Sec. 2. Block, report, and suspend suspicious orders
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/bill/118/hr/501/rh/section-2A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Section 312(a) of the Controlled Substances Act ( 21 U.S.C. 832(a) ) is amended— in paragraph (2), by striking and at the end; and by striking paragraph
(3)and inserting the following paragraphs: determine whether an order or series of orders is suspicious, taking into consideration— any unusual size, pattern, or frequency of the order or series of orders; and any customer business model, dispensing patterns, prior orders, or other characteristics that may indicate the order or series of orders is suspicious, despite the particular order or series of orders not exhibiting an unusual size, pattern, or frequency; and upon discovering suspicious circumstances regarding an order or series of orders, and in a manner consistent with the other requirements of this section— decline to fill the order or series of orders, establish and maintain (for not less than a period to be determined by the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration) a record of the order or series of orders, and notify the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration for the purpose of including information on such order or series of orders in the centralized database established under subsection (b)(1); or exercise due diligence as appropriate and— if the due diligence fails to dispel all of the indicators that give rise to the suspicion that, if the order or series of orders is filled, the drugs that are the subject of the order or series of orders are likely to be diverted, decline to fill the order or series of orders; or if the due diligence does dispel all such indicators, fill the order or series of orders; establish and maintain (for not less than a period to be determined by the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration) a record of the order or series of orders and the due diligence that was performed; and notify the Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration for the purpose of including information on such order or series of orders in the centralized database established under subsection (b)(1), including any indicators giving rise to the suspicion that, if the order or series of orders is filled, the drugs that are the subject of the order or series of orders are likely to be diverted. . Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, for purposes of section 312(a)(4) of the Controlled Substances Act, as inserted by subsection (a), the Attorney General of the United States shall promulgate a final regulation specifying— the indicators that give rise to a suspicion that, if an order or series of orders is filled, the drugs that are the subject of the order or series of orders are likely to be diverted; a definition of due diligence; and in the case of a registrant that dispels all of the indicators giving rise to a suspicious order or series of orders, the circumstances in which the registrant is not required to file the notification under such section 312(a)(4). Section 402(a)(5) of the Controlled Substances Act ( 21 U.S.C. 842(a)(5) ) is amended by inserting before the semicolon at the end the following: , including any such violation of section 312(a)(4) . Section 312(a)(4) of the Controlled Substances Act, as inserted by subsection (a), shall apply beginning on the day that is 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act. Until such day, section 312(a)(3) of the Controlled Substances Act shall apply as such section 312(a)(3) was in effect on the day before the date of enactment of this Act. It is the sense of Congress that— medications for opioid use disorder significantly reduce the risk of overdose death; and the requirements of this Act are not intended to impair access to controlled substances primarily used to treat opioid use disorder.
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