Robert Patterson, acting head of the Drug Enforcement Administration, announced he is retiring, saying that running the agency as a temporary fill-in had become “increasingly challenging,” the Washington Post reports. Patterson, a 30-year DEA employee, emailed employees saying he will retire in about two weeks. Patterson said he “realized that the administrator of the DEA needs to decide and address priorities for years into the future — something which has become increasingly challenging in an acting capacity.” It was not immediately clear who would succeed Patterson. Patterson became the agency’s acting head in October after the departure of Chuck Rosenberg, who had also served as an acting, rather than Senate-confirmed, head of the agency.
Rosenberg’s departure came after months of tension between him and Attorney General Jeff Sessions over marijuana research policy and the Trump administration’s focus on pursuing the MS-13 street gang, rather than sophisticated drug cartels. Rosenberg had also put himself at odds with the president, emailing staff members that Trump had “condoned police misconduct” in remarking to officers in Long Island that they need not protect suspects’ heads when loading them into police vehicles. “Since taking on the role of acting administrator, I have known that a permanent replacement would eventually be named. As such, I took each day as a gift, and with that mentality tried my best to keep the agency moving forward,” Patterson wrote.