ORDER
The respondents in this matter, plaintiffs in the underlying litigation, Zink v. Lombardi, No. 2:12-cv-04209 (W.D. Mo. filed Aug. 1, 2012), petition for rehearing of this court’s decision filed January 24, 2014, and to vacate the opinion on account of mootness. For the following reasons, we deny the petition.
The respondents argue that the issues before this court were moot at the time of the opinion’s issuance, because the identities of the testing laboratory and compounding pharmacy used by the State have become known through media accounts and inferences made by one of respondents’ experts from other filings in the case. We do not know whether the media sources and the expert have correctly identified the pharmacy and the laboratory. The issue before this court was whether the district court properly ordered the Director to disclose in discovery the identities of the prescribing physician, the compounding pharmacy, and the testing laboratory. The respondents never withdrew their request for the disputed discovery, and there was a live controversy over whether the Director was required to provide it. The petition for writ of mandamus was therefore not moot when the opinion issued.
The respondents next contend that this court wrongly granted mandamus relief on grounds that were not presented to the district court. We believe the grounds were adequately presented. In moving to dismiss the original complaint challenging a method of execution using propofol, the Director argued that the plaintiffs failed to state a claim under the Eighth Amendment because they did not allege the existence of a feasible, readily implemented alternative that significantly reduces risk of severe pain. R. Doc. 3, at 5. The Director also urged that the plaintiffs failed to state a claim under the Ex Post Facto Clause because the governing statute grants the Director discretion to establish the method of execution, the punishment of death for capital murder had not changed, and only the mode of producing this result had changed. Id. at 11-12. After the Department of Corrections changed its execution protocol to use compounded pentobarbital, the district court granted leave to amend the complaint, rejecting the Director’s argument that amendment would be futile in light of Baze v. Rees,
The respondents urge that this court misread Baze v. Rees by holding that an Eighth Amendment claim challenging method of execution must allege that the risk of harm arising from the State’s current lethal-injection protocol is substantial when compared to known and available alternatives. They cite the Supreme Court’s statement in Hill v. McDonough,
The respondents finally assert that this court misread their state-law claims in concluding that the identities of the pharmacy and laboratory are plainly not relevant to their state-law claims. As they reiterate in the petition, however, the respondents alleged in their amended complaint that the Department violates state law by carrying out executions using compounding-pharmacy drugs. The Department admits that it acquires the drugs from a compounding pharmacy. As we read the complaint, the plaintiffs have not alleged that some uses of compounding-pharmacy drugs are lawful and some uses are unlawful, such that investigation of the particular compounding pharmacy would be relevant to their claims under state law.
The petition for rehearing is denied.
