay. So will you comply with state and 4 federal laws relating to the growing of any 5 cannabis that you're allowed to grow? 6 A Yes. We are prepared to meet those. 7 Q If you would look at factor number three. 8 A Yes. 9 Q And that refers to the promotion of 10 technical advances in the art of-- 11 JUDGE BITTNER: Actually I have--wait a 12 minute. It would help if I read the right section 13 of the statute. I'm sorry. 14 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 15 BY MS. CARPENTER: 16 Q That refers to the promotion of technical 17 advances in the art of manufacturing these 18 substances and the development of new substances? 19 Do you believe that your application will further 20 promote the technical advancement of these 21 substances? 22 MR. BAYLY: Objection. This is leading. 0075 1 I think we need to get a little more open 2 questions. 3 MS. CARPENTER: That's fine, Your Honor. 4 Are there any ways-- 5 JUDGE BITTNER: Yeah, would you rephrase 6 it? 7 MS. CARPENTER: Sorry. I beg your pardon? 8 JUDGE BITTNER: Would you rephrase the 9 question? 10 MS. CARPENTER: Yes, I will. 11 BY MS. CARPENTER: 12 Q Do you understand what promotion of 13 technical advances means? 14 A Well, I think I do. I mean it means 15 making scientific advances or technical advances in 16 something. 17 Q Okay. Do you think your application would 18 further technical advances? 19 A Well, I think there is two answers to that 20 as far as I'm concerned. One is that, yes, it 21 would make an advance in the understanding any 22 possible clinical use of marijuana if we were able 0076 1 to supply this to investigators to run trials, and, 2 secondly, as I've explained to DEA agents that 3 visited, that we would learn more about how the 4 environment affects the constituents in the plant 5 material which would enable, if this does become at 6 some stage down the road here, becomes a useful 7 drug, and that the manufacturer of it has to be 8 controlled under security conditions, they would 9 know the environment it needs to be grown under to 10 produce a clinical marijuana, medical marijuana. 11 MS. CARPENTER: All right. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Could I just ask-- 13 THE WITNESS: Yes. 14 JUDGE BITTNER: Because I want to make 15 sure I understand things. Doctor, would you 16 distinguish for me between cannabis and marijuana? 17 THE WITNESS: Well, the cannabis is the 18 Latin name for the marijuana plant. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: So can you use the two 20 terms interchangeably? 21 THE WITNESS: It can be used 22 interchangeably and they are. 0077 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Is there a 2 connotation of using one over the other? 3 THE WITNESS: I don't--there would have 4 been probably in the beginning, but I don't think 5 there is anymore. I think in the street, they're 6 accepted as the same. To me they are accepted as 7 the same thing. 8 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Thanks. Go ahead, 9 Ms. Carpenter. 10 THE WITNESS: The only different 11 distinction I would make is between medical 12 marijuana and marijuana, marijuana being associated 13 with recreational use and medical marijuana being 14 restricted to use for helping people. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 16 BY MS. CARPENTER: 17 Q And you mentioned earlier that part of the 18 work that Dr. Doblin had asked you all to help with 19 was to develop a vaporizer. Do you think that work 20 would lead to any technical advances? 21 A Well, whenever, I think whenever we can 22 talk about advances in drug delivery, we're talking 0078 1 about advances. I mean that's why clinical trials 2 need to be run. I'm not qualified at this time 3 without something that I can--a study that's been 4 run by medical doctors under appropriate conditions 5 to judge whether the vaporizer is better than 6 anything else. I don't have that expertise. 7 I assume that the purpose of manufacturing 8 this medical marijuana is to be able to test 9 various delivery systems and to determine if they 10 are effective and will help patients. 11 Q And in your opinion would that be a 12 technical advancement in medical marijuana? 13 A That would be an advance over smoking the 14 marijuana, yes. 15 Q Okay. If you would look at statutory 16 factor number four, prior conviction record of 17 applicant? 18 A Yes. 19 Q Have you ever been convicted of any 20 offenses, federal or state? 21 A I had a speeding ticket once. 22 Q That's it? 0079 1 A Yes. 2 Q Okay. Factor number five is past 3 experience in the manufacture of controlled 4 substances and the existence in the establishment 5 of effective control against diversion. What do 6 you understand that factor to mean? 7 A Well, I think what it means if I've had 8 any experience in the manufacture of these or 9 effective controls, and the answer is no, I have 10 not had any experience in that. 11 Q Okay. 12 A I've never grown marijuana or any other 13 controlled substance. We have not--I have no 14 experience in the control against diversion. 15 That's why we've been working closely with the DEA 16 agents that came to visit campus to set up 17 appropriate security conditions. 18 Q And have you agreed to meet all those 19 appropriate-- 20 A We've agreed to meet all of those. 21 Q So the fact that they're not there now 22 wouldn't mean that they wouldn't be there should 0080 1 you get the license? 2 A No, and the university understands that 3 we'd have to have appropriate security. 4 Q Okay. To your knowledge, is there anybody 5 in the country other than one person who has an 6 experience growing medical marijuana for clinical 7 use? 8 A Well, in growing, there are other people 9 that are growing it, but for manufacture purpose, 10 only one that I'm aware of for supplying product. 11 Q Okay. 12 A Other studies that I'm aware of have to do 13 with detecting marijuana fields, but those are just 14 for that type of purpose. 15 Q Okay. So to your knowledge, would there 16 be anybody else in the country who would have that 17 experience except for one person? 18 A No, I think that probably only the one 19 current under contract has any experience in 20 manufacture of this product. 21 Q Okay. All right. And factor number six 22 is such other factors as may be relevant to and 0081 1 consistent with the public health and safety. Do 2 you think that your application would further any 3 other factor that would fit into that category? 4 A Well, only that, you know, I'm looking 5 for--as a scientist, I'm looking to forward 6 advanced science in the study of this product and 7 that's what our contribution would be, to determine 8 if this material could be used clinically and if it 9 would help patients and our part would be as the 10 beginning part of being able to manufacture the 11 product which could be tested. 12 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. Could I have the 13 Court's indulgence for one moment? Your Honor, we 14 have no further questions at this time. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Let's go--oh, yes, 16 Doctor. 17 THE WITNESS: I have one correction I'd 18 like to make. 19 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 21 THE WITNESS: Okay. In reference to the 22 dates, in the second DEA visit as I was thinking 0082 1 about as we were going through here, and I had 2 mentioned it was in 2004 summer, but it could have 3 very well been the fall of 2003. Those dates are 4 merging on me here, the second visit by the DEA, 5 and I just want to be sure that we understand. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: You don't know how long 7 after the first visit it was? 8 THE WITNESS: Well, the first visit was in 9 2002. So it was probably over a year since the 10 first visit and that's about all I can--I recall it 11 was in the summer because we walked across campus, 12 and it was very beautiful weather. It was a 13 beautiful day and I remember talking about that, 14 but it could have been the fall of 2003 or the 15 spring of 2004, and I cannot, I cannot place it 16 exactly at this time. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Okay. Thank you. 18 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Dr. Craker. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Let's go off the record. 20 [Discussion held off the record and a 21 short recess was taken.] 22 JUDGE BITTNER: We are on the record. Ms. 0083 1 Carpenter, your next witness. 2 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Your Honor. 3 We'd like to call Dr. Irwin Martin. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: Doctor, raise your right 5 hand, please. 6 Whereupon, 7 IRWIN G. MARTIN, PH.D. 8 was called as a witness herein and, having been 9 first duly sworn by the Administrative Law Judge, 10 was examined and testified as follows: 11 JUDGE BITTNER: Please be seated. 12 DIRECT EXAMINATION 13 BY MS. CARPENTER: 14 Q Would you state your name and address for 15 the record, please? 16 A Irwin G. Martin, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 3812 17 Michael Road, North Ann Arbor, Michigan. 18 Q Thank you. What do you do, Dr. Martin? 19 A I'm currently retired. 20 Q Okay. What did you do before you retired? 21 A I was an executive in the pharmaceutical 22 industry and after that worked--did some consulting 0084 1 for a few years and then was an executive in the 2 nonprofit world as well. 3 Q Okay. Let me ask you to turn in one of 4 those big fat books up there to Respondent's 5 Exhibit 11. 6 A Okay. 7 Q Do you recognize that document? 8 A Yes. 9 Q What is it? 10 A It is my CV as posted on my Web site. 11 Q Okay. And did you create that document? 12 A Yes, I did. 13 MS. CARPENTER: I would move Respondent's 14 Exhibit 11 into evidence? 15 MR. BAYLY: No objection. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Received. 17 [Respondent's Exhibit No. 11 18 was marked for identification 19 and received in evidence.] 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Could I ask what is the 21 date of the document, Doctor? Do you know when you 22 prepared this? 0085 1 THE WITNESS: When I prepared this? 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Yes. 3 THE WITNESS: I constantly change it as I 4 add and subtract things. So it's sort of a fluid 5 document. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: So it's current? 7 THE WITNESS: It is current except that 8 I've recently taken off the picture because the 9 picture no longer applies, as you can probably 10 tell. 11 [Laughter.] 12 JUDGE BITTNER: I don't know. I thought 13 it was pretty good. I like the tie. 14 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: So are you still the 16 acting President of the DIA Foundation? 17 THE WITNESS: No, the new document has a 18 through 2005 there. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Okay. Go ahead, 20 Ms. Carpenter. 21 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you, Your Honor. 22 BY MS. CARPENTER: 0086 1 Q Let's talk a little bit about your 2 education first. 3 A Sure. 4 Q Where did you receive your degrees? 5 A I have an undergraduate degree in biology 6 and environmental studies from Brandeis University 7 and a doctorate in zoology from the University of 8 Massachusetts. 9 Q Okay. Have you taken any other courses 10 along the way? 11 A I've taken a number of business courses at 12 Drexel University School of Business and the 13 Wharton School at University of Pennsylvania. 14 Q Okay. And what did you do after you 15 graduated, got your doctorate? 16 A I had a post-doc position at the Monell 17 Chemical Senses Center at the University of 18 Pennsylvania. 19 Q And what did you do there? 20 A I studied olfaction in guinea pigs. 21 Q Okay. And where did you go from there? 22 A I was hired by SmithKline Beckman 0087 1 Corporation into a management training position. 2 Q And what were you training to manage? 3 A Regulatory affairs and pharmaceuticals. 4 Q So when was that? 5 A When was that? 6 Q When did you start at SmithKline? 7 A In 1982. 8 Q Okay. And what did you do in that 9 position? 10 A Well, if for that six year period at 11 SmithKline and French, and I believe it was 12 SmithKline and French for most of those six years--we kept 13 changing names--I was in regulatory affairs 14 responsible in various levels of responsibility, 15 increasing levels of responsibility. At all 16 levels, however, my primary role was to represent 17 the company at the FDA, be the liaison for the R&D 18 division to the FDA as well as advise internally my 19 colleagues in R&D on FDA issues, policies, et 20 cetera. 21 Q Okay. And were you working with regard to 22 a specific new drug that was being developed? 0088 1 A Yes, a number of new drugs, yes. 2 Q Okay. When you left SmithKline, where did 3 you go from there? 4 A I had a short stint at Squibb, the Squibb 5 Institute, and left there after they were acquired 6 by Bristol-Myers. 7 Q And what did you do at Squibb? 8 A Similar position. I was the Director of 9 Regulatory Affairs. 10 Q Director of Regulatory Affairs. And so 11 what did that involve at Squibb? 12 A Again, the same type of responsibilities, 13 just a larger portfolio of products representing 14 the company at the FDA and then providing 15 internally--my customer was the R&D Division to 16 whom I gave advice similar to what the FDA would 17 be. 18 Q Just be clear. R&D stands for? 19 A Research and development. 20 Q Okay. And that would be for 21 pharmaceutical products? 22 A Right. 0089 1 Q Okay. And after you left Squibb, where 2 did you go? 3 A To Parke-Davis which was the 4 pharmaceutical research division of the Warner- 5 Lambert Company. 6 Q All right. And how long did you stay 7 there? 8 A That was ten years. 9 Q And what did you do while you were there? 10 A Again, similar responsibilities. At this 11 point, I was now heading first the U.S. Division 12 for Regulatory Affairs and then my last year there 13 I headed International Regulatory Affairs. 14 Q Okay. And so did you continue to work 15 with liaison with the FDA in those positions? 16 A Up until that last year, yes. 17 Q Okay. And that was with regard to new 18 drugs being developed? 19 A Again, new drug development; right. 20 Q Was it also in regard to other new 21 indications for previously developed drugs or? 22 A It was drugs in development, marketed 0090 1 drugs, which would include developing drugs for new 2 indications, new formulations, responsible for the 3 regulatory advice related to the advertising and 4 promotion of drugs as well. 5 Q Okay. So can you just--take your 6 experience at Parke-Davis, what would be the 7 experience, what would be the steps you would go 8 through as the representative for Parke-Davis in 9 terms of getting a new drug developed? How would 10 that start out? 11 A The Research Division discovers a 12 compound. It would be within the research end of 13 things before we move into development. They would 14 come forward with an idea. The molecule would be 15 synthesized. Initial animal testing would be done 16 to show that it seems to have some, that it's 17 pharmacologically active, that it actually does 18 something. 19 Once the research scientists have what 20 they think is a viable product, it comes forward to 21 a management team, who agrees or not agrees that we 22 can move forward towards testing in humans, at 0091 1 which point a project team is assembled. 2 Regulatory affairs is part of that project team. 3 The team works together towards an IND, an 4 Investigational New Drug Application, which would 5 allow the company to study the drug for the first 6 time in humans. 7 Q So after you've done the animal research, 8 would you meet with the FDA to propose the IND or 9 how does that happen? 10 A Depending on the type of drug and whether 11 it is a completely new pharmacologic class, if that 12 were the case, indeed we would be meeting with the 13 FDA well before the IND. If it's another drug of a 14 well-known class, we might not meet with the FDA 15 until after we submit the IND. 16 Q Okay. 17 A But there is constant dialogue with the 18 agency throughout the drug development process. 19 Q And again if you could just state, what is 20 an IND again? 21 A Investigational New Drug Application. 22 Q Okay. And what does that do? What does 0092 1 getting an IND do? 2 A Well, technically, by statute, it allows 3 you to shift drug across state lines for clinical 4 testing. 5 Q Okay. So you met with the FDA, you've 6 submitted an IND; do they have to approve an IND? 7 A An IND goes into effect in 30 days unless 8 the FDA objects and puts it on hold. 9 Q Okay. 10 A So they review INDs very quickly. 11 Q So after the IND is-- 12 A In effect. 13 Q --in effect, what happens next in that 14 drug development process? 15 A Phase 1 studies are conducted. Phase 1 16 studies are typically in healthy volunteers. This 17 basically is to show obviously the initial safety 18 of the drug, whether there is some very quick 19 unpleasantry that is discovered, but most 20 importantly--well, that's important, but in 21 addition, how the drug is handled by the body, the 22 biopharmaceutics of the drug, if you will. 0093 1 So, how much drug you take in a tablet or 2 in a solution and how much gets into the 3 bloodstream, how that's excreted, how long it lasts 4 in the blood. Those are all the Phase 1 studies. 5 Q Okay. And are you dealing with the FDA 6 during the Phase 1 study? 7 A Absolutely. 8 Q Okay. And what happens next? 9 A Once the company feels they have 10 sufficient data to proceed to patients, both safety 11 and biopharmaceutical data, they move on to Phase 12 2, Phase 2A would be small patient studies. You 13 pick a patient class that is your intended patient 14 group when the drug is actually marketed, and this 15 is your first test of efficacy. 16 If you have a blood pressure drug, does it 17 lower blood pressure. If you have a lipid lowering 18 drug, does it lower lipids? This is really your 19 first test in patients. 20 Q So the difference between Phase 1 and 21 Phase 2, they're both in people, but Phase 2 is the 22 first time you're studying whether the drug does 0094 1 what it's supposed to do; is that accurate? 2 A Right. It's the first time it's actually 3 in patients. 4 Q Okay. 5 A As opposed to healthy volunteers. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: At what point are you 7 looking at what the impact of the drug on the body 8 is? Both or do you start that in Phase 1? 9 THE WITNESS: Well, always. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 11 THE WITNESS: Any time you put it in 12 people, you're clearly measuring what the drug is 13 doing. For instance, lipid lowering drugs while 14 you may not be looking at a patient class, Phase 1 15 studies, you can see whether the lipids are lowered 16 because the drug would have the effect even in 17 healthy people. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 19 THE WITNESS: So you're always measuring 20 those sort of endpoints. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: I also have an irrelevant 22 question that's been bothering me. 0095 1 THE WITNESS: Okay. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: That is why are the 3 initials for an Investigational New Drug 4 Application IND without the "A" at the end? 5 THE WITNESS: It's actually a long story 6 that has an answer. 7 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 8 THE WITNESS: The initial law or the 9 initial regulation was written exemption for blah-blah-blah- 10 blah. It was like a really long thing, 11 and IND was picked out of that. It was only later 12 that they changed the name of the application to an 13 Investigational New Drug Application, but by that 14 time, the IND term had been so ingrained that 15 people just kept calling it IND. Sort of like the 16 CDC. 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 18 THE WITNESS: You know people still call 19 it the CDC, but it's actually the CDC and whatever 20 the other letter is, you know. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. So the acronym IND 22 stands for Investigational New Drug Application. 0096 1 THE WITNESS: Application, yes. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. I just kept 3 wondering why. 4 THE WITNESS: Yeah, it's-- 5 JUDGE BITTNER: I'm sorry. Go ahead, Ms. 6 Carpenter. 7 MS. CARPENTER: That's quite all right. I 8 had that question myself. I just didn't have the 9 nerve to ask it. 10 BY MS. CARPENTER: 11 Q So I think you were describing the Phase 2 12 studies. 13 A Right. 14 Q And again, is the FDA involved with those? 15 A The FDA reviews every--well, the FDA 16 certainly has the ability to review every protocol 17 that is submitted. You need to submit a clinical 18 protocol before conducting any study in humans. So 19 the FDA is supposed to look at every protocol 20 submitted. I have no reason to think they don't 21 because, again, their highest priority review--they 22 only have 30 days to object. 0097 1 Initially, they don't have any time to 2 object. If you submit a new protocol, technically 3 you can go ahead and start that protocol 4 immediately. So typically they're looking at these 5 things fairly readily. So there's dialogue back 6 and forth, formal, informal. FDA will provide 7 comments on protocols if they think it's a safety 8 issue. 9 So if they think that you're taking undue 10 risks with patients you will get a formal reply. 11 If they think you're doing something silly and 12 simply wasting your own money, you're not likely to 13 get any formal reply. 14 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: You were on Phase 2A, I 16 think, before-- 17 THE WITNESS: Right, right. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: --got off my on my 19 question. 20 THE WITNESS: Yeah. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay 22 BY MS. CARPENTER: 0098 1 Q And what would Phase 2B be? 2 A Phase 2B is the larger proof of efficacy 3 studies. So now you actually power the study with 4 enough patients so you can meet a statistical p-value. You 5 can actually say with some statistical 6 certainty that indeed the drug shows efficacy. So 7 these are-- 8 Q And what--sorry. Go ahead. 9 A So you're moving from tens of patients to 10 hundreds of patients. 11 Q And what is efficacy just to be clear? 12 A Does the drug have the clinical effect 13 that it was intended to? Does it lower blood 14 pressure? Does it lower lipids? Does it, you 15 know, slow the growth of a tumor or whatever your 16 intended clinical endpoint is. 17 Q Okay. And is there a Phase 2C? 18 A No. 19 Q Okay. 20 A Then there is Phase 3. And Phase 3 are 21 the large safety studies so you've moved from tens 22 of patients to hundreds of patients, and now you're 0099 1 into thousands of patients. So you're once again 2 proving your efficacy, but at this point collecting 3 safety data. You're always collecting safety data, 4 but now in thousands of patients you have a safety 5 database that is a lot more reliable than simply a 6 few hundred patients. 7 So Phase 3 is what you complete and then 8 you're ready to go to the FDA with a package of 9 thousands of patients and saying we think this drug 10 is suitable for marketing. 11 Q Okay. And so after you take that package 12 in, is that called something else? 13 A I wish you could just take it in. You 14 have to actually write a New Drug Application, an 15 NDA, which summarizes all these thousands of 16 patients as well as all the, how the drug is made 17 and manufactured and the controls there, all the 18 preclinical, all the animal testing, so everything 19 you ever know about the drug. And basically the 20 NDA regulations are written, you know, tells A, 21 tells B, it tells C, and then the last one is 22 basically and tells everything else. 0100 1 So anything you know about the drug, you 2 assemble into a coherent document. Today, this is 3 done electronically and send it into the FDA as a 4 New Drug Application. 5 Q Okay. And what does the FDA then do? 6 A The FDA has by agreement ten months to 7 review the document. That doesn't mean approve it 8 or reject it, but they have to at least complete 9 the review within ten months. They provide 10 comments or they provide an approval, and then 11 there is discussion about what other data are 12 requested or how can I interpret these data; they 13 don't seem to make sense? And then hopefully the 14 company and the agency discuss labeling and the 15 drug is hopefully then approved. 16 Q Okay. And what happens after it's 17 approved? 18 A Companies often, usually because they want 19 to, sometimes because the FDA asks them to, conduct 20 Phase 4 studies, and these are studies in marketed 21 products either to gather additional safety 22 information, to gather efficacy information in a 0101 1 new patient population, maybe for a new indication. 2 If you have a heart failure drug, maybe you're 3 going to test it in, you know, blood pressure, you 4 know, similar types of indications, but yet those 5 were not done in the initial NDA. So those are 6 called supplemental NDAs. 7 Q Okay. And then once it's approved, it's 8 marketed as it's been approved, I presume? 9 A Right. And there is obviously data 10 collected post-marketing on safety and always 11 submitted. So the dialogue with the FDA is 12 constant throughout the life of a drug. 13 Q Okay. Dr. Martin, do you have any 14 academic affiliations or have you had them in the 15 past? 16 A I've had an adjunct professorship at 17 University of Michigan in the College of Pharmacy 18 as well as at Eastern Michigan University in their 19 School of Allied Health, I believe, is the title. 20 Q And did you give talks or teach classes on 21 drug development issues? 22 A I lectured on regulatory affairs and drug 0102 1 development as well as was a preceptor for pharmacy 2 students within Parke-Davis. 3 Q Okay. And what professional associations 4 do you have? 5 A I've been a long-time member of the Drug 6 Information Association. 7 Q Can you tell us what that is? 8 A Drug Information Association, or DIA, is a 9 nonprofit neutral organization that provides 10 primarily educational and networking opportunities 11 for people within the pharmaceutical and related 12 health care fields. Members are from academia, 13 from the industry, from the regulators themselves, 14 from governments, and there are meetings, 15 workshops. 16 We just had an annual meeting here in 17 Washington back in June where we had approximately 18 8,000 people. So it is a large, very respected, I 19 believe, organization. Again, neutral. We take no 20 positions. I keep saying "we" even though I'm no 21 longer with them so forgive me for that. It should 22 be "they" at this point. 0103 1 Q And what were the positions that you held 2 at the DIA? 3 A As a volunteer, while I was still in 4 industry, I was, again, moved up through the ranks, 5 became a member of the board and then was president 6 of the association. And after I left the industry 7 and I was consulting, DIA then offered me a full-time job 8 and I was Associate Executive Director and 9 then Acting Executive Director up through the 10 beginning of this year. 11 Q Okay. What other professional 12 associations are you affiliated with? 13 A I had been a member of the Food and Drug 14 Law Institute. When I was a consultant I was a 15 member of that. I've been a long-time member of 16 the Regulatory Affairs Professional Society and I 17 was a, when I was in industry, I was an active 18 volunteer for PhRMA which is the trade organization 19 of the pharmaceutical industry and did a lot of 20 work with them, for them. 21 Q Have you done presentations for those 22 organizations relating to drug development? 0104 1 A I've done a number of presentations, 2 worldwide for a number of organizations relating to 3 primarily regulatory affairs, drug development, 4 submitting NDAs and, you know, new technology 5 related to that. 6 Q Okay. Have you also made presentations to 7 the FDA? 8 A Yes, actually I was, I had the honor of 9 being the first industry lecturer at the FDA new 10 reviewer training course. They wanted to have 11 someone from the other side of the table come and 12 speak to their new reviewers. That was probably 13 one of my favorite things to do. 14 Q Okay. Can you give us an estimate as to--well, 15 let me ask first. How long does it take to 16 get a new drug through the very beginning stages 17 through market approval, just a ball park? 18 A Well, a lot depends on how you define 19 "beginning" because there may be a ten year 20 research program before the first compound is even 21 discovered, but once you have a compound that you 22 say is a lead candidate and you want to actually 0105 1 bring that to the market, I think the average tends 2 to be seven, eight years now, something like that. 3 Q Okay. And so over the course of your 4 career, can you ball park how many new drugs that 5 you've shepherded through this new drug development 6 process? 7 A Well, in a 20 plus year career, I'm 8 guessing it was on the order of ten or 12. 9 Q Okay. And were there other drugs that you 10 helped develop for new indications? 11 A Oh, yeah, many. I have no idea, but it 12 was more in the dozens. 13 Q Okay. And you would shepherd that through 14 the process at FDA in a similar way? 15 A Right, right. 16 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. Your Honor, at this 17 time, I would tender Dr. Martin as an expert in new 18 drug development. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Mr. Bayly? 20 MR. BAYLY: No objection. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Granted. Could I just 22 ask, the DIA Foundation you reference, is that an 0106 1 affiliate with the Drug Information Association? 2 THE WITNESS: Right. 3 JUDGE BITTNER: And it's a 501(c)(3)? 4 THE WITNESS: Yes, they're both 5 501(c)(3)s. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Oh, okay. So what's the 7 difference between what they do? 8 THE WITNESS: Oh, how much time do we 9 have? The foundation was set up to provide grants 10 and right now the foundation's main mission is to 11 provide grants that no one else can provide and 12 that is to actually governments. So that 13 developing countries can send their regulators to 14 the FDA, to the EMEA, to the TJA in Australia, to 15 learn from their colleagues. Where their country 16 doesn't have enough money to actually spend, you 17 know, for travel and room and board where they get 18 there, the foundation will provide grants on the 19 order of $50,000 or so. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: So it's really to provide 21 training to potential regulators? 22 THE WITNESS: Right. 0107 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 2 THE WITNESS: That's the primary purpose. 3 We also have given academic grants, modest research 4 grants on the 15, $20,000 range, but right now the 5 thrust is to do those things that no one else can 6 do, and the reason DIA can do it is, again, because 7 it's that neutral forum that the FDA and other 8 governments will accept money from. 9 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Go ahead, Ms. 10 Carpenter. 11 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you. 12 BY MS. CARPENTER: 13 Q Dr. Martin, we've talked a little bit 14 about how you would take a drug through the 15 process, but we haven't talked about the FDA looks 16 at the drug. So when a new drug or IND comes 17 through the door, what is it that the FDA is 18 evaluating? 19 A The primary thing--I should say once they 20 receive a document, they create a parallel group to 21 the industry group. The industry has a project 22 team. The FDA then creates a review team which has 0108 1 technical experts from all their disciplines. 2 Their primary responsibility is to assure public 3 safety, not to assure new drugs are developed. 4 That is part of their mission, but their 5 primary mission is to protect the public. So they 6 review particular INDs for safety issues. 7 Q Okay. 8 A And again object within that 30-day period 9 if they see something. 10 Q All right. Do they also--what else do 11 they review for, for efficacy or any other? 12 A Well, as you move through the drug 13 development process and eventually towards an NDA 14 and then ask for marketing approval, the main 15 criteria upon which drugs are approved is basically 16 safety, efficacy and quality. Those are the 17 international terminology. 18 Safety being not just the clinical safety 19 but all the animal data would be reviewed by their 20 safety experts. So this is short term as well as 21 long term. Carcinogenicity studies in animals. 22 Efficacy is all the clinical data to 0109 1 assure that indeed the drug does do what it is 2 alleged to do, and then quality is all the 3 manufacturing controls to assure that indeed the 4 tablet that was tested or the dosage form that was 5 tested in the clinic is the same as the patient 6 takes in his or her doctor's office as well as two 7 years later, it's exactly the same product. 8 So that those three things is what 9 determines whether a drug can be approved. 10 Q Okay. 11 A And the control of the formulation is a 12 very important part of that. 13 Q Okay. Let's talk a little bit about 14 quality. How would a company go about assuring the 15 quality that you're talking about of making sure 16 that what is tested in the clinical studies is the 17 same thing that's delivered to a patient? 18 A You have to test for consistency. You 19 have to test batch to batch whether the product is 20 exactly the same. You have to test for potency so 21 that, again, what was tested in Phase 1 is the same 22 as tested in Phase 2 as eventually on the 0110 1 marketplace. This is done by a number of 2 techniques, very complex analytical tools to assure 3 that you're actually testing the formulations, 4 you're testing the bulk drug before it's 5 formulated. It's a fairly rigorous thing. 6 Q Okay. And I presume that would vary 7 somewhat from product to product, what would be 8 required for quality? 9 A Well, what would be required doesn't 10 really vary, but how one meets those requirements 11 varies greatly. If you have a simple small 12 molecule that was designed to affect a particular 13 receptor, it is fairly easy to know whether the 14 tablet that tested here is the same as the tablet 15 you tested here because your analytical analysis 16 will show you the exact same amount of that 17 particular single small molecule because you know 18 that is the active component. 19 Some products are much more complex. 20 Botanicals is a great example. Biotechnology 21 derived products where you have proteins and all 22 other things that are being made at the same time 0111 1 as that protein. 2 One of my favorite examples is a very 3 well-known drug called Premarin which actually 4 stands for pregnant mare urine, and this is a 5 naturally derived product from pregnant horses, and 6 the active component is a whole combination of 7 equine estrogens and the FDA was able to review 8 that and approve it and it is a remarkably complex 9 product. So the answer to the question I guess is 10 the requirements are the same, but how you meet 11 those requirements, yes, is remarkably variable. 12 Q Okay. You mentioned botanicals. Can 13 plants or botanicals ever be approved as a matter 14 of quality? 15 A Well, last year, and while I wasn't active 16 in the industry, I do know that they did issue a 17 guidance document for how to submit an application, 18 a new drug application for botanically derived 19 material, and at a quick review of it, the standard 20 seemed fairly similar. 21 So it seems that the FDA is willing to 22 accept a botanically derived product and hold it to 0112 1 the same standards as any other product. 2 Q And did you happen to notice whether that 3 review mentions marijuana at all? 4 A There was-- 5 MR. BAYLY: Objection, Your Honor. There 6 is absolutely nothing in this prehearing statement 7 where there's a proffer of the witness talking 8 about a particular botanical, particularly 9 marijuana. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Let me look. I think this 11 was in your original prehearing statement? 12 MS. CARPENTER: I believe it was the same 13 in the supplemental, Your Honor. I tried to make 14 it all one document for ease of reference. 15 MR. BAYLY: As I recall, the supplemental 16 incorporated the initial-- 17 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 18 MS. CARPENTER: It did. 19 MR. BAYLY: --and then added, which I 20 think is a pretty good idea really. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Actually I agree with you. 22 MS. CARPENTER: Your Honor, the only thing 0113 1 I would point out is he does talk about the 2 requirements, simply the requirements for the 3 approval of new drugs and biologics, and I assumed, 4 but I may be wrong that biologics included 5 botanicals. I may have-- 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Let me just find it. Let' 7 see. 8 MS. CARPENTER: It may be my linguistic 9 fault. That line is--it's the first line of the 10 second paragraph. 11 JUDGE BITTNER: I'm lost. 12 MS. CARPENTER: It's under the proposed 13 testimony of Irwin Martin which is-- 14 JUDGE BITTNER: Right. 15 MS. CARPENTER: --the second one under the 16 summary of testimony. Second paragraph, first 17 sentence. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Will discuss the fact that 19 the major developed regions of the world. That's 20 what I have. 21 MS. CARPENTER: Have unified their 22 requirements for the approval of new drugs and 0114 1 biologics. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Oh, I see. 3 MS. CARPENTER: This is not extensive 4 testimony, Your Honor, but-- 5 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. I'll overrule the 6 objection. 7 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you. 8 MR. BAYLY: Judge Bittner, then in that 9 event, we have proffered Dr. Ouslander. I don't 10 know if he's going to come or not. It looks more 11 like he's going to come and I'm going to ask that 12 he be able to testify about marijuana if Dr. Martin 13 is going to get into that. I just don't think that 14 biologics--it may--really stretching it--talk 15 about, give us a slight hint about maybe talking 16 about botanicals in general, but particularly not 17 marijuana. 18 So we simply, this is not simply notice 19 that we have to take this on, so the best we can do 20 is to have Dr. Ouslander come in here and rebut it 21 even though I will admit that on our supplemental 22 prehearing statement, we didn't mention this issue. 0115 1 JUDGE BITTNER: I think that's fair. 2 MS. CARPENTER: I think that's fair, too, 3 Your Honor, and I would say it's one question about 4 marijuana which is simply--and I don't think he's 5 even answered if he knows. 6 BY MS. CARPENTER: 7 Q So it's do you know if this botanical 8 guidelines that you mentioned mentions marijuana at 9 all? 10 A I believe there is a parenthetical, for 11 example. 12 Q Okay. 13 A And that was it. It was certainly not 14 directed towards marijuana. 15 Q Thank you. 16 A And that's all I'm going to say about 17 marijuana. 18 [Laughter.] 19 BY MS. CARPENTER: 20 Q So given these requirements to meet 21 safety, efficacy and quality, as a company is 22 thinking about developing a new drug, what are some 0116 1 of the first steps a company has to take before it 2 even decides to move to the IND process? 3 A Well, it's a very complex decision. One 4 of the most important meetings that are held in a 5 research and development company is whether to move 6 forward with a new drug candidate and there's a 7 number of questions that management asks. One, 8 does it seem to work? And two, does it, how safe 9 does it seem to be? 10 And one of the most important is can we 11 make it and can we make it at a reasonable price 12 and can we assure ourselves that we'll continue to 13 be able to make it at a reasonable price. 14 Q Okay. So I guess you need a source for 15 the product? 16 A Right. Where are we getting it? Are we 17 making it? Are we buying it? Can it be made again 18 reasonably? You don't want to market drugs that 19 are going to cost thousands of dollars to the 20 patient when they can then take an aspirin instead, 21 for instance. 22 Q Okay. 0117 1 A It doesn't make sense. 2 Q And when they're deciding on what source 3 they're going to use to obtain the either raw 4 ingredients or the product itself, what are the 5 things that you would think about? 6 A Well, I would think one of the most 7 important decisions management has to make is do we 8 have a consistent source, can we control that 9 source? For again, small molecules that we can 10 synthesize, the company controls that. If they are 11 more complex molecules or these mixtures, you know, 12 when Wyeth was making Premarin, you know, can we 13 continue to have pregnant mares to produce enough 14 urine for us? And they therefore went and built 15 huge farms so that they could control that raw 16 substance. 17 So any company would be unlikely to give a 18 positive development recommendation if they're not 19 assured that they will have a drug supply that is 20 unchanging and reliable. 21 Q So it needs to be reliable in terms of its 22 quantity or in terms of its make up or what? 0118 1 A Well, reliable in that can we assure that 2 we can get it? Can we assure that it won't change? 3 Can we assure that it's consistent? One of the 4 biggest problems in drug development is the 5 unfortunate need sometimes to repeat studies. If 6 you have a new formulation or your drug source has 7 changed, you may need to repeat years worth of data 8 because you can no longer assure that the data you 9 developed with this earlier version of this drug 10 will actually be the same drug as you now have. 11 So companies go out of their way to assure 12 at Phase 1 or certainly at Phase 2A that that drug 13 substance is what they will develop throughout drug 14 development. Repeating studies is a very costly, 15 both in money and time, endeavor. 16 Q And having a reliable and a consistent 17 source would prevent that or at least come as close 18 as possible? 19 A You would hope so. Right. 20 Q Is it important to be able to choose as a 21 drug developer exactly what components are in the 22 product? 0119 1 A Are in the? 2 Q In the product that you're developing? 3 A Well, it's important to be able to control 4 it. You may not always be able to choose. Again, 5 if it's a naturally derived product, you may not 6 have all those answers. I keep coming back to 7 Premarin, but, you know, again Wyeth did not 8 necessarily choose which of those equine estrogens 9 to develop, but they had to assure that once they 10 had that mixture, that that stated consistent, so 11 it's not necessarily the choice, but it's the 12 ability to control once you've made--once that 13 choice has been handed you. 14 Q Okay. And if there were differences in a 15 product, that different sorts of mares produced 16 different sorts of urine, for example, would it be 17 important for Wyeth to be able to choose which 18 mares were going to produce the urine it was going 19 to use? 20 A Yeah, I think the analogy isn't quite 21 working, but-- 22 Q Probably not. 0120 1 [Laughter.] 2 BY MS. CARPENTER: 3 Q Having not much familiarity with mare's 4 urine and happy that way. 5 A Yeah. I don't want anybody to think that 6 women are actually taking urine. You know it's a 7 little bit more synthesized, purified than that. 8 But it is important to be able to control the 9 source, especially any naturally derived product 10 because there are variations, yes. 11 Q Okay. And what would be the effect on the 12 development of a new drug, in your opinion, if a 13 developer cannot be sure that they have a reliable 14 and consistent supply, as you've described? 15 A Well, if you know from the beginning of 16 development that you're not going to have a 17 reliable consistent source, the impact is there is 18 no development. No company, no reasonably 19 business-oriented company would ever develop a 20 product. 21 If during the course of development, 22 something changes because there is something out of 0121 1 your control or that a change was made because it 2 may actually work towards a better product, then 3 there's two things you do. One is you try and show 4 biopharmaceutically--in other words, 5 pharmcokinetically like you do in Phase 1, is this 6 new product equivalent? Does the body use this new 7 product the same way it used the old product? 8 If that can't be done because of the 9 complexity or the lack of analytical technique, 10 then you basically start over. So those are your 11 two choices. 12 Q Okay. Just a couple of other quick 13 questions. One is do you know what orphan drug 14 status is? 15 A Yes. 16 Q Can you explain to the Court what that is? 17 A I can explain very broadly, not being an 18 expert, but I have submitted one or two orphan drug 19 applications in my life. Basically the orphan drug 20 statute was passed to give some financial incentive 21 to companies to develop drugs that seem to be 22 effective or at least have been alluded to be 0122 1 effective for very small patient populations, and I 2 believe the number is 200,000 patients or less in 3 the U.S. so that these patients typically would not 4 have had the benefit of a potentially efficacious 5 drug because the economics were not there for the 6 company. 7 It costs hundreds of millions of dollars 8 to develop a drug, and develop a drug for 200,000 9 people, no company would ever get the return on 10 that investment. So a law was passed to allow 11 companies to recoup tax credits as well as get 12 research grants to develop drugs for small 13 populations. 14 Q Okay. So if a company had an orphan drug 15 status, it would have a financial interest in 16 developing that drug? 17 A It would not have a financial 18 disadvantage. How is that? 19 Q Okay. 20 A I think that's a more accurate way of 21 saying it. 22 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. That's fine. 0123 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Doctor, what happens if 2 there's a small population in the United States, 3 but a large population someplace else, is that 4 considered? 5 THE WITNESS: I believe, for malaria, for 6 instance, let's say, I believe you could get orphan 7 drug status in the U.S., but most companies would 8 be developing it overseas anyhow because you 9 wouldn't be getting tax credit for clinical studies 10 in the U.S. since you wouldn't be doing your 11 clinical studies in the U.S. because there would be 12 so few patients. You'd be doing your clinical 13 studies elsewhere. 14 JUDGE BITTNER: So it just becomes 15 irrelevant? 16 THE WITNESS: I believe so. Again, I'm 17 not an expert in that. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 19 BY MS. CARPENTER: 20 Q Can a drug developer develop an orphan 21 status drug without similar concerns about source 22 and consistency and availability of the product 0124 1 that you discussed earlier? 2 A If a drug is a true orphan, I would think 3 those sort of decisions are even more important 4 because you're sort of on the edge of profitability 5 or at least maybe not even profitability. You're 6 sort of on the edge of losing a lot of money, and 7 if indeed drug development is going to cost you 8 even more, then that might be a way to make that 9 decision to stop development even earlier if the 10 market is so small to start with. 11 This is in answer to a question about the 12 reliability of the source. 13 Q Thank you. 14 A I want to make sure I tie this long-winded 15 answer back together. 16 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. Thank you. The 17 Court's indulgence for one minute. Okay. I think 18 we have no further questions, Your Honor. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Mr. Bayly. 20 MR. BAYLY: Thank you, Judge Bittner. 21 CROSS-EXAMINATION 22 BY MR. BAYLY: 0125 1 Q Good morning, Dr. Martin. 2 A Good morning. 3 Q I'm Brian Bayly. I'm, as you probably may 4 have heard, I'm one of the Government attorneys, 5 and I just want to ask you a few questions about 6 the testimony that you just gave. 7 You said you retired. When did you 8 retire? 9 A I left DIA at the end of March of this 10 year. 11 Q Oh, okay. And I think you already talked 12 about or you indicated you're very familiar with an 13 NDA, or New Drug Application? 14 A Right. 15 Q Okay. Are you familiar with what I would 16 term an abuse liability assessment in terms of 17 marking a potential drug? 18 A I know that's part of the NDA. 19 Q Okay. All right. Would you explain what 20 that is to us, Dr. Martin? 21 A Well, I can tell you that of all the drugs 22 I've developed I've never had to complete that 0126 1 portion. 2 Q You never had what? 3 A I never had to complete that part because 4 we didn't develop drugs that had abuse potential. 5 Q Okay. 6 A I know it's one of the boxes one has to 7 check on the NDA form. Having, I've never needed 8 to complete that. 9 Q Well, would, then does that mean that you 10 didn't have to deal with marketing a drug that 11 would be controlled? 12 A That's correct. 13 Q I just want to make sure I got what you 14 said on direct correctly here, but I think you 15 indicated that in your career, you were responsible 16 for getting ten to 12 drugs on the market; is that 17 correct? 18 A The numbers are difficult to remember. 19 Q I'm not going to hold you to any specific 20 numbers, but it's-- 21 A I believe that's approximately the number 22 of NDAs that I've worked on, I've been responsible 0127 1 for, yes. 2 Q And what I'm interested in, Dr. Martin, is 3 that number you're talking about the drugs that 4 actually got approved and launched for marketing; 5 is that correct? 6 A I think all but one of those NDAs was 7 actually approved. 8 Q All but one? 9 A Yeah. 10 Q Okay. And how many, can you say 11 approximately how many drugs did you look into 12 that--well, let me put it this way. Can you say 13 how many INDs you were involved in? 14 A I have no way. Many, many. 15 Q A lot? 16 A Yeah. I think the numbers tend to be ten 17 NDAs to one--ten INDs to one NDA, in that order. 18 So if my career is representative of the industry, 19 then you might multiply that by ten. 20 Q So would you then represent that's roughly 21 the ratio of INDs to NDAs? 22 A For drugs that are actually submitted and 0128 1 go into clinical testing, I believe the number is 2 about ten percent wind up actually on the market. 3 I don't know exactly but that's certainly the order 4 of magnitude. 5 Q Ball park figure? 6 A Yeah. 7 Q And of those, just to make sure now, of 8 the ten percent of the NDAs that get approved then, 9 of those how many actually get marketed, and I 10 think you said in your experience, one did not? 11 A Let me restate that if you don't mind. 12 Q Sure. 13 A Of the ten percent that get submitted as 14 an IND, they get studied in humans. Ten percent 15 get marketed. 16 Q Okay. 17 A That's a different question, and the one 18 out of ten or so that was not approved was an NDA. 19 It simply was withdrawn before it was approved. 20 Okay. Do you understand? 21 Q Well, was an NDA submitted-- 22 A Yes. 0129 1 Q --and then withdrawn? 2 A Yes. 3 Q Okay. 4 A Yeah. 5 JUDGE BITTNER: So that was a kind of 6 sport case? 7 THE WITNESS: It was kind of--sorry? 8 JUDGE BITTNER: Sport case? It was an 9 unusual situation? 10 THE WITNESS: We like to think so. I mean 11 it was withdrawn for a business decision. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 13 BY MR. BAYLY: 14 Q But that happens? That's not unusual? 15 A Yes, yeah, clearly. Well, I wouldn't say 16 it's unusual. It's unusual, not unheard of. 17 Companies tend not to develop compounds and then 18 decide not to pursue them. That's not a smart 19 thing to do. 20 Q Dr. Martin, you've testified about the 21 source of supply for marketing a drug and the 22 consistency, but as based upon your experience and 0130 1 your education, are there other factors that a 2 pharmaceutical company would consider before 3 launching or getting an IND, before they would, and 4 simultaneously consider the source of supply? 5 A Oh, of course. There's many factors. I'm 6 saying three of the most important are the ones I 7 identified. 8 Q Okay. 9 A I'm not sure--well, I'll let you ask the 10 question. 11 MR. BAYLY: Right. Judge Bittner, I would 12 request that we can give Dr. Martin Respondent 13 Exhibit No. 1. 14 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 15 BY MR. BAYLY: 16 Q Maybe you're way ahead of me. You have 17 that already? 18 A I think this is it, yeah. 19 Q Is that the--it's the IOM report? 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Right. Let's find it. 21 THE WITNESS: This is says "Marijuana in 22 Medicine." Is that the one you're talking about? 0131 1 BY MR. BAYLY: 2 Q Yes. 3 A Okay. Which I have not seen before. 4 MR. BAYLY: I'll make sure everybody has 5 got it before I-- 6 BY MR. BAYLY: 7 Q Dr. Martin, I'm referring to this exhibit 8 as a point of reference, but just let me ask you, 9 is this exhibit something you're familiar with or 10 not? 11 A No. 12 Q Okay. If you would please turn to page 13 213 of Exhibit 1, and I know this is going to--I'll 14 explain this right up front so we don't get 15 confused by the record. It's the page numbers I'm 16 referring to looks like Bate stamps, and they are 17 on the very bottom so that it will actually read 18 0213. 19 A Right. Okay. 20 Q And it's chapter five of this exhibit, 21 this book here. And I want to take you down to the 22 second full paragraph, Dr. Martin. Do you see 0132 1 that? 2 A Yes. 3 Q And since it's short, I'll read it for the 4 record and then just ask you if you agree or 5 disagree, just to get your thoughts on this 6 statement. 7 Drug development is a long and financially 8 risky process. For every drug that ultimately 9 reaches clinical testing through an IND, thousands 10 of drugs are synthesized and tested in the 11 laboratory, and only about one in five drugs 12 initially tested in humans successfully secures FDA 13 approval for marketing through a new drug 14 application, NDA. 15 A Right. 16 Q Do you agree with that or what is your 17 reaction to that-- 18 A Yeah, I think that's correct. 19 Q --short paragraph? 20 A I was guessing one in ten. They're saying 21 one in five. I mean it's the same order of 22 magnitude. That's correct. 0133 1 Q And then I'd like you to look down at the 2 bottom of the page 213 and I'm just going to read 3 you one or two sentences here, but it skips over to 4 215, Dr. Martin. If you see, there's like a chart 5 in between. 6 A Okay. 7 Q So the statement I want you to recess 8 here, it starts at the very bottom of 213, quote: 9 "With respect to the cost of a single drug's 10 development, a number of recent studies have 11 provided a range of estimates of about 200 to 300 12 million depending on the method and year of 13 calculation." 14 And what I'd like to ask you about that 15 statement, Dr. Martin, is that estimate roughly 16 true or is it somewhat obsolete in light of when 17 this report was written back in the late '90s? 18 A Yes, I was just looking up references 33 19 and 44 and those are indeed late '90s. The latest 20 out of Tufts which is the Tufts Center for Drug 21 something or other, it's the drug development 22 research group at Tufts University. They're the 0134 1 ones who have been conducting or analyzing the cost 2 of drug development. I believe their latest number 3 is about 800 million. 4 Q Is there a range in there or is it just 5 roughly 800 million? 6 A Oh, 800 million is like a very rough 7 estimate. You know you take the cost of all of R&D 8 and how many NDAs come out of that. So it includes 9 everything that was never developed. It includes, 10 it actually includes the price, the cost of the 11 opportunity, so, you know, if you have $100 12 million, is it best to put it in new drug or can 13 you put it in a money market and, you know, earn 14 two and a half percent or something. So it's the 15 loss of the what they would have made if they 16 simply invested the money somewhere else. It is 17 not actually out of pocket costs. 18 Q Okay. So you're talking about opportunity 19 costs? 20 A Yeah, yeah. So the 800 million estimate 21 is across the entire industry for all new drugs 22 including opportunity costs. 0135 1 Q Now, Dr. Martin, in your experience with 2 drugs, have you also had to deal with drug devices, 3 the delivery system? 4 A I've never dealt with devices. I've been 5 in pharmaceuticals only. I've dealt with delivery 6 systems, but not as a drug device. 7 Q Well, at least let me ask you then this 8 question, though. 9 A Right. Are we done with this? 10 Q Your experience, is it with only dosage 11 units or some of the drugs that you developed that 12 got through the NDA process and were launched, were 13 some of those drugs delivered by other methods 14 other than just your normal dosage unit tablet 15 pill? 16 A Well, I'm trying to answer this without 17 being--well, I'll try and answer it politely. 18 There are a number of chemists who would say that 19 there is no such thing as a simple tablet pill. I 20 mean I know what you're trying to say, but there's 21 some fairly sophisticated things that go on inside 22 of some of those little capsules, and I've had 0136 1 experience in some fairly sophisticated 2 pharmaceutical work, all within a tiny little 3 capsule. 4 There is actually pump mechanisms, osmotic 5 pumps and things like that. So the consumer looks 6 at it and it's a simple capsule, but it's a very 7 complex delivery system. So that experience I have 8 had. I have not had experience in medical devices 9 per se. 10 Does that answer your question? 11 Q Well, yes, it does, but then as a follow 12 up, though, in the industry, are you familiar with 13 the fact that a device would need the FDA approval 14 as well as the drug? In other words, if you're 15 marketing a drug and you want to deliver it through 16 a syringe or something like that, would that need 17 to be approved? 18 A If it is indeed a drug device combination 19 product like a pre-filled syringe, basically the 20 centers, the Center for Drug Review and the Center 21 for Device Review, determine which has the primary 22 responsibility. These are called combination 0137 1 products. 2 So if the centers feel, and there's a 3 committee they have that work together, if the 4 centers feel that it is primarily a drug, such as a 5 pre-filled syringe, we know very well what a pre-filled-- 6 what a syringe is. We don't need to do an 7 extensive review of that. Then the responsibility 8 would be within the Center for Drugs. 9 If it is primarily a device, and I can't 10 frankly think of one at this point--maybe even--see, even 11 the drug-coated stints, I believe--I'm 12 not sure who has primary review for that. I would 13 bet it was the drug side. But I'm not sure. So 14 there are mechanisms within the FDA review to 15 jointly review drug device combinations. 16 Does that answer your question? 17 Q Yes. 18 A Okay. 19 Q But on follow-up to that, then in certain 20 cases, the drug manufacturer would have to consider 21 developing the drug itself as well as the device? 22 I mean that would be two separate issues or at 0138 1 least two separate expenses. Let me put it that 2 way. 3 A It would be a parallel development and it 4 would all be part of the same NDA. It may not be 5 any more expensive than the capsule that I was 6 describing, for instance. Some devices are very 7 inexpensive. Some formulations are very expensive. 8 I wouldn't take the next step and therefore 9 conclude it's more expensive to develop a 10 combination that a non-combination. I don't think 11 that's a cause and effect there. 12 Q Well, it depends then on the device. 13 A Sure. 14 Q As one factor? 15 A Right. 16 Q Are you familiar with any of the safety 17 devices that have to be overcome with the delivery 18 system? Any safety issues? 19 A That have to be overcome with a delivery 20 system? 21 Q I mean, yeah, as a drug company 22 anticipates a certain delivery system, are there 0139 1 safety issues that they have to consider? 2 A There are safety issues on everything the 3 company considers. I'm not trying to be smart, but 4 I'm not sure what you're getting at. I mean 5 everything is, there is nothing done in drug 6 development that is not with patient safety in 7 mind. So what are you--can you ask your question 8 differently? 9 Q Well, could you tell us some of the safety 10 issues that have to be overcome with a delivery 11 device or does it depend on a particular delivery 12 device? 13 A Well, it clearly depends on the delivery 14 device. One of the more common questions for time 15 release products, most folks are familiar with 16 drugs that used to have to be taken six times a day 17 and now you can take one a day. Well, that's 18 basically done through some fairly sophisticated 19 pharmaceutics, and one of the things that one must 20 show to oneself as well as to the agency, to the 21 FDA, is that all that drug indeed is delivered over 22 time. 0140 1 So dose dumping is what's that called. 2 One has to assure that that doesn't happen. So 3 there are extra questions when you have a new 4 device or any device that is part of a drug 5 delivery system. But I wouldn't say it's anything 6 terribly unusual or a hurdle terribly high to jump 7 over. 8 Q If you could turn, please to page 220, 9 221. 10 A Okay. 11 Q Yeah. Let me back up here. That would be 12 page 219, Dr. Martin. The bottom paragraph. 13 Again, I'll read it. 14 It says: The possibility of scheduling is 15 a major detriment of whether a manufacturer 16 proceeds with drug development. In general, 17 pharmaceutical firms perceive scheduling to be a 18 detriment because it limits their ability to 19 achieve market share for the following reasons: 20 restricted access, physician disinclination to 21 prescribe controlled substances, stigma, the 22 additional expense for abuse liability studies, and 0141 1 expensive delays in reaching the market due to 2 federal and state scheduling processes. 3 Do you agree with that? 4 MS. CARPENTER: Sorry. Could I just make 5 one quick objection just because there were two 6 mistakes in the reading, and I wanted it to be 7 clear. The first line, I think you said a major 8 detriment, but it's actually a major determinant. 9 MR. BAYLY: Yeah, you're right. 10 MS. CARPENTER: Is that correct? And then 11 the second time you said detriment, it was in 12 general pharmaceutical firms perceive scheduling to 13 be a detriment, but it's actually deterrent. Just 14 wanted to be clear on the record. 15 JUDGE BITTNER: All right. 16 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you. 17 BY MR. BAYLY: 18 Q Dr. Martin, discount my reading. Just 19 look at that paragraph that I read and ask you if 20 you could assess that, if you're in agreement with 21 that? 22 A That sentence, yes, not that paragraph? 0142 1 We've only read the sentence; yes? 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Uh-huh. 3 THE WITNESS: Yes, right. 4 BY MR. BAYLY: 5 Q Okay. 6 A Because I haven't read the rest of the 7 paragraph and I don't know what the rest of the 8 paragraph says. So I'm just being clear here. 9 MS. CARPENTER: And, Your Honor, let me 10 just object quickly. I think he already testified 11 he had no experience with controlled substances. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: He said that, I believe, 13 that he had not brought any controlled substances 14 to market. 15 THE WITNESS: Right. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: So I don't know. Can you 17 answer the question? I think the question was do 18 you agree with that sentence? 19 THE WITNESS: Yeah, I can answer the 20 question, and that would certainly, I would agree 21 with the assessment that drug companies are not 22 keen to develop scheduled drugs because of the 0143 1 reasons outlined here. 2 BY MR. BAYLY: 3 Q Okay. Well, Dr. Martin, let me ask you 4 just a few more general questions on your testimony 5 here. Would another consideration to launch an 6 IND, would that be based on, would you assess 7 whether there are already competing drugs on the 8 market that address the same medical problem? 9 A Sure. 10 Q Would you assess the potential drug 11 market? I know it sounds rather cold, but if 12 you're marketing such a drug--would you see a 13 difference between wanting to market a drug such as 14 Lipitor, which is going to be a drug that you keep 15 taking indefinitely, as opposed to a drug where you 16 know the population has a terminal problem? Would 17 that be a consideration? 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Terminal problem as in the 19 population is going to die or terminal problem as 20 in the problem is going to go away? 21 MR. BAYLY: Well, actually it could be 22 both. I guess the problem goes away-- 0144 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. In other words, 2 taking for an indefinite duration as opposed to-- 3 THE WITNESS: Right. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: --something like a pain 5 killer that you hope would not have to be taken 6 forever. 7 THE WITNESS: If I may digress--thank you 8 for the Lipitor example. Having developed Lipitor, 9 I just like to hear that name out there. 10 [Laughter.] 11 BY MR. BAYLY: 12 Q A lot of us use it. 13 A I have a tee-shirt that says--to answer 14 your question directly, no. Market share clearly 15 or market size is clearly considered, but not 16 whether it's short-term versus long-term use. In 17 other words, you could have a painkiller, for 18 instance, that is a huge market even though people 19 may only take it, you know, when they have a 20 headache once a month. 21 That's still a huge market. Or you can 22 have a relatively small market, but people take it 0145 1 for the rest of their lives. So it's not how long 2 the patients take the drug; it's the size of the 3 market is clearly considered. 4 Q So it depends then? It's going to vary as 5 to the people that need it as well as how long they 6 take it? 7 A All of those things are taken into account 8 and you know clearly part of every management team 9 is a marketing person who helps to figure out just 10 how large the potential market is, and that's drug 11 companies are indeed businesses. And they need to 12 make those smart business decisions. 13 Q Is a market analysis done before the IND 14 is submitted? 15 A Well, there's certainly an informal market 16 analysis done of every, you know, research program. 17 It's unlikely that companies would want to be 18 researching things for which there is no market. 19 I mean I've had too much experience in 20 drugs looking for indications, you know, where 21 scientists come up with a drug that inhibits this 22 particular enzyme perfectly or this receptor 0146 1 perfectly, yet it doesn't do anything. You know 2 there's no clinical indication for that. We try 3 not to do things like that. So clearly before any 4 decisions in research are made and clearly before 5 any decisions in development are made, market 6 potential is assessed, again initially informally 7 and then much more formally as you move to the 8 bigger dollar costs. 9 Q Could you tell us what a market analysis 10 would entail generally when you're assessing the 11 possibility of doing an IND? 12 A I can give you some general, you know, a 13 few key things that would be included. 14 Q Well, let me back up here. 15 A Okay. 16 Q And let me withdraw that just for a 17 second, Dr. Martin. 18 A Sure. 19 Q And ask you in your experience, were you 20 the one that or were you one of the ones that 21 participated in the market analysis or did they do 22 the market analysis and say, okay, Dr. Martin, here 0147 1 we've got this; now you take the ball? 2 A Well, everything is done as a team. I 3 never carried the ball on my own, if you will. You 4 know I worked very closely with the drug 5 development folks, with the clinical folks, with, 6 you know, clinical development is a huge 7 discipline. So there's hundreds of people that 8 work on drug development. 9 There's a management team on the order of 10 about 20 that might make that decision on whether 11 to move forward. Did I conduct market analysis? 12 No. I mean nor did the marketing person conduct 13 the regulatory analysis. Everyone comes with their 14 own area of expertise, brings it to the team and 15 then the team makes a recommendation to senior 16 management. 17 Does that answer that question? 18 Q Well, then I want to make--you're saying 19 you did participate in the market analysis somewhat 20 being a member of the team? 21 A I would say that as a member of any 22 project team--we're not just talking about Lipitor 0148 1 now; right? We're talking in general terms; right? 2 Q Right. 3 A Okay. As a member of any project team, 4 the team receives information on the potential 5 market and then people with expertise and people 6 without expertise put in their two cents, but 7 hopefully those with the expertise formulate the 8 team's opinion, if you will, the consensus opinion 9 and that goes to senior management. 10 So in that regard, I've certainly heard 11 enough market proposals and my expertise was not in 12 marketing, so I would be on the listening end and 13 not on the participating end of, you know, the size 14 of that market. 15 Does that answer the question? 16 Q Well, yeah, if I could follow it up, Dr. 17 Martin. 18 A Okay. 19 Q And at least if you were engaged in some 20 of the market proposals, could you tell us what 21 that entailed in your experience? 22 A In very general terms. How many patients 0149 1 have the disease or the symptom that the product is 2 to help to treat or cure, whatever the type of 3 product is. So it's a size of the population. 4 Again, how long the drug would be used. Clearly 5 that's part of it. 6 Who else is on the market? You know what 7 other companies with whatever products? And how 8 good those products are versus what we think the 9 profile of our product would be? And then whatever 10 we can find publicly about what other companies are 11 doing as well in this particular field? How many 12 new beta blockers does one need? After awhile you 13 don't need anymore. There's more than enough out 14 there. 15 So it's the incremental benefit of your 16 drug versus the competition and it may be smaller, 17 it may be huge, and then the size of the market. I 18 mean that's basically how those decisions are made. 19 Q Is the interaction with other drugs also a 20 factor in the market prospects or market analysis? 21 A Now your question was specific to before 22 the IND, so we really wouldn't have much 0150 1 information about interaction with other drugs, but 2 as you move into drug development and you're 3 starting to get potential drug interactions, sure, 4 companies stop development for a number of reasons, 5 one of which may indeed be newly discovered drug 6 interactions that makes the product no longer 7 competitive. That's a potential thing. 8 Or you continue with development, but now 9 you simply warn your investigators and then the 10 prescribing physicians about that drug interaction. 11 Q Okay. So an IND can be derailed perhaps 12 because of side effects? 13 A That's the primary--well, yes. Safety or 14 efficacy or lack of ability to make the drug 15 consistently. Any of those things could cause a 16 drug company to decide to discontinue development; 17 yes. 18 Q How about patents and the need for 19 patents; is that another factor to be considered 20 and is that a factor that you consider before the 21 IND? 22 A The patent status is always part of the 0151 1 drug development decision; yes. But there's lots 2 of things that are patentable, not just the 3 molecule itself. The drug delivery system 4 delivering that particular drug is a potential 5 patentable product. So drugs that have off patent 6 have been developed. Orphan Drug Product, for 7 instance, gives seven years of exclusivity to that 8 product if developed for that orphan status. So 9 that is as good as a patent. 10 So if you have an orphan drug status, you 11 get seven years of exclusivity if you develop it 12 for that indication. 13 Q Okay. Would you please turn to page 228? 14 MS. CARPENTER: I'm sorry, Mr. Bayly. 15 What was that page number again? 16 MR. BAYLY: 228. 17 MS. CARPENTER: Thank you. 18 BY MR. BAYLY: 19 Q This is more for reference than anything 20 because I want to ask you this in the context of 21 your general experience, Dr. Martin, but the 22 sentence I'm pointing out to here is the, it's the 0152 1 first full paragraph, and it starts out "Three 2 points," but then you go down a couple more 3 sentences and it starts "In general." 4 A Okay. 5 Q Implies that their development is 6 considered especially risky from a commercial 7 standpoint in that small companies are often 8 willing to assume greater development risk than 9 larger more established firms. In your experience, 10 would that statement be generally true, that there 11 are small companies that would be willing to take 12 more risk than the established older companies? 13 MS. CARPENTER: Just object here for a 14 moment. The predicate for "their" is unclear when 15 you read that sentence into the record. In 16 general, that implies that their development. And 17 the question is the development of what? 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Oh, you have to refer to 19 the previous sentence. 20 MS. CARPENTER: Yes. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: But I would. 22 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 0153 1 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 2 THE WITNESS: Well, I want to make sure 3 that the witness is aware of what that is. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: Right. That they're 5 referring specifically to cannabinoids. 6 THE WITNESS: Right. 7 MR. BAYLY: Right. It's not necessary to--that's 8 more of a point of reference. 9 BY MR. BAYLY: 10 Q So it's just the general question is, Dr. 11 Martin, despite the various hurdles that we've 12 talked about, including the consistency of supply 13 would not the smaller companies be willing to take 14 somewhat more of a risk than your-- 15 A I wouldn't make that broad a 16 generalization. 17 Q All right. And how would you qualify it 18 then? 19 A Well, the person whom they're quoting here 20 says often willing. I'm not sure that I would be 21 comfortable saying often. There certainly are 22 small companies who have taken greater risks. It 0154 1 implies that large companies don't also take great 2 risks because I've seen that as well. 3 I mean sometimes a Pfizer, for instance, 4 which I think is like $3 billion a year in R&D, for 5 them to invest a couple hundred million dollars on 6 a risky product, that's not a big part of their R&D 7 expenses. For a small company, that would be huge. 8 So risk/benefit risk analysis is a complex thing, 9 and I think this author is taking a little bit too 10 much liberty. I understand what they're implying 11 but I'm not sure I would agree with the word 12 "often." 13 Q Well, and then of course the risk is there 14 are many, many risks, right, as we've discussed? 15 A Sure. 16 Q It's going to be, the risk is relevant to 17 what the particular risk is and how much capital a 18 company has; would that be true? 19 A I wouldn't--well, the risk is not related 20 to how much capital it may have. What you do with 21 that risk might be, but even then I've seen small 22 companies, you know, take a risk, run out of money 0155 1 and then go raise more money. I mean that happens 2 all the time, as well. I just think it's too broad 3 a statement and without, you know, specifics, I 4 really wouldn't agree with it. 5 Q Well, you said you wouldn't agree because 6 of the-- 7 A The often. 8 Q --the adverb "often." Right? 9 A Yeah. 10 Q But it's not totally untrue? 11 A No, no. There are companies that are 12 often formed. Okay. I won't use the word "often" 13 myself. Companies have been formed to develop a 14 particular compound. And if that compound doesn't 15 work out, the company goes out of business, and 16 then you may have had a couple dozen people, you 17 know, invest a couple of years and that was a risk 18 they were willing to make. 19 It does happen. Again, it's the "often" 20 part. There are small companies who are as 21 conservative as the big pharma companies. We may 22 be quibbling, but I just think it's too broad a 0156 1 statement. 2 Q I think you've already testified a little 3 bit about botanical products as opposed to 4 developing other single entity chemical products; 5 is that correct? Characterize that correctly. 6 A Well, I testified that the FDA issued a 7 guidance document so therefore they're willing to 8 accept, therefore, the assumption I'm making is 9 they're willing to accept botanicals held to the 10 same standards as drugs and approve them through an 11 NDA process. 12 Q Okay. 13 A I have no personal experience in 14 development of botanicals. 15 Q Okay. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: And by botanical, you 17 mean? 18 THE WITNESS: Generally the term is used 19 for plant derived material. 20 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. So are, would you 21 consider, for example, hydrocodone produced from 22 opium to be a botanical? 0157 1 THE WITNESS: No, because it's a purified 2 product that can be controlled. 3 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. That's kind of 4 where I was trying to go. 5 THE WITNESS: Yeah. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: So a botanical is 7 something that stays botanical all the way through? 8 THE WITNESS: In my mind, it's the 9 ability--yeah, you grind up those leaves, you know, 10 and there may be some extraction, but not a whole 11 lot more than a simple extraction. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: So if tobacco were a drug, 13 it would be a botanical? 14 THE WITNESS: Tobacco would never be a 15 drug. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: And I was just--because I 17 couldn't think of anything else, but if it were, it 18 would be--you would classify it. 19 THE WITNESS: DEA should do something 20 about tobacco, but that's a whole another story. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Right, right. No, I 22 realize that and I realize that was a poor choice. 0158 1 I just couldn't think of something better off the 2 top of my head without going into marijuana, which 3 I didn't want to do. 4 THE WITNESS: You know the St. John's Wort 5 and that kind of stuff that basically is ground-up 6 plant material that is now sold as food supplements 7 and the like. Those are botanicals. 8 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. So it's that it's 9 not purified down to it's sort of chemical 10 composition. 11 THE WITNESS: Yeah, because if you do 12 that, generally people can either use that very 13 pure extracted compound or make it themselves 14 synthetically. That's in my mind the difference. 15 I haven't read that guidance carefully enough to 16 see if the FDA has another definition for what they 17 consider a botanical is. 18 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Thank you. 19 BY MR. BAYLY: 20 Q Dr. Martin, I think you also talked a 21 little bit about orphan drug status. That is 22 allowed for how long? Did you say seven years? 0159 1 A Well, once a drug is developed as--an 2 orphan drug status designation--you apply for the 3 orphan drug status designation. 4 Q Right. 5 A And if you receive that designation, then 6 you proceed to develop the drug as an orphan drug. 7 Once that drug reaches the market, it is given 8 seven years exclusivity, in essence, a FDA patent, 9 if you will. 10 Q Is there any time limit on developing this 11 orphan drug? In other words, you apply for it and 12 then you're hoping to-- 13 A Yeah. 14 Q --get it and get that seven year-- 15 A Does it expire, you mean? 16 Q Right. 17 A Does the status--I'm not sure. I frankly 18 don't know. I've never been in that situation. 19 I've developed orphan drugs, but I don't know 20 whether there is, you know, a statute of limitation 21 on that designation. 22 Q Dr. Martin, are you familiar with what a 0160 1 Schedule I substance is? 2 A I'm familiar with the nomenclature, yeah. 3 Q And would the fact that a pharmaceutical 4 product being developed from a Schedule I have to 5 be, the company would also have to petition to 6 lower it another schedule-- 7 A Right. 8 Q --would that be another hurdle that the 9 company would consider? 10 A As I mentioned earlier, yes. Those things 11 would all be part of the consideration of whether 12 to proceed with drug development. 13 MR. BAYLY: Nothing further. Thank you, 14 Dr. Martin. 15 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: Redirect? 17 MS. CARPENTER: I do, Your Honor. Give me 18 just one minute. 19 REDIRECT EXAMINATION 20 BY MS. CARPENTER: 21 Q Dr. Martin, you were asked some questions 22 about the amount of money it would take to deliver 0161 1 a new drug, and I think you had indicated the 2 latest number was 800 million, and that that was 3 derived from including lost opportunity costs as 4 well as direct development, as well as losses from 5 other things it didn't develop; do you recall that? 6 A Right. 7 Q Okay. Maybe you could go into--could you 8 explain a little bit more what you meant by that? 9 What kinds of costs go into that $800 million 10 number? 11 A Well, it's basically the cost of all of 12 R&D absorbed by those few products that actually 13 make it on to the market, so the thousands of 14 chemicals that were synthesized and screened that 15 led to the five to ten INDs that led to the one 16 approved drug, well, that one approved drug then 17 absorbs, if you will, the cost of all that research 18 and all that development. 19 So it's really how much a hugh 20 pharmaceutical company spends on all their R&D 21 divided by how many NDAs they get at the end of the 22 year. 0162 1 Q Okay. So it's not the actual cost of 2 developing a particular drug; is that right? 3 A No. It's how much it costs for that 4 company to remain in business, but certainly a 5 smaller company with a very directed R&D on an 6 orphan drug, for instance, is not going to spend 7 anywhere near $800 million. 8 Q Okay. And that was my next question. Are 9 there differences in development costs for 10 different drugs? 11 A Oh, absolutely, sure. 12 Q Okay. And those could range quite a bit 13 with it? 14 A There are clinical studies that cost a 15 couple hundred thousand dollars, and there's 16 clinical studies that cost $100 million. 17 Q Okay. 18 A I don't know. Well, hundreds of, tens of 19 millions of dollars. How's that? 20 Q Okay. 21 A So, yes, the prices are all over the 22 board. The costs are all over the board. 0163 1 Q Okay. Mr. Bayly also asked you a series 2 of questions about a lot of different factors that 3 the drug companies or drug developers have to 4 balance in terms of making a decision about whether 5 to bring a drug to market--size of the market, 6 sources, et cetera, like that. 7 Who is the one who makes that decision? 8 Who makes, who weighs all that and decides whether 9 or move forward or not? 10 A Well, clearly it varies in every company. 11 But most companies have a senior management team 12 that or a senior management team within the R&D 13 division, and some CEOs have a little bit more 14 control than others, but most of the time it's the 15 head of R&D and his direct reports, his or her 16 hopefully some day direct reports that make that 17 decision. 18 Q Okay. 19 JUDGE BITTNER: The direct reports being 20 the person who report to that head of R&D? 21 THE WITNESS: To the head of R&D, yes. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. 0164 1 BY MS. CARPENTER: 2 Q And do you think it's possible that some 3 drug companies would disagree with another drug 4 company's decision about how to balance and weigh 5 those factors? 6 A That's why there's a very active in 7 licensing and out-licensing department in every 8 pharmaceutical company. Different companies make 9 different decisions, and whereas a company like 10 Pfizer may say if it doesn't, you know, if we're 11 not going to make $500 million a year it's not 12 worth our effort, whereas a smaller company may 13 say, my goodness, that's going to make $50 million 14 a year, and that's huge for us. So absolutely, 15 different decisions by different companies. 16 Q Okay. And does the FDA have any role in 17 deciding whether or not a drug should be brought to 18 market because of those factors, that is the 19 economics of the decision? 20 A No. 21 Q Okay. In your experience, has the FDA 22 ever denied an application because they said 0165 1 there's no way you're going to get this through the 2 process? As a financial matter? 3 A Oh, no. 4 Q Sorry. 5 A No, you know, they may offhanded say you 6 guys must be crazy, but I'll review whatever you 7 want. 8 Q Okay. 9 A But no, clearly from a formal review 10 standpoint, that is outside their responsibility. 11 MS. CARPENTER: Okay. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: So, Doctor, then, what 13 would happen, for example, if Company A says this 14 drug isn't going to work for us, but we'll sell it? 15 THE WITNESS: Right. 16 JUDGE BITTNER: We'll say the NDA to or 17 the IND to Company X? 18 THE WITNESS: Yeah, they would sell the 19 rights to that compound to another company. 20 MS. CARPENTER: I think that's all I had, 21 Your Honor. 22 JUDGE BITTNER: Any recross? 0166 1 RECROSS EXAMINATION 2 BY MR. BAYLY: 3 Q Dr. Martin, the questions you were just 4 asked, one of the questions by Mrs. Carpenter, I 5 believe, was that the FDA doesn't assess the market 6 potential of the drug; they'll go ahead and approve 7 an IND as long as it meets the IND criteria; would 8 that be correct? 9 A Yeah, the only market analysis they would 10 do is to grant a orphan drug application, but for 11 an IND, the FDA does not conduct a market analysis. 12 Q But would it be a fair statement to say 13 that a pharmaceutical company looking for a profit 14 is not going to file an IND where they don't see a 15 potential profit? 16 A People do-- 17 Q Almost a truism? 18 A Well, one would think that would be a 19 truism, but I've seen lots of people do lots of 20 silly things. You like to think that you're not 21 going to submit an IND that's not going to lead to 22 a profit, but sometimes INDs are submitted--maybe I 0167 1 just shut up and answer the question. 2 [Laughter.] 3 THE WITNESS: Okay. I've answered your 4 question. 5 MR. BAYLY: That's fine. That's all I 6 have. 7 THE WITNESS: Okay. 8 JUDGE BITTNER: Are INDs ever submitted by 9 nonprofit organizations? 10 THE WITNESS: Sure. 11 JUDGE BITTNER: So there could be another 12 motive in there somewhere? 13 THE WITNESS: There are controversial 14 products that companies did not want to have their 15 names associated with and, yeah, and nonprofits 16 have stepped up and submitted. You know, RU-486, 17 for instance, very few large companies were going 18 to put up with, you know, picketers outside their 19 research offices. So sure, that does happen and 20 has happened successfully. 21 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Anything else, Mr. 22 Bayly? 0168 1 MR. BAYLY: No, Your Honor. 2 JUDGE BITTNER: Ms. Carpenter? 3 MS. CARPENTER: I'm finished, Your Honor. 4 JUDGE BITTNER: Okay. Dr. Martin. 5 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 6 JUDGE BITTNER: Are you flying on 7 Northwest? 8 THE WITNESS: Yes, and there has been no 9 implication--knock on wood--as far as I can tell. 10 JUDGE BITTNER: Good luck. 11 THE WITNESS: Thank you. 12 JUDGE BITTNER: Thank you. Off the 13 record. 14 [Discussion held off the record.] 15 JUDGE BITTNER: Back on the record. We 16 will recess for the day and resume at nine o'clock 17 tomorrow morning. Off the record. 18 [Whereupon, at 12:20 p.m., the hearing 19 recessed, to reconvene at 9:00 a.m., Tuesday, 20 August 23, 2005.] 21