-
Middle East war to dominate Houston's 'Davos of Energy'
-
Kim holds off Korda charge to win LPGA Founders Cup
-
Trump orders immigration agents to airports amid crippling budget standoff
-
Iran awaits Trump threat to blow up power plants
-
Alcaraz eyes clay court season after early Miami exit
-
Real Madrid down Atletico in derby, leaders Barca edge Rayo
-
Korda sends Alcaraz to another early exit in Miami
-
Bordeaux-Begles hammer Toulouse in Dupont absence
-
Slovenia PM claims election win as results show neck and neck finish
-
England's Fitzpatrick birdies 18th to win PGA Valspar title
-
Man City's League Cup glory adds twist to title race
-
Leftists win mayoral elections in Paris and Marseille
-
Vinicius double helps Real Madrid edge Atletico thriller
-
Doncic cleared to face Pistons after foul rescinded: NBA
-
Inter's Serie A lead cut to six with Fiorentina draw, Como march on
-
World No.1 Alcaraz beaten by Korda in Miami Open third round
-
Cuba starts to restore power after new blackout
-
Ovechkin nets 1,000th combined NHL season-playoffs goal
-
Undav doubles up as Stuttgart down Augsburg to go third
-
Leftists win mayoral elections in Paris and Marseille: projections
-
Israel warns weeks of fighting ahead in Mideast war
-
Guardiola revels in Man City's 'special' League Cup win over Arsenal
-
Hodgkinson headlines Britain's 'Super Sunday' at world indoors
-
Messi scores for Miami in 3-2 MLS victory at NYCFC
-
Bezzecchi wins second race of the season at Brazil MotoGP
-
Britain's Hodgkinson wins world indoor 800m gold
-
Former France and West Ham star Payet announces retirement
-
Man City's O'Reilly savours 'unbelievable' double in League Cup final win
-
Israel to advance ground operations in Lebanon after striking key bridge
-
Man City win League Cup as O'Reilly sinks Arsenal after Kepa blunder
-
Marseille downed by Lille in Ligue 1 as Lyon's struggles continue
-
NBA bans Mitchell, Champagnie one game for sparking melee
-
'Project Hail Mary' rockets to top of N. America box office
-
Syrians protest alcohol sale limits, curbs on personal freedom
-
Spurs can '100 percent' avoid nightmare of relegation: Saltor
-
Araujo header scrapes Liga leaders Barcelona win over Rayo
-
Israel launches strikes as Lebanon warns of invasion
-
Torrential rains in Kenya kill 81 in March: officials
-
Iran threatens Mideast infrastructure after Trump ultimatum
-
Spurs felled by Forest in relegation battle, Sunderland shock Newcastle
-
Spurs collapse against Forest, failing acid test
-
US may 'escalate to de-escalate' against Iran: Treasury chief
-
Howe disappointed in himself after 'painful' Newcastle defeat
-
Quansah to miss England's pre-World Cup friendlies
-
Araujo header scrapes Liga leaders Barca win over Rayo
-
Georgia buries Patriarch Ilia II as succession stirs fears of Russian influence
-
DeChambeau wins back-to-back LIV Golf play-offs
-
Sunderland inflict more derby pain on Newcastle
-
Nepali youth demand release of govt report into deadly September uprising
-
US, Iran trade threats to target infrastructure in Middle East
Did DEA's Anne Milgram Get Caught in Her Own Marijuana Criminal Algorithms?
WASHINGTON, DC / ACCESS Newswire / October 22, 2025 / Anne Milgram rose to prominence on a mission to "use data and algorithms to fight crime." As New Jersey's Attorney General from 2007 to 2010, she was praised for bringing analytics to law enforcement. But as DEA Administrator, Milgram's "data-driven" DEA became the very system of corruption, chaos, and incompetence she once claimed algorithms could prevent.
DEA Anne Milgram A Digital Reformer Turned Bureaucratic Relic

When President Biden appointed Anne Milgram to lead the DEA in 2021, she promised to modernize the agency with analytics and accountability. Instead, she presided over one of the most dysfunctional and scandal-ridden eras in its history.
Under her watch:
Chinese-backed illegal marijuana operations exploded across the U.S., from Oklahoma to Maine. The DEA's own field divisions were overwhelmed - yet leadership in Washington turned a blind eye.
DEA's Diversion Control office, led by Thomas Prevoznik and Matthew Strait, focused its fire not on international criminal networks, but on law-abiding pharmaceutical innovators like MMJ BioPharma Cultivation, which has waited over seven years for a bulk-manufacturing license to grow FDA-approved cannabis for clinical trials.
"Under Anne Milgram, the DEA ignored actual crime while criminalizing medicine," said Duane Boise, CEO of MMJ International Holdings. "They let illegal Chinese grows flourish while blocking American pharmaceutical research approved by the FDA. It's the definition of hypocrisy."
Milgram's academic brand - data science meets law enforcement - collapsed under the weight of her agency's failures. She promised a DEA guided by real time data, but the evidence shows her team ignored the numbers that mattered most:
Explosive growth in Chinese financed cartel grows operating openly across rural America.
A DEA licensing backlog that left scientific research frozen for nearly a decade.
A federal court system now rejecting the DEA's internal "tribunal" process as unconstitutional - a process her deputies weaponized to silence applicants.
Milgram's so-called algorithm became a feedback loop of failure - one that rewarded insiders, punished innovators, and allowed criminal enterprises to thrive in plain sight.
Deputies Running Rampant
Inside the agency, Milgram's inner circle functioned like an unchecked network of bureaucratic enforcers:
Matthew Strait, his deputy, engineered new "bona fide supply agreement" rules retroactively - a legal move now under scrutiny for violating administrative law.
Aarathi Haig, the agency's litigation counsel, continued representing DEA in court despite her bar-eligibility controversy, defending unconstitutional proceedings against legitimate pharmaceutical applicants.
All of it happened under Milgram's watch - and all of it reflects a DEA that lost sight of both science and law.
From Data to Damage
Ironically, Milgram's downfall mirrors the fatal flaw in her own algorithmic ideology: blind trust in systems without accountability. The DEA's data was clear - illegal foreign grows were multiplying while medical cannabis researchers languished. Yet Milgram's leadership ignored the evidence, weaponizing bureaucracy against legitimate progress.
In the end, the "data-driven DEA" turned into a data-blind dictatorship, one that measured everything except its own corruption.
A Message for Terry Cole
Now, new Administrator Terry Cole inherits the wreckage. His first 100 days will determine whether the DEA reforms or continues Milgram's legacy of deceit.
"Cole has a chance to rebuild an agency that has betrayed science, Congress, and patients," Boise said. "But if he doesn't act fast, he'll become part of the same algorithm of corruption that destroyed Milgram's credibility."
The Verdict
Anne Milgram once claimed she could predict criminal behavior through data. She may have succeeded - she just never realized the algorithm would identify her and her own agency.
MMJ is represented by attorney Megan Sheehan.
CONTACT:
Madison Hisey
[email protected]
203-231-8583
SOURCE: MMJ International Holdings
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
P.Silva--AMWN