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Washington
Analysis | U.S. to tighten organ donation rules
U.S. to tighten rules on donated transplant organs
The U.S. government is moving to tighten a regulation for the collection of human pancreases for research after a Senate committee and others complained the rule was being exploited by groups that also procure kidneys, hearts, livers and other organs for transplant.
A rule issued in 2020 requires the nation’s 56 nonprofit organ procurement organizations (OPOs) to meet certain collection benchmarks to retain government certification to operate. Pancreases, which contain “islet cells” that produce insulin and are most often valuable for diabetes research, count toward the total needed to reach those thresholds.
Some of the groups began collecting large numbers of pancreases after the regulation was issued, eliciting “concern” from the Centers for Medicare and Medicare Services in a Jan. 18 memo that the spike in procurements may not reflect “a meaningful increase in pancreata being actually used for islet cell research.”
Officials with several OPOs have said the increased collection of pancreases reflects a rising demand for them by researchers. One noted that pancreases are not collected from every deceased donor, which the official maintains would be a clear indication of an attempt to inflate total organ procurement statistics.
But in March 2023, the Senate Finance Committee, which has been investigating the troubled U.S. transplant system for years, issued a blunt warning to some of the 56 organizations. In a letter to 10 groups that reported sharp increases in pancreas collection, it questioned whether they were “flagrantly gaming” the system to “falsely inflate their performance.”
- The committee’s letter also cited an email it said was sent by one organ procurement employee to another. “Savvy (or cynical?) OPOs ought to start a pancreas for research program immediately,” the message said.
In its memo, CMS warned the procurement organizations that the organs can be counted only if they are used for legitimate purposes. The agency said it would update regulations regarding islet cell research and planned to develop approaches to “validate” organ procurement organization reports of how pancreases were used.
Each organ procurement organization holds a government-guaranteed monopoly over a swath of territory where it collects organs, mainly kidneys, from deceased donors. The groups arrange the transfer of organs to hospitals for implantation into patients and to centers that conduct research on organs unsuitable for therapeutic use.
Some have long done a poor job of collecting enough organs, according to academic research, a House subcommittee and other outside reviews of the U.S. transplant system. Though the number of transplants is rising, more than 100,000 people remain on the national waiting list for organs — most seeking kidneys — and some die every day.
But CMS has never revoked any organ procurement group’s right to operate.
Under rules that took effect in 2021 to weed out poor performers, the procurement groups must meet certain benchmarks for organ collection or risk losing their contracts. Pancreases for research count toward the total.
In September, researchers who have been critical of the groups’ performance published peer-reviewed data in JAMA Network Open showing that the number of pancreases collected for research rose from 1,258 in 2018 to 4,563 in 2022. They said it is impossible to determine where the organs went or how they were used.
- The article also showed that six of the procurement organizations were among a group most likely to lose their government contracts in 2026, when CMS conducts its first review of their performance under the new rule. Seven more were vulnerable to loss of their contracts.
Micah Davis, chief operations officer of Lifebanc, which collects organs in northeast Ohio, said in an interview that well over 90 percent of the pancreases his organization collected in 2023 were used in research, while a few were used in training. The organization retrieved 169 pancreases in 2023, according to Davis, up from just two in 2021.
- Davis said there was no shortage of legitimate medical researchers who have accepted the organs. “It was easy to find them,” he said. “They were enthusiastic to participate.”
But Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement in January that “I’ve been investigating this issue with my colleagues and have seen the evidence of inflated metrics firsthand.”
You can read Lenny’s full report here.
Georgia sues to extend timeline for narrow Medicaid expansion
Georgia is suing CMS in a bid to recover “stolen implementation time” from its new health program for low-income adults, which is set to expire next year under the current agreement, Jill Nolin reports for the Georgia Recorder.
The state filed a federal complaint on Friday asking the court to move the end date for Georgia Pathways to Sept. 30, 2028, citing the Biden administration’s unsuccessful attempt to challenge the program’s work requirement.
A closer look: Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s plan to partially extend Medicaid first received sign-off from the Trump administration three weeks before the 2020 election. But Democrats have fiercely opposed work rules, and the Biden administration revoked Georgia’s approval for such a mandate in 2021.
The move led to a legal showdown, where a district judge ultimately sided with the state. The program officially launched in July, two years after its original start date. As of mid-December, about 2,300 people had enrolled. About 345,000 are thought to be eligible for the Medicaid program, according to the state’s estimate.
Senators take aim at 340B reform
A bipartisan group of senators has drafted proposals aimed at resolving controversial disputes in the federal government’s drug discount program, according to documents obtained by Stat’s Rachel Cohrs.
Among other 340B targets, the new framework would:
- Allow providers, including community health centers and hospitals, to contract with external pharmacies to deliver discounted medications to patients.
- Establish clear criteria for which subsidiaries can qualify for discounts through the program.
- Require providers to report more information about how they use their savings and how many patients received discounted drugs.
The draft legislation comes from Senate Minority Whip John Thune (S.D.) and fellow Republican Sens. Jerry Moran (Kan.) and Shelley Moore Capito (W.Va.). Across the aisle, they are joined by Democratic Sens. Debbie Stabenow (Mich.), Tammy Baldwin (Wis.) and Ben Cardin (Md.).
- A federal judge approved McKinsey & Co.’s proposal to pay $230 million to settle claims that the company’s consulting work fueled an opioid crisis that led municipal governments to divert public resources toward emergency responses, Joyce E. Cutler reports for Bloomberg Law.
- Juul launched an aggressive campaign in 2018 aimed at securing the public support of civil rights organizations and Black leaders for its e-cigarettes, as the company sought to bolster its beleaguered public image, Stat’s Nicholas Florko reports, citing documents made public last week.
- Independent advisers to the Food and Drug Administration called for greater diversity in pulse oximeter clinical trials on Friday, saying the agency’s proposal to increase the minimum number of participants probably wouldn’t be enough to ensure the devices produce accurate results for all skin tones, CNN’s Jacqueline Howard reports.
- Congress may make insulin pumps and other medical devices more accessible to the blind, Stat’s Lizzy Lawrence reports.
📅 Welcome back! The House and Senate are both in session this week. Here’s what we’re watching:
On tap today: The House Rules Committee will meet to consider legislation that would ban the use of quality-adjusted life years in all federal health insurance programs.
On Tuesday: The House Budget Committee will mark up a bill that would change how the Congressional Budget Office evaluates the costs and savings of preventive health-care policies. The House Ways and Means Committee will examine chronic drug shortages in the United States. A House Energy and Commerce subcommittee will scrutinize the FDA’s foreign drug inspection program.
Meanwhile, at the agencies, independent advisers to the FDA will discuss and make recommendations on medical device supply chain resiliency and shortage issues.
On Thursday: The CEOs of Merck, Johnson & Johnson and Bristol Myers Squibb will testify before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee on prescription drug prices. The Senate Finance Committee will examine artificial intelligence in health care.
And at The Post, Dan Diamond will speak with New York City Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan about winter respiratory viruses, lessons from the pandemic and youth mental health.
Texas Medical Board under pressure to define emergency exception to abortion ban (By Olivia Goldhill | Stat)
Providence officials approve overdose prevention center (By Anna Betts | The New York Times)
Ozempic, Wegovy strain state budgets in battle against obesity (By Celine Castronuovo | Bloomberg Law)
Thanks for reading! See you tomorrow.
Washington
J. Edgar Hoover Building to close for good as FBI relocates its HQ, Patel says – WTOP News
The FBI had announced in July that it would abandon the Hoover Building and move to the Ronald Reagan Building, just a few blocks down Pennsylvania Avenue.
After 50 years as the FBI’s main headquarters, the J. Edgar Hoover Building in D.C. is closing permanently, Director Kash Patel announced Friday.
“We finalized a plan to permanently close the FBI’s Hoover headquarters and move the workforce into a safe, modern facility,” Patel said in a post on X.
He didn’t state the exact date the building will close and when FBI employees will move into its new offices.
The agency had announced in July that it would abandon the Hoover building and move to the Ronald Reagan Building, just a few blocks away at 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Patel noted in his post that when President Donald Trump’s administration came into office in January, “taxpayers were about to be on the hook for nearly $5 billion for a new headquarters that wouldn’t open until 2035. We scrapped that plan. Instead, we selected the already-existing Reagan Building, saving billions and allowing the transition to begin immediately with required safety and infrastructure upgrades already underway.”
His said that most of the FBI headquarters’ employees will be in the Reagan Building and “the rest are continuing in our ongoing push to put more manpower in the field, where they will remain.”
In November, Maryland leaders sued the Trump administration after it scrapped plans to move the bureau’s headquarters to Greenbelt and opted instead to keep it in Downtown D.C.
Maryland leaders criticized White House officials for ignoring the site selection process of Congress and the General Services Administration when it chose to remain in D.C. The lawsuit also pointed out that Congress had already appropriated funds for the Greenbelt relocation.
When the move to the Reagan Building was announced over the summer, critics maintained that it would not meet the security demands needed for the FBI. Patel said the agency is working on the building to ensure it has the required safety and infrastructure upgrades.
The Reagan Building is connected to the International Trade Center, and already houses some federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Customs and Border Protection, as well as several non-government businesses.
The J. Edgar Hoover Building was designed in the brutalist style popular in the 1960s when it was conceived and constructed. It was criticized for not conforming to the style of other federal buildings, and Hoover himself called it “the greatest monstrosity ever constructed in the history of Washington.” It was completed in 1975, and President Richard Nixon named it after the longtime FBI director after Hoover’s death in 1972.
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Washington
Suspect in National Guard shooting faces new federal charges that allow death penalty discussions
WASHINGTON — A man accused of shooting two National Guard troops near the White House has been charged in a complaint with federal firearms charges in connection with the ambush on November 26 that fatally wounded one of the West Virginia National Guard members and seriously injured the second.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, has been charged with transporting a firearm in interstate commerce with the intent to commit an offense punishable for more than one year. He has also been charged federally with transporting a stolen firearm in interstate commerce.
“The transfer of this case from Superior Court to District Court ensures that we can undertake the serious, deliberate, and weighty analysis required to determine if the death penalty is appropriate here,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro. “Sarah Beckstrom was just 20 years old when she was killed and her parents are now forced to endure the holiday season without their daughter. Andrew Wolfe, by the grace of God, survived but has a long road ahead in his recovery.”
Lakanwal remains charged with first-degree murder, assault with intent to kill and illegal possession of a firearm in the shooting that killed Beckstrom, 20, and wounded Wolfe, 24, in violation of D.C. code. Lakanwal, who was shot during the encounter, has pleaded not guilty to the D.C. charges.
There is no death penalty in D.C. Superior Court.
Beckstrom and Wolfe were deployed with the West Virginia National Guard for President Donald Trump’s law-enforcement surge in the nation’s capital, which has flooded the city with federal agents and troops since August. Lakanwal is accused of driving from Bellingham, Washington to Washington, D.C. while in possession of a stolen firearm and ambushing the two Guard members outside a subway station three blocks from the White House.
An Afghan national, Laknawal worked with the American government, including the CIA, “as a member of a partner force” in Kandahar, Afghanistan, CIA Director John Ratcliffe said.
Lakanwal, 29, entered the United States in 2021 through Operation Allies Welcome, officials said. That Biden administration program evacuated and resettled tens of thousands of Afghans after the U.S. withdrawal from the country.
Lakanwal’s lawyer was not immediately available for comment.
The video in the player above is from an earlier report.
Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
Washington
Video Shows Moment Man Carjacks Washington State Patrol Lieutenant’s Car
TMZ.com
Here’s an easy way to find yourself on the naughty list … a man in Seattle is in police custody after stealing a patrol car from a Washington State Patrol lieutenant … and only TMZ has video of the suspect shoving the cop to the ground and taking off in her car.
We obtained footage showing a man casually crossing a busy Interstate-5 in Seattle when a WSP patrol car shows up … the guy stops in his tracks, paces around, then goes up to the driver side door and yanks the cop out of the car. He pushes her to the freeway pavement, then gets behind the wheel and speeds off.
That’s where our wild video ends, but the story doesn’t end there … because an intense police pursuit ensued … and it ended with WSP officers pinning the car and taking the guy into custody.
Washington State Patrol Trooper Rick Johnson tells TMZ … the female lieutenant from the video was not injured and she will not be reprimanded for the incident.
This all started just before noon on Christmas Day … and we’re told the guy is now getting grilled by detectives. Sounds like he’s having a not-so-merry Christmas.
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