DEA Announcement of proposed scheduling of MDMA as a Schedule I Drug,
Federal Register, July 27, 1984
Letter from Dr. Greer to DEA requesting scheduling hearing, August 22, 1984
Letter from Dr. Grinspoon and Prof. James Bakalar requesting a scheduling hearing, August 28, 1984
Letter from Prof. Tom Roberts, requesting scheduling hearing, August 13, 1984
Letter from Nathaniel Branden, Ph.D., stating that scheduling MDMA would be a scientific calamity, August 23, 1984
Letter from David B. Katzin MD, Ph.D., requesting a hearing,
August 27, 1984
Letter from Joel Alter, DO, FACOS, opposing scheduling of MDMA, August 29, 1984
Letter from C. Quincy, DO, citing potential benefits of MDMA, August 29, 1984
Letter from Dr. Shulgin, arguing that MDMA should be placed in Schedule III, August 29, 1984
Letter from ARUPA (Association for Responsible Use of Psychoactives) describing a survey of the clinical use of MDMA and urging against Schedule I, August 29, 1984
Letter from June E. Riedlinger, R.Ph. urging against Schedule I
Letter from David E. Nichols, Ph.D., professor of medicinal chemistry, recommending the postponement of scheduling until further research can be done, August 17, 1984
Letter from Dr. Greer to Dr. Grinspoon & Prof. Roberts on the possibilities of animal or human research with MDMA, April 21, 1984
Copies from letters to editor of Journal of American Medical Association, August 1984, regarding FDA
Letter from attorney Richard Cotton to DEA Administrator Francis M. Mullen, Jr., stating that a scheduling hearing is now required by law, September 12, 1984
DEA notice of scheduling hearing for MDMA Federal Register, December 31, 1984
Memo and order by Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young announcing hearing, February 8, 1985
Memo for from Richard Cotton to potential witnesses in MDMA proceedings, March 1, 1985
First Memorandum of Law Submitted on Behalf of Dr. Grinspoon, Greer, et al. (stating that it is possible to schedule MDMA in schedules other than schedule I)
Memo from Administrative Law Judge outlining the proceedings to follow, March 22, 1985
Opening Memo on Behalf of Dr.s Greer, Grinspoon, Profs. Bakalar and Roberts (includes appendix with witness summaries)
List of witnesses giving testimony for Greer et al.
Government's opening statement. Includes appendix with witness summaries.
Final witness list for Hoffman-LaRoche, Inc., a pharmaceutical company interested in the interpretation of "accepted medical use", April 25, 1985
Testimony from Morris Lipton, Ph.D., M.D., biochemist and psychiatrist supporting further research on MDMA and deconstructing the DEA's argument for Schedule I status, April 24, 1985
Testimony of Dr. Lester Grinspoon, comparing the decision to schedule MDMA to the scheduling of LSD, halting potentially beneficial research, and discussing MDMA's promise in therapy, April 18, 1985
Testimony of Norman Zinberg, M.D., discussing MDMA's low risk and potential benefits as a therapeutic agent, April 22, 1985
Testimony of David E. Nichols, Ph.D., a medicinal chemist stating that MDMA represents a new type of pharmacologic agent and cannot be considered to be either an hallucinogenic agent or an amphetamine-type stimulant
Testimony of George Greer, MD April 22, 1985, discussing his clinical experience with MDMA
Testimony of Robert DuBois Lynch, M.D. (a psychiatrist who sees therapeutic benefits)
Testimony of Richard Ingrasci, M.D., MPH, a psychiatrist who found therapeutic benefit of MDMA, April 22, 1985
Testimony of Richard Seymour, the Director of the Haight Ashbury Training and Education Projects of the Haight Ashbury Free Medical Clinics reporting on his observations of clients using MDMA in an non-therapeutic context, and his assessment of MDMA as having a relatively low abuse potential, April 22, 1985
Testimony of Philip E. Wolfson, M.D.
psychiatrist who found therapeutic benefits and sees low abuse potential,
April 24, 1985
Testimony of Rick J. Strassman, M.D.,
discussion of pharmacology of MDMA
Testimony of Joseph J. Downing, M.D.
describes his experience testing MDMA as a therapeutic tool
(includes an appendix written by a patient who used MDMA-assisted therapy to cope with a sexual assault)
April 24, 1985
Testimony of Lance S. Wright, M.D. stating low abuse potential and belief in therapeutic potential
Testimony of Thomas B. Roberts, Ph.D. recommending further studies and that MDMA not be scheduled at this time, April 23, 1985
Testimony of June E. Riedlinger, R.Ph., a pharmacist commenting on MDMA's low abuse potential, structural differences from MDA, and usefulness in therapy
Identification of DEA's witnesses and affadavit of direct testimony, April 26, 1985
Testimony of Special Agent Robert C. Chester, Jr. regarding ecstasy trafficking in Texas, April 25, 1985
Testimony of John P. Docherty, MD, a government psychiatrist noting methodological problems in Dr. Greer's study, April 24, 1985
Testimony of Richard A. Glennon, Ph.D., arguing that MDMA has amphetamine-like properties, similar to MDA, April 22, 1985
Testimony of Harold F. Hardman, Ph.D., M.D., a pharmacologist, stating that MDMA is a stimulant, less toxic than MDA and more toxic than mescaline, April 18, 1985
Testimony of Frank Sapienza, M.S., a DEA chemist, discussing MDMA street use, laboratories & some literature, April 25, 1985
Testimony of Ronald K. Seigel, Ph.D., a psychopharmacologist arguing for Schedule I status
Testimony of Edward Charles Tocus, Ph.D., an FDA pharmacologist, arguing for Schedule I status
Government's rebuttal testimony witnesses, May 20, 1985
Memo from Richard Cotton to witnesses, enclosing DEA rebuttal testimony, June 3, 1985
Testimony of Joel Kleinman, M.D., Ph.D., critiquing Greer et al's MDMA studies, May 18, 1985
Testimony of Lewis S. Seiden, Ph.D., critiquing studies, discussing neurotoxicity potential, and advising caution in administering MDMA to humans, May 15, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of James M. Sheahan, DEA Chief of Registration Unit, describing the process by which one becomes registered as a Schedule I researcher, May 20, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of Larry Snyder, a DEA investigator, describing the recordkeeping and storage requirements of scheduled drugs,
May 16, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of Edward Charles Tocus, Ph.D., critiquing testimony by Lynch, Downing, and Dziewanowska,
May 16, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of D. Bruce Vaupel, Ph.D., a NIDA pharmacologist responding to Dr. Nichols' statement,
May 17, 1985
List of witnesses submitting rebuttal testimony for Greer et al.
May 20, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of George Greer, MD
(rebuttal to testimony of Dr. John Docherty, Professor Ronald Seigel, Dr. Edward Tocus)
Letter from Dr. Shulgin to Dr. Greer, May 17, 1985
Testimony of Rodney A. Houghton, M.D. evaulating Dr. Greer's use of MDMA,
April 29, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of Will L. MacHendrie M.D., member of Dr. Greer's Peer Review Commttee,
April 30, 1985
Government's list of witnesses called for cross-examination,
May 31, 1985
Temporary placement of MDMA into Schedule I
(the emergency scheduling), May 28, 1985
DEA Press Release on Emergency Scheduling,
May 31, 1985
Letter from Richard Cotton to Secretary Margaret Heckler, Department of Health and Human Services
arguing that there is a discrepancy between MDMA's emergency scheduling due to an "imminent public health hazard" and the FDA-approved marketing of amphetamines, which are more often abused
June 5, 1985
Statement by Greer et al on the May 31, 1985 emergency scheduling of MDMA,
June 10, 1985
Draft of an argument against the emergency scheduling
Same Letter as above, to Rep. William J. Hughes, Chairman of Subcommittee on Crime
Same Letter as above, to Senator Paul Laxalt, Chairman, Subcommittee on Criminal Law
Same Letter as above, to Senator Paula Hawkins, Chair, Subcommittee on Alcoholism
Report on orally administered MDMA toxicity in rats
Nichols, Summer 1985
Administrative Law Judge Francis L. Young's Opinion and Recommended Decision on Preliminary Issue,
June 1985
Letter from Jo Brugmans, M.D., Vice President of Janssen Pharmaceutica to Frank Sapienza, stating that his company engages in research with Schedule I drugs with the cooperation of the DEA and FDA,
October 18, 1985
Letter from Albert Kurland, M.D. (LSD researcher at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center) to Lester Grinspoon, discussing the difficulties of research with Schedule I drugs,
July 11, 1985
Motion for Leave to File Additional Documents on Behalf of Dr.s Greer and Grinspoon, Professors Bakalar and Roberts,
July 19, 1985
Additional documents submitted on behalf of Dr.s Greer, Grinspoon, Prof.s Bakalar and Roberts,
July 19, 1985 (Letters from DEA detection labs showing that MDMA not widely abused)
Letter from Charlotte Johnson to Richard Cotton, July 16, 1985, regarding DEA's requests for info on MDMA from detection labs
Article on PCP Self-Injection by the Baboon (Griffiths et al.)
Memo from Richard Cotton to Dr. Greer et al November 5, 1985 with enclosure:
Letter from Prof. James Bakalar to Richard Cotton regarding "accepted medical use" as defined in medical literature,
December 23, 1985
Agency's Proposed Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Argument by Stephen Stone and Charlotte Johnson, December 10, 1985.
Pharmaceutical company's proposed findings
Greer et al's proposed findings
Memo from Richard Cotton to interested parties.
Government's response to the Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Arguments Submitted by Drs. Greer and Grinspoon, et al., February 10, 1986
Administrative Law Judge's decision
Government's exceptions to the Administrative Law Judge's Decision
Governments Exceptions to the Opinion and Recommended Ruling, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Decision of the Administrative Law Judge,
June 13, 1986
Greer et al's response to government's exceptions
Cover Letter from Richard Cotton to Judge Young, June 27, 1986
Request for opportunity for oral presentation to the administrator from Greer, Grinspoon et al,
June 27, 1986
Cover Letter for Response to DEA Exceptions, from Rick Cotton to Greer, Grinspoon, Shulgin, and Harlow,
July 14, 1986
DEA Administrator's Response
"Summary review of certain phenylethylamine related substances recommended for control by WHO",
May 1985, by the 22nd Expert Committee on Drug Dependence, WHO, Geneva, from April 22-27 1985
recommending that MDMA be placed in Schedule I, but also stating that it is an interesting substance and more research should be encouraged, and noting Dr. Paul Grof's dissent
WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence: Twenty-second report, Geneva, 1985
Letter from the Secretary General of the United Nations to the U.S. Secretary of State, stating that the WHO has found that MDMA should be placed in Schedule I, and that the Commission on Narcotic Drugs will schedule MDMA during its next session.
July 18, 1985
Extension of temporary schedule I status of MDMA,
Federal Register, June 17, 1986
DEA places MDMA in Schedule I,
Federal Register, October 14, 1986
Petition for Review of DEA, U.S. Court of Appeals, First Circuit
(the appeal, from Dr. Lester Grinspoon)
Administrative Law Judge Docket Card submitted to Court of Appeals,
December 3, 1986
Notice from appeals court stating that record on appeal has been filed,
December 8, 1986
First draft of appeals brief, with cover Letter from James Bakalar to Richard Cotton,
December 22, 1986
Letter from Lyn B. Ehrnstein to Lester Grinspoon, supporting his appeals case,
December 29, 1986
Letter from Court of Appeals to lawyers stating due date for filing briefs,
December 30, 1986
Notice from Court of Appeals stating due date for filing briefs,
January 12, 1987
Petition for Review of Final Order of DEA: Brief for Petitioner,
January 12, 1987
Joint Appendix in appeals case (document containing much of the material from the scheduling hearing),
January 12, 1987
Motion for leave to cite material not reproduced in the joint appendix, from Richard Cotton on behalf of petitioners,
January 29, 1987
Notice of receipt of Letter and identification of petitioners' counsel by Richard Cotton,
February 13,1987
DEA's brief,
February 11, 1987
Petitioner's counsel appearance form
Motion for leave to cite material in the record not reproduced in the join appendix, from Richard Cotton,
February 18, 1987
Motion for summary grant of petition, to strike brief, or for order that appellee not be heard
(from petitioner, because the DEA's brief was filed late),
February 18, 1987
Court Order denying petitioner's motion to strike DEA's brief,
February 20, 1987
Reply brief for petitioner,
February 23, 1987
Appeals Court docket stating date and time of hearing
Appeals court docket stating time allowed appellant and appellee in hearing
DEA request for time extension to file rehearing petition
Letter from the court granting respondent an extension of time to file petition for rehearing,
October 1, 1987
Court Order denying the DEA's petition for rehearing,
December 14, 1987
U.S.A. v. William Spain; Court's statement that Spain's conviction is overturned due to the DEA's illegal emergency scheduling of MDMA,
July 13, 1987
"Characterization of 3 new psychotomimetics", Shulgin and Nichols
"The Nature of the MDMA Experience and its Role in Healing, Psychotherapy, and Spiritual Practice",
Sophia Adamson and Ralph Metzner
"Legal aspects of MDMA", Greer & Shulgin
"Preliminary Report on the Acute and Subacute Oral Toxicity of MDMA in Rats",
Phillip T. Goad, Ph.D., July 9, 1985
"MDMA in Psychiatry: A Review of Preliminary Findings",
Rick J. Strassman, MD
"Using MDMA in Psychotherapy", George Greer, MD, Advances, Spring 1985
"NIDA Capsules Publication on MDMA", July 1985
"Preliminary Study of New Antidepressant in Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases", 1958
"A Proposal for Orphan Pharmaceuticals Inc.: A Psychedelic Medicine Pharmaceutical Corporation", Rick Doblin, July 27, 1985
"MDMA on the Scales of Justice: a Report of the DEA's MDMA Hearing -- The Opening Meeting -- February 1, 1985",
Rick Doblin, February 3, 1985
"MDMA-DEA Strategy Reconsidered: Schedule I, II, or III?" Rick Doblin, November 10, 1985
1. Introduction to the Legal Record of the DEA's 1984-1988 MDMA Scheduling Hearings
2. Before the Hearing:
Letters Supporting MDMA Research and Petitioning the DEA for a Scheduling Hearing to Determine Legal Status of MDMA
3. The hearing is scheduled
4. Documents from the opening of the hearing
5. Opening memos from each party and lists of witnesses
6. Testimony from witnesses for Greer et al.
Attached: "The Legal, Safe and Effective Use of MDMA", George Greer M.D.
7. Testimony from DEA witnesses
Includes exhibits: Early article about ecstasy, series of flyers given with pills advising on usage
8. Government witnesses' rebuttal testimony
Exhibits from this witness:
Rebuttal testimony of Harlan E. Shannon, Ph.D., responding to Dr. Nichols' statement, May 17, 1985
9. Greer et al rebuttal testimony
Included: FDA document on obtaining approval, May 16, 1985
Rebuttal testimony of Rick J. Strassman M.D. (rebuttal to Dr. Docherty. Seigel, and Tocus)
May 16, 1985
10. Cross-examination
11. Meanwhile: Emergency Scheduling of MDMA
12. The Hearing Continues...
Below are all letters from labs regarding MDMA:
Letter from Paul S. Gipe to Frank Sapienza, June 12, 1979
Cover Letter from Roland R Griffiths, Ph.D., to Frank Sapienza with enclosed report on MDMA self-injection study,
September 30, 1985
Letter from Stark Ferriss to Frank Sapienza, June 12, 1979
Letter from Sandra J. Stoltenow and Michael L. Rehberg to Frank Sapienza, June 13, 1979
Letter from J. W. Brackett, Jr. to Frank Sapienza, June 26, 1979
Letter from F. E. Perry to Frank Sapienza, August 2, 1979
"Efficacy, Dependence Potential and Neurotoxicity of Anorectic Drugs", Schuster & Johnson
Article on reinforcing effects of MDMA on baboons (Griffiths et al.)
Cover Letter from Charlotte Johnson (DEA attorney) to Richard Cotton for NIDA studies,
October 3, 1985
Response to Agency Exhibits by Drs. Grinspoon et al., November 4, 1985, critiquing government animal studies
Addendum Report of 28-Day Oral Toxicity of MDMA in Dogs and Rats Sponsored by Earth Metabolic Design Laboratories, April 17, 1986
13. The Hearing's Conclusions
Government's proposed findings
(The DEA's statement that MDMA currently has no accepted medical use, has a high potential for abuse, and has not been studied sufficiently to allow therapeutic use in humans)
Hoffman-La Roche Inc.'s Proposed Finding of Fact, Conclusion of Law, and Argument
A pharmaceutical company's argument regarding the DEA's narrow interpretation of "accepted medical use" and the limits this places on research
Enclosures: Brief, Including Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law on Behalf of Drs. Greer and Grinspoon, et al. January 15, 1986
Government's response to Greer et al.'s proposed findings
Submitted to the DEA Administrator from Stephen E. Stone and Charlotte A. Johnson, Counsel for DEA, arguing that Judge Young is biased and did not consider the evidence, and MDMA should be placed in Schedule I.
Enclosures: Response of Drs. Grinspoon, Greer, et al., to the Government's exceptions to the opinion of the Administrative Law Judge, June 27, 1986
Motion to Strike Portions of the Exceptions filed by the DEA
(Portions which state a bias of the Administrative Law Judge) June 27, 1986
14. And meanwhile, across the globe...documents from the international scheduling of MDMA by the World Health Organization
FDA request for data and comments to submit to the WHO regarding scheduling of MDMA and other phenylethylamines,
Federal Register, July 19, 1984
Assessment of 28 phenylthylamines, including MDMA
15. Phase II: The Appeals Process
16. Later court cases relevant to the emergency scheduling
U.S. District Court of Appeals Eastern District of California
Motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction
October 29, 1986
Case in which defendants were arrested for MDMA under the emergency scheduling
US District Court for District of Colorado
Case in which defendants were arrested for MDMA under the emergency scheduling
Exhibit B: Opinion and Recommended Ruling, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Decision of Administrative Law Judge,
May 22, 1986
Appendix: Rescheduling of Methaqualone
Exhibit C: Temporary placement of MDMA into Schedule I by DEA,
May 28, 1985
Exhibit D: Issue of the Brain Mind Bulletin discussing MDMA
Certificate of Service for Motion to Suppress Evidence and Return Property,
October 29, 198617. MDMA is removed from Schedule I
Deletion of MDMA from Schedule I following appeals court decision,
Federal Register, January 27, 1988
18. MDMA becomes a Schedule I Drug
(the decision that stands today)
DEA Scheduling of MDMA in Schedule I,
Federal Register, February 22, 1988
19. Other interesting MDMA-related documents
20. Documents from Earth Metabolic Design Laboratories and/or Rick Doblin