MMT was developed by Ethyl Additives Co, the originator of tetra-ethyl lead, which was the first, and most effective octane enhancer. Ethyl changed their name several times over the last few years; some parts to Albermarle, others to Afton Chemical.
MMT was supposed to be a safe replacement for lead, but the OEMs worried about long term catalyst efficiency, so they devised a test plan and published technical documentation that killed it in the US. Ethyl similarly conducted tests and published technical documentation showing it didn't make any difference. In the end, the OEMs claim to have found the needle in the haystack and by gosh, it was a really important needle. Ethyl couldn't see the writing on the wall and even challenged the EPA, eventually losing. There continues to be doubt about how the EPA made this decision. MMT was used in Canadian gasoline, apparently without massive death and disease. MMT is, however, a metallic compound and by definition is not allowed in US gasoline.
Technically MMT is as good or better than Pb, but can't be used at high concentrations because of fuel instability, deposit problems, and it doesn't have the "more is better" response that Pb does. Therefore it is usually used along with something else, such as low levels of Pb or highly aromatic gasoline formulations.
The characteristic dark orange color is the giveaway, if that is what happened here.