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VA Rejects Psychedelic-Focused Veterans Group’s Grant Application For Suicide Prevention Program
Dec 2, 2025
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is facing criticism after
rejecting a grant application from an organization that helps connect
veterans to programs abroad where they can receive psychedelic therapy to
treat serious mental health conditions.
While VA Secretary Doug Collins has been vocal about his support for
expanding access to psychedelics like ibogaine in hopes of curbing the
suicide epidemic among veterans, the organization No Fallen Heroes that
supports efforts to facilitate the alternative treatment was told last
month that it did not qualify for a suicide-prevention grant program.
No Fallen Heroes “has been doing the work our government talks about but
rarely delivers” for the past five years, Matthew “Whiz” Buckle, a Navy
“TOPGUN” veteran who founded the group, said. “We’ve saved and changed the
lives of over 100 veterans and first responders through real,
trauma-informed support and sacred-medicine healing retreats.”
The mission of the organization is specifically to mitigate the veteran
suicide crisis, yet No Fallen Heroes “received a rejection letter from the
VA for the Staff Sergeant Parker Gordon Fox Suicide Prevention Grant” after
an “exhaustive, in-depth application that our team poured their heart
into,” he said.
“We can assume why. We use psychedelic-assisted (sacrament-assisted)
healing—the very thing saving the lives the VA keeps losing,” Buckley said.
“But that’s the point: What we’re doing as a country clearly isn’t working.
It is time to do something new.”
For the past five years, the @NoFallenHeroes Foundation has been doing the
work our government talks about but rarely delivers. We’ve saved and
changed the lives of over 100 veterans and first responders through real,
trauma-informed support and sacred-medicine healing retreats.…
pic.twitter.com/Gf9ro3gJFo
— Matthew 'Whiz' Buckley (@WhizBuckleyNFH) November 14, 2025
The rejection for the grant comes months after Buckle met with VA staff,
and the secretary himself, to discuss the therapeutic potential of
psychedelic medicine for the veteran community. Collins then raised the
issue directly with President Donald Trump during a cabinet meeting in May.
Collins “even mentioned nonprofits like No Fallen Heroes using these
compounds to save and change lives,” the veteran said. “So clearly, the VA
bureaucracy is not listening to its own leadership. Shocking, I know.”
“If the VA and Secretary Collins believe there are organizations doing more
to prevent veteran suicide than we are, I’d genuinely love to meet them.
Because our track record speaks for itself,” he said. “We’re not here to
wait. We’re not here to ask permission. Lead. Follow. Or get out of the
way. Our heroes don’t have time for bureaucracy.”
In the rejection letter, VA didn’t address the substance of the grant
application. Rather, it said simply that the applicant did not meet
“threshold requirements” to qualify, so they were deemed ineligible.
“We regret to inform you that your agency’s SSG Fox SPGP application did
not meet one or more of the requirements in 38 C.F.R. § 78.20 for threshold
review, and it is therefore not eligible to be considered for funding,”
Todd Burnett, acting director of the VA Office of Suicide Prevention, wrote.
Marijuana Moment reached out to VA for comment about the grant application
rejection, but a representative did not respond by the time of publication.
Meanwhile, a former U.S. senator said recently that she’s personally spoken
to both Collins and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. about the therapeutic potential of
psychedelics like ibogaine—and both members of Trump’s cabinet were
receptive to reform on the issue.
While former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) mentioned that Collins wasn’t
especially familiar with psychedelics therapy before joining the Trump
administration, the secretary has since become one of the most vocal
proponents of advancing reform to facilitate access for veterans.
In July, for example, the VA secretary touted his role in promoting
psychedelics access for veterans with serious mental health conditions,
saying he “opened that door probably wider than most ever thought” was
possible.
“I’m the first VA secretary—actually, in a Cabinet meeting about a month
and a half ago—to actually bring up psychedelics in a Cabinet meeting,”
Collins said at the time. “I think what we got to look at is we’ve got to
put alternatives on the map. The VA is going to do our job. We’re going to
do within the law and do what we have to do.”
The secretary also said over the summer that he’s “very open” to expanding
access to psychedelics therapy for veterans—emphasizing that he’s intent on
finding ways to “cure” people with serious mental health conditions and not
just treat their surface-level symptoms.
Collins noted that VA either internally or through private partnerships is
actively conducting about a dozen clinical trials into “various different
substances that we’re seeing actually really good results on,” including one
based at VA Bronx Health Care that’s investigating MDMA-assisted therapy with
“actually really, really good results.”
*Image courtesy of CostaPPR.*
The post VA Rejects Psychedelic-Focused Veterans Group’s Grant Application
For Suicide Prevention Program appeared first on Marijuana Moment.













