Compliance is required, with specific exceptions. Understanding the exceptions does not eliminate the obligation; it defines its limits.
A DEA administrative subpoena issued under 21 U.S.C. 876, an OIG subpoena issued under the Inspector General Act, and a federal grand jury subpoena are each legally compulsory instruments. Non-compliance with each carries different consequences, and the grounds on which compliance may be withheld or challenged differ by instrument. The answer to whether you must comply is therefore not a simple yes or no. It is: you must comply with the obligation as defined by the applicable statute and as limited by applicable privileges and legal objections.
DEA Administrative Subpoenas
A DEA administrative subpoena issued under Section 876 may be served on any person whom the DEA has reason to believe may have information or documents relevant to a controlled substance investigation. Compliance is required unless the recipient successfully challenges the subpoena in federal district court. The grounds for challenge are limited: the subpoena must be within the DEA’s statutory authority, the information sought must be relevant to the investigation, and the demand must not be unreasonably oppressive given the volume and scope of the records sought.
The challenge to a DEA administrative subpoena must be filed before the subpoena’s return date, and filing the challenge does not automatically stay the obligation to comply. A motion for a stay of compliance pending the court’s resolution of the challenge is a separate application that must be filed and granted before compliance can be withheld without risk of a contempt finding.
In practice, many DEA administrative subpoena responses are negotiated rather than litigated. Counsel who contacts the issuing attorney and identifies specific concerns about the subpoena’s scope, the volume of records demanded, or the timeline for production often finds that reasonable adjustments are available without the need for a court challenge. The negotiated resolution of scope and timeline disputes serves the interests of both parties and is the most efficient path to compliance in most cases.
OIG Subpoenas
The OIG’s subpoena authority under the Inspector General Act permits the OIG to compel the production of documents, records, and other information relevant to a fraud, waste, or abuse investigation. The OIG may also compel the taking of oral testimony under oath in connection with an investigation. OIG subpoenas are administrative subpoenas subject to the same general standards applicable to DEA administrative subpoenas: they must be within the OIG’s statutory authority, must seek relevant information, and must not be unreasonably oppressive.
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(212) 300-5196Failure to comply with an OIG subpoena does not result in contempt of court directly, because the OIG’s subpoena is administrative rather than judicial. The OIG must seek enforcement of the subpoena through a federal district court before contempt sanctions are available. The enforcement proceeding gives the recipient an opportunity to raise objections to the subpoena’s scope and legal sufficiency that were not resolved informally. In practice, the filing of an OIG enforcement proceeding is a significant escalation that most recipients seek to avoid through negotiated compliance.
Grand Jury Subpoenas
A federal grand jury subpoena is the most compulsory of the three instruments, because it is a court order rather than an administrative demand. Non-compliance with a grand jury subpoena without a legally sufficient basis for refusal subjects the recipient to contempt of court, which may result in fines or incarceration until compliance is achieved. The grounds on which compliance may be withheld are limited to: applicable legal privileges, including the attorney-client privilege and the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination; a successful motion to quash based on the subpoena’s legal insufficiency; or a court-granted stay of compliance pending the resolution of such a motion.
The Fifth Amendment privilege applies specifically to testimonial self-incrimination. A recipient who is asked to testify before the grand jury and whose truthful testimony would tend to incriminate them may invoke the Fifth Amendment on a question-by-question basis. The privilege does not generally extend to the production of documents, though the act of production doctrine provides limited protection in specific circumstances where the production itself is testimonial and incriminating.
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The question of whether to comply, how to comply, and what grounds exist for limiting or challenging compliance is a legal question that requires legal analysis. The practitioner who assesses their own compliance obligation without counsel may either over-produce, surrendering materials that were protected, or under-produce, risking a contempt finding or an adverse inference. Neither outcome serves the practitioner’s interests.

Federal agents execute a search warrant at your medical practice, seizing patient records and prescription logs.
Can they take patient records without patient consent?
A valid federal search warrant overrides HIPAA privacy protections. However, the warrant must be properly scoped. An attorney can challenge overly broad warrants and move to suppress improperly seized evidence.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
What Compliance Does Not Require
Compliance with a DEA or OIG subpoena does not require the production of privileged materials. Attorney-client communications, work product materials, and in some circumstances materials protected by the physician-patient privilege under applicable state law may be withheld if properly identified on a privilege log submitted with the production. The privilege log must identify each withheld document with sufficient specificity to permit the issuing authority to assess the privilege claim without revealing the privileged content.
Compliance also does not require production of records that fall outside the subpoena’s description. The practitioner who produces records beyond the subpoena’s scope, believing that over-production demonstrates good faith, has provided the government with materials it was not entitled to compel and has done so voluntarily. The voluntary production of materials outside the subpoena’s scope waives the protections that would have attached to those materials had the government been required to subpoena them specifically.