Thomas André Endicott, D.D.S.
Outcome
Utah dental and controlled substance licenses revoked February 22, 2024; DEA issued Order to Show Cause March 26, 2024; Endicott defaulted; DEA revoked registration effective April 28, 2025.
Details
Thomas André Endicott, D.D.S. — Utah License Revocation and DEA Registration Default Revocation (2024–2025)
Outcome: Both Endicott's Utah dental license and Utah controlled substance license were revoked on February 22, 2024; the DEA issued an Order to Show Cause on March 26, 2024; Endicott defaulted by failing to respond; and the DEA revoked his registration effective April 28, 2025, in a Default Decision and Order published March 27, 2025.
On February 22, 2024, Thomas André Endicott, D.D.S. had both his Utah dental license and his Utah controlled substance license revoked by state authorities. On March 26, 2024, the Drug Enforcement Administration issued an Order to Show Cause proposing revocation of his DEA registration based on his lack of state authority to handle controlled substances.
A DEA Diversion Investigator attempted to personally serve Endicott with the Order to Show Cause at his registered address but found Endicott not present and learned he had not been seen at the premises since November 2023. Additional diligence was requested to locate and serve Endicott, which was ultimately unsuccessful. On April 8, 2024, the DI emailed a copy of the OSC to Endicott's registered email address; the email was not returned as undeliverable.
Endicott failed to request a hearing or respond to the proceeding, and was therefore deemed to have defaulted. The Agency treated the factual allegations in the OSC as admitted. The final Default Decision and Order was published in the Federal Register on March 27, 2025, and became effective April 28, 2025.
Primary Source: Thomas André Endicott, D.D.S.; Decision and Order (Fed. Reg. Mar. 27, 2025)
How Crucible Prevents This
Endicott's Utah dental and controlled substance licenses were revoked in February 2024, yet it took until March 2024 for DEA to issue an Order to Show Cause. Crucible's real-time license monitoring integration — checking state dental board databases — would have flagged the dual license revocation immediately and suspended controlled substance prescribing authority automatically, without waiting for DEA to initiate administrative proceedings.
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