At issuе today is whether the district court erred in dismissing a First Amendment claim for declaratory and injunctive relief on standing and ripeness grounds. After thorough review, we affirm because the requested relief concerns wholly prospective conduct for which the details of time, location, audience, and the nature of the protest activity are utterly lacking. Quite simply, this case is not justiciable.
I.
The basic facts and procedural history are straightforward. Plaintiffs Adam El-end, Jeff Marks, and Joe Redner allege that their First Amendment rights were violated on November 2, 2002, when they attempted to protеst at a political rally attended by President Bush at the University of South Florida (USF) Sun Dome.
*1203 Marks and Redner held up placards, 1 while Elend videotaped the event and distributed copies of certain Supreme Court decisions pertaining to the First Amendment. Plaintiffs began to conduct this activity on a median adjacent to a parking lot on the USF campus, approximately 150 feet from the nearest Sun Dome entrance and 30 feet from event attendees who were waiting in line. Soon after the commencement of this activity, USF police officers told the Plaintiffs that they would have to stand in the “First Amendment zone,” an area estimated to be one quarter of a mile away from the Sun Dome. The “protest zone” consisted of a metal fence patrolled by law enforcement personnel, some of whom were on horseback. Plaintiffs contend that others carrying placards and signs indicating support of President George Bush or Governor Jeb Bush were not asked to move to the protest zone.
Plaintiffs explained to USF officers their belief that the creation of such a zone unconstitutionally restricted their freedom of speech. At that point, they were approached by a purported agent of the Sun Dome, Kelly Hickman, who also requested they move to the protest zone. When Plaintiffs refused to relocate, Hillsborough County Sheriffs deputies arrested them for “trespass after warning,” Fla. Stat. § 810.09 (2006). Plaintiffs were released and the charges dropped after it was determined that no agent of the Sun Dome had the requisite authority to provide a warning, as required by state trespass law. 2
Invoking federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343, Plaintiffs commenced this lawsuit in the United States District Court in the Middle District of Florida in August 2003. The named defendants were Sun Dome, Inc.; the USF Board of Trustees, “in their rеpresentative capacity” for USF; W. Ralph Basham'in his official capacity as Director of the U.S. Secret Service [hereinafter “Secret Service”]; and Cal Henderson, the Sheriff of Hillsborough County in his official capacity. Plaintiffs sought damages against Sun Dome and USF, through 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1988, for violations of their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Plaintiffs also sought declaratory relief for the allegedly unconstitutional “acts, practices, and customs” of defendants and an injunction against “any further constitutional violations.” Their claims against the Secret Service were made pursuant to 5 U.S.C. § 702, which removes governmental immunity from suits seeking declaratory or injunctive relief against federal agencies or employees acting in their official capacity. Notably, Plaintiffs did not seek any monetary damages from the Secret Service.
Soon thereafter, the Secret Service moved to dismiss the claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and, in July 2004, the district court granted the motion because the complaint failed to “allege that the plaintiffs desire to engage further in the type of activities that are the subject of this action.” Plaintiffs *1204 then filed a second verified amended complaint in response to the district court’s observation that the first complaint did not contain specific allegations of future injury. In the amended complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that they “fully intend to peacefully express their viewpoints in the future in a manner similar to their activities on November 2, 2002 in concert with presidential appearances at the USF Sun Dome and at other locations around the country.” Verified Second Amended Complaint, para. 46. The complaint contained no further explication of the time, location, audience, or nature of protest activity contemplated.
The Secret Service again moved to dismiss on justiciability grounds. Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the district court again dismissed Plaintiffs’ claims against the Secret Service on May 18, 2005, holding that Plaintiffs’ claims that they would protest in a similar manner in the future were too speculative to satisfy the requirements of both standing and ripeness. The court reasoned that the Plaintiffs could wait until it became known when and where they would protest before seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.
On August 24, 2005, Plaintiffs sought leave to amend the complaint still again in order to add the Hillsborough County Sheriffs Department and individual employees, the USF Police Department and individual employees, and Sun Dome employees “who actively participated in the incident.” Sun Dome and USF moved for summary judgment on the claims against them. The district court granted summary judgment for the remaining defendants Sun Dome and USF on the basis of Eleventh Amendment immunity because they were state actors and because of the lack of evidence that Sun Dome had any policy or custom that violated the First Amendment. The district court also determined the claims against Sun Dome and USF to be nonjusticiable, again on standing and ripeness grounds. Finally, the district court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend because it was untimely, having been filed after the scheduling order deadline had passed and because no good cause was shown.
Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal, urging that 1) the district court erred in dismissing the Secret Service as a defendant on justiciability grounds, and 2) the district court also erred in denying Plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file an additional amended complaint. Subsequent to the filing of the notice of appeal, Plaintiffs, Sun Dome, and the USF Board of Trustees agreed to the voluntary dismissal of the appeal as to all other appellees, leaving the Secret Service as the sole appellee and only the first issue for us to resolve.
II.
We review de novo questions concerning our subject matter jurisdiction, including standing and ripeness.
See Fla. Pub. Interest Research Group Citizen Lobby, Inc. v. EPA,
Standing and ripeness present the threshold jurisdictional question of whether a court may consider the merits of a dispute.
See Bochese v. Town of Ponce Inlet,
This case presents an instance of the doctrinal overlap between standing and ripeness analysis. “Few courts draw meaningful distinctions between the .two doctrines; hence, this aspect of justiciability is one of the most confused areas of the law.”
Wilderness Soc’y v. Alcock,
It is by now axiomatic that standing requires the plaintiff to demonstrate injury in fact, causation, and redressability.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Despite the conspicuous overlap of the two doctrines, we discuss standing and ripeness separately. But whether this case is examined through the prism of standing or ripeness, it can be distilled to a single quеstion: whether the Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged an imminent and concrete threat of future injury by stating their intention to protest at an unspecified, prospective event supervised by the Secret Service? The answer is plainly in the negative.
A.
The standing inquiry “requires careful judicial examination of a complaint’s allegations to ascertain whether the particular plaintiff is entitled to an adjudication of the particular claims asserted.”
Allen,
From these principles flow the two strands of standing analysis: a court must take into account “both constitutional limitations on federal-court jurisdiction and prudential limitations on its exercise.”
Warth,
In their complaint, Plaintiffs allege that the “Secret Service [has] previously instituted a policy and practice of forcing ‘demonstrators’ or selected political speakers (specifically selected on the basis of the content of their message) to constrain themselves to other ‘Protest Zones,’ ” which “have been widely utilized as a reflection of their custom and practice of implementing constitutionally impermissible restrictions on protected political speech at virtually every domestic presidential appearance.” Putting aside whether such a policy actually exists, we examine whether Plaintiffs’ claimed future injury is imminent and concrete enоugh for judicial consideration. As we have noted already, the Plaintiffs failed to characterize their future injury in any way, other than to say at the highest order of abstraction that they “fully intend to peacefully express their viewpoints in the future in a manner similar to their activities on November 2, 2002 in concert with presidential appearances at the USF Sun Dome and at other locations around the country.” Given the entirely speculative inquiry of whether Plaintiffs will protest again and — even assuming that such a protest will take place — the unspecified details of where, at what tyрe of event, *1207 with what number of people, and posing what kind of security risk, we are being asked to perform the judicial equivalent of shooting blanks in the night. Consistent with our obligation to adjudicate only a live case or controversy, we refuse to pull the trigger.
A plaintiff is deemed to have suffered an injury in fact — “an invasion of a judicially cognizable interest” — when he demonstrates a harm that is “(a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
31 Foster Children v. Bush,
Plaintiffs’ complaint can be separated into two purported injuries. First, the protest zone was allegedly located at a distance too far from the event itself for Plaintiffs to effectively exercise their First Amendment rights. Second, the Plaintiffs claimed they were discriminated against based on the content of their message 3 by being sent to a special protest zone while others with signs favorable to President Bush were not treated similarly.
The content-based discrimination alleged, if trae, could constitute a breach of First Amendment protections. “[T]he First Amendment has its fullest and most urgent application to speech uttered during a campaign for politiсal office.”
Eu v. San Francisco Cty. Democratic Central Comm.,
But a prayer for injunctive and declaratory relief requires an assessment, at this stage in the proceeding, of whether the plaintiff has sufficiently shown a real and immediate threat of future harm.
See City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
Viewed in this light, the Plaintiffs’ allegations are insufficient. When standing is questioned at the pleading stage, as it is here, “general factual allegations of injury resulting from the defendant’s conduct may suffice, for on a motion to dismiss we presume that general allegations embrace those specific facts that are necessary to support the claim.”
Lujan,
The barest examination of several leading standing cases in this circuit illustrates the pleading deficiencies in this complaint. Where we have found a sufficient imminence of future harm based on a past injury, the plaintiff has alleged with particularity that a future injury would likely occur in substantially the same manner as the previous injury. Thus, for example, in
31 Foster Children,
Even the precedents that Plaintiffs rely
on
—Bischoff
v. Osceola County,
Florida PIRG
is even less on point because it involved a concrete,
ongoing
injury. In that case, the plaintiffs alleged an injury involving their loss of enjoyment of Florida’s waters because of overpollution. “[Pjlaintiffs have provided detailed affidavits averring how they are particularly injured by the EPA’s failure .... ”
Florida PIRG,
In sharp contrast, the injury alleged in this case remains wholly inchoate. Unlike in
Bischoff,
where it was known exactly where the activists intended to demonstrate and precisely which local ordinance was invoked to stop them, Plaintiffs’ intention in this case to protest “in concert with presidential appearances at the USF Sun Dome and at other locations around the country” fails to provide any limitation on the universe of possibilities of when or where or how such a protest might occur. Other than the one instance in November 2002, we are not even given a description of Plaintiffs’ past conduct from which to infer that they might act in a similar manner in the future.
See Lynch,
Moreover, it is entirely conjectural that President Bush would return to speak at a political rally at the Sun Dome. In fact, we have no indication that he has done so again since November 2002 despite numerous presidential visits to Florida. Nor is it even remotely permissible to presume future injury from Plaintiffs’ intention to protest “at other locations around the country.” To find that this somehow constitutes “real and immediate” injury sufficient to сonfer standing would eviscerate the meaning of both words.
Indeed, the Plaintiffs’ avowed intention to protest in a similar manner in the future is akin to the plaintiff in
Lujan
who declared, “I intend to go back to Sri Lanka [to observe endangered species],” but confessed that she had no current plans: “I don’t know [when].”
Lujan,
B.
Plaintiffs also fail the standing requirements because the putative injury lacks
redressability.
First, the inchoate nature of the claim provides an insurmountable obstacle for a court to fashion an injunction that accomplishes anything beyond abstractly commanding the Secret Service to obey the First Amendment. It is well-established in this circuit that an injunction demanding that a party do nothing more sрecific than “obey the law” is impermissible.
See Burton v. City of Belle Glade,
Second, promulgating an order in the face of such overwhelming ambiguity would amount to an abdication of our duty to only adjudicate actual cases or controversies. A proper deference tо the Constitution’s separation of powers means that a court may only reach the merits of those cases that present concrete and immediate injury. It seems to us self-evident that a court would be unable to conduct the First Amendment analysis required without knowing anything more than vague generalities about future protests. Assuming that Plaintiffs were in fact subject to content-based discrimination during their protest based on a Secret Service policy, that policy would be reviewed using strict scrutiny.
See Burson v. Freeman,
To be clear, our ruling today does not set the bar insuperably high for prospective relief. We have recognized before that “[t]he injury requirement is most loosely applied — particularly in terms of how directly the injury must result from the challenged governmental action — ■ where first amendment rights are involved, because of the fear that free speech will be chilled even before the law, regulation, or policy is enforced.”
Hallandale Prof'l Fire Fighters Local 2238 v. City of Hallandale,
III.
The ripeness problem in this case is much the same as standing. In essence, this doctrine deals with when a
*1211
party can seek pre-enforcement review: “whether there is sufficient injury to meet Article Ill’s requirement of a case or controversy and, if so, whether the claim is sufficiently mature, and the issues sufficiently defined and concrete, to permit effective decision-making by the court.”
Digital Props., Inc. v. City of Plantation,
Hardship can sometimes be established if a plaintiff demonstrates that he would have to choose between violating an allegedly unconstitutional statute or regulation and risking criminal or severe civil sanctions.
See Steffel v. Thompson,
In this case, however, it would strain credulity to say that there is a credible threat that Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights will be violated in the future. Again, we don’t know when they will protest, we don’t know where they will protest, and we don’t know how they will protest.
The injunctive and declaratory relief sought for the allegedly unconstitutional protest zones would seem especially unfit for judicial decision on ripeness grounds too, because, as we have noted already, that analysis depends so criticаlly on the location and circumstances of the protest zone.
Cf. Cal. Bankers Assoc. v. Shultz,
In saying that Plaintiffs lack standing and ripeness to prosecute their claims today, we do not blithely discard the First Amendment rights that underpin their claims. The opportunity to petition the President of the United States or other high-ranking government officiаls for redress of grievances has long served as a bedrock right enshrined in the First Amendment. Rules or regulations that stifle speech based on the content of the message are the essence of what is proscribed by free speech jurisprudence.
See, e.g., Police Dept. v. Mosley,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The placards contained the following three messages:
"Freedom of expression would not truly exist if the right could only be exercised in an area that a benevolent government has provided as a safe haven for crackpots.” Tinker v. Des Moines,393 U.S. 503 ,89 S.Ct. 733 ,21 L.Ed.2d 731 [sic]
"Why do you let these crooks fool you?”
"War is good for business. Invest your sons.”
. To be convicted under § 810.09(b) of the Florida penal code, an offender must defy an "order to leave, personally communicated to the offender by the owner of the premises or by an authorized person .... ”
. Although Plaintiffs characterize their injury as content-based discrimination, the facts they allege may more aptly be described as viewpoint-based discrimination. Plaintiffs contend they were treated differently based on expressing disapproval of the President, not based on expressing any political message at all. But in truth, it makes little practical difference here whether the First Amendment claims are labeled content-based or viewpoint-based since analytically both are treated using strict scrutiny.
Burson v. Freeman,
