*212 OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal, brought by a class of inmates sentenced to death by the State of Delaware, presents two main questions for our review. First, we must decide how to interpret the Supreme Court’s highly splintered opinion in
Baze v. Rees,
I.
A. Facts 1
Delaware, like the great majority of the more than thirty states that currently allow capital punishment,
see Baze,
Pursuant to the authority granted by the Delaware statute, the Commissioner has devised a protocol for use during executions. The protocol has been amended several times over many years. Delaware carried out its first execution by lethal injection in 1992 under one such protocol. That protocol, like the current version, calls for the sequential IV injection of three chemicals into an inmate’s bloodstream. The first chemical is sodium thiopental, which renders the inmate unconscious by inducing a coma. The second chemical is pancuronium bromide, a muscle relaxant that essentially paralyzes the inmate. Finally, the inmate’s heart is stopped by an injection of potassium chloride.
Since 1992, Delaware has carried out a total of thirteen executions by lethal injection under its variably amended protocols. The execution teams involved in those executions have not always followed those protocols to the letter. In some instances, for example, the execution teams failed to administer the correct chemical dosage into the inmate’s bloodstream. In other instances, the execution teams did not attend the requisite number of training ses *213 sions or verify that the equipment used during the executions was fully operational. Furthermore, Delaware officials have not consistently followed up with execution teams to determine whether a particular execution proceeded in accordance with the protocol or whether improvements in the protocol or its implementation were in order.
On August 29, 2008, Delaware instituted a new lethal injection protocol. Under the new protocol, the Commissioner and the Warden of the Delaware Correctional Center are designated as members of the execution team. The Warden selects the remaining team members from Department of Correction personnel based on a number of criteria, including length of service, ability to maintain confidentiality, maturity, willingness to participate, work performance, professionalism, staff recommendations, and review of personnel files. At least two members of the execution team are designated as members of the IV team, which may also include various specialists with at least one year of professional experience. 3 Members of the execution team are required to read the relevant portion of the protocol pertaining to their particular function and to rehearse the protocol at least three times within ninety days of a scheduled execution.
Under Delaware law, an inmate’s execution is scheduled by a state trial court and must take place between the hours of 12:01 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. See Del.Code Ann. tit. 11, § 4209(f). No more than ten witnesses are permitted to attend an execution, including one adult member of the immediate family of the victim. See id.
Once an inmate’s execution is scheduled, the new protocol calls for an individual designated by the Warden, approximately three hours before the execution, to transport the chemicals from a locked refrigerator to an “injection room,” where the IV team prepares the syringes. Members of a “tie-down” team strap the inmate to a gurney in the execution chamber. After the tie-down team has exited the chamber, the IV team enters the chamber and verifies that the inmate’s blood flow is not overly restricted by the gurney straps. The IV team then inserts a primary IV line and a backup IV line. If both the primary and backup lines cannot be established within one hour, the Commissioner must contact the Governor of Delaware and request that the execution be postponed. If the lines are established, the Warden signals to the IV team to administer the three-drug sequence. After the delivery of the sodium thiopental and a saline solution, the IV team must wait two minutes and check the inmate’s consciousness. During this time, the curtain to the execution chamber is kept closed. The Warden calls the inmate’s name out loud to observe any reaction from the inmate. At the same time, a member of the IV team assesses the inmate’s consciousness by touching the inmate, shaking his shoulder, and brushing his eyelashes. If the inmate appears to be unconscious, the curtain is reopened and the Warden signals for the pancuronium bromide to be administered, followed by the potassium chloride. After two minutes have passed, if the inmate does not appear to be unconscious, the Warden must direct the IV team to discontinue use of the primary IV line and to resort to the backup IV line, beginning with a new injection of sodium thiopental. Following the injection of all three chemicals, the IV team signals the Warden that the process is complete. One of the IV team members then begins a stopwatch. If, after ten minutes, a heart *214 monitor connected to the inmate does not indicate a flat line and a doctor is unable to pronounce the inmate dead, the Warden must order a new round of delivery of the three chemicals. The protocol calls for the process to continue until the inmate is declared dead.
To date, no inmate has been executed under Delaware’s current lethal injection protocol.
B. Procedural History
In May 2006, Robert W. Jackson, III 4 initiated this lawsuit by filing a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware against various known and unknown Delaware officials (collectively referred to in this opinion as “Delaware”). 5 Jackson asserted a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 6 alleging that Delaware’s then-effective lethal injection protocol violated his right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution. He sought temporary and permanent injunctive relief to prevent his execution by lethal injection until Delaware’s protocol was brought into conformity with constitutional standards. Within days of filing his complaint, Jackson moved for a preliminary injunction to prevent his execution, which was then scheduled for May 19, 2006. The District Court granted that motion and stayed Jackson’s execution. Thereafter, on Jackson’s motion the District Court certified Jackson’s proposed class of Delaware death row inmates (collectively referred to in this opinion as the “Plaintiffs”) and appointed class counsel.
In September 2007, the District Court postponed a then-impending trial date in light of the Supreme Court’s grant of the petition for a writ of certiorari in
Baze v. Rees,
The Plaintiffs have timely appealed the District Court’s grant of summary judgment for Delaware. Delaware has timely appealed the District Court’s stay pending appeal. 8
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise plenary review over the purely legal question of how a Supreme Court decision is to be interpreted.
See Kadelski v. Sullivan,
III.
A. The Meaning of Baze
The Eighth Amendment, which applies to the states by virtue of the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits the infliction of “cruel and unusual punishments.” U.S. Const, amend. VIII;
see Baze,
The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari and likewise affirmed. Chief Justice Roberts authored the plurality opinion, which Justice Kennedy and Justice Alito joined. Beginning from the premise — which neither party disputed— that capital punishment is constitutional, the plurality rejected the petitioners’ argument that Kentucky should adopt a one-drug, instead of a three-drug, protocol and their accompanying invitation to adopt an “unnecessary risk” standard in adjudicating Eighth Amendment claims.
Id.
at 1532. Instead, the plurality held that to prevail on such a claim an inmate must show that there is “a ‘substantial risk of serious harm,’ an ‘objectively intolerable risk of harm’ that prevents prison officials from pleading that they were ‘subjectively blameless for purposes of the Eighth Amendment.’ ”
Id.
at 1531 (quoting
Farmer v. Brennan,
The plurality was unpersuaded by the petitioners’ contention that Kentucky should adopt a one-drug protocol because *217 of the risk that the first drug in the three-drug protocol might be maladministered. See id. at 1533. While acknowledging that, “failing a proper dose of sodium thiopental that would render the prisoner unconscious, there is a substantial, constitutionally unacceptable risk of suffocation from the administration of pancuronium bromide and pain from the injection of potassium ehloride[,]” id., the plurality nevertheless wrote that “a condemned prisoner cannot successfully challenge a State’s method of execution merely by showing a slightly or marginally safer alternative.” Id. at 1531. The plurality explained that “[pjermitting an Eighth Amendment violation to be established on such a showing would threaten to transform courts into boards of inquiry charged with determining ‘best practices’ for executions, with each ruling supplanted by another round of litigation touting a new and improved methodology” and “would embroil the courts in ongoing scientific controversies beyond their expertise, and would substantially intrude on the role of state legislatures in implementing their execution procedures — a role that by all accounts the States have fulfilled with an earnest desire to provide for a progressively more humane manner of death.” Id. (citation omitted). The plurality did not categorically preclude an inmate from proving an Eighth Amendment violation in light of a safer alternative, but it did impose a heavy burden on an inmate seeking to make such a showing. Specifically, in the words of the plurality, the inmate’s
proffered alternatives must effectively address a “substantial risk of serious harm.” To qualify, the alternative procedure must be feasible, readily implemented, and in fact significantly reduce a substantial risk of severe pain. If a State refuses to adopt such an alternative in the face of these documented advantages, without a legitimate penological justification for adhering to its current method of execution, then a State’s refusal to change its method can be viewed as “cruel and unusual” under the Eighth Amendment.
Id. at 1532 (internal citation and footnote omitted).
Applying these principles to the facts before it, the plurality found that the petitioners had failed to establish that there was a substantial risk of maladministration of Kentucky’s protocol. The plurality saw no clear error in the trial court’s determination that mixing the drugs was relatively uncomplicated and pointed to the protocol’s various safeguards ensuring an adequate delivery of sodium thiopental. Specifically, the Court highlighted the protocol’s requirements that IV team members have at least one year of professional experience; that execution team members participate in at least ten yearly practice sessions; and that the warden and deputy warden be present in the execution chamber to watch for signs of IV problems. See id. at 1533-34. In light of these safeguards, the plurality concluded that “the risks identified by petitioners are [not] so substantial or imminent as to amount to an Eighth Amendment violation.” Id. at 1534.
Finally, the plurality responded to the suggestion of Justice Stevens, who concurred in the judgment, that the plurality opinion would “leave[] the disposition of other cases uncertain,” by explaining as follows:
A stay of execution may not be granted on grounds such as those asserted here unless the condemned prisoner establishes that the State’s lethal injection protocol creates a demonstrated risk of severe pain. He must show that the risk is substantial when compared to the known and available alternatives. A *218 State with a lethal injection protocol substantially similar to the protocol we uphold today would not create a risk that meets this standard.
Id. at 1537 (emphasis added). 9
In his concurrence in the judgment, Justice Stevens, in addition to raising the abovementioned concern that the plurality found ungrounded, questioned the utility of pancuronium bromide in three-drug protocols, given the risk that “the inmate will suffer excruciating pain before death occurs[,]” id. at 1543 (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment), and suggested that states consider eliminating it from their protocols. Id. at 1546 (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment). Justice Stevens stated his understanding that the death penalty is constitutional as a general matter in light of the Court’s precedents and determined that the petitioners had failed to meet their burden of showing that Kentucky’s protocol was unconstitutional under those precedents, whether interpreted by the plurality or the dissent. Id. at 1552 (Stevens., J., concurring in the judgment). However, he also “relied on [his] own experience in reaching the conclusion that the imposition of the death penalty represents the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes.” Id. at 1551 (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment) (internal quotation marks omitted). 10
Justice Thomas, with whom Justice Scalia joined, concurred in the judgment, and thought Baze “an easy case.” Id. at 1563 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment). In his view, the plurality’s standard was both unsupported by Eighth Amendment jurisprudence and amorphous, rendering it difficult for lower courts to apply. See id. at 1556,1561-62 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment). According to Justice Thomas, the relevant inquiry in an Eighth Amendment challenge is whether the challenged method of execution is designed to inflict pain. See id. at 1563 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment). “Because Kentucky’s lethal injection protocol is designed to eliminate pain rather than to inflict it,” Justice Thomas wrote, the “petitioners’ challenge must fail.” Id. (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment).
Justice Breyer concurred in the judgment as well. He agreed with Justice Ginsburg’s dissenting opinion that a court should evaluate several factors to determine the constitutionality of a state’s execution protocol, but thought that “the legal merits of the kind of claim presented must inevitably turn not so much upon the wording of an intermediate standard of review as upon facts and evidence.” Id. (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment). Based on both “the record in this case [and] ... the literature on the subject,” Justice Breyer could not find “sufficient *219 evidence that Kentucky’s execution method poses the significant and unnecessary risk of inflicting severe pain that petitioners assert.” Id. 1563-64 (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment) (internal quotation marks and record citation omitted).
Finally, Justice Ginsburg, with whom Justice Souter joined, dissented. In Justice Ginsburg’s view, “[t]he constitutionality of Kentucky’s protocol ... turn[ed] on whether inmates are adequately anesthetized by the first drug in the protocol, sodium thiopental.” Id. at 1567 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting). She agreed with the plurality that “the degree of risk, magnitude of pain, and availability of alternatives must be considered,” but concluded that these factors “are interrelated [such that] a strong showing on one reduces the importance of the others.” Id. at 1568 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting). The “critical question,” according to Justice Ginsburg, “is whether a feasible alternative exists.” Id. at 1569 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting). Contrasting the relatively deficient safeguards in Kentucky’s protocol with the greater safeguards included in other states’ protocols, Justice Ginsburg would have remanded “with instructions to consider whether the failure to include readily available safeguards to confirm that the inmate is unconscious after injection of sodium thiopental, in combination with the other elements of Kentucky’s protocol, creates an untoward, readily avoidable risk of inflicting severe and unnecessary pain.” Id. at 1572 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
To summarize, the plurality announced a standard governing challenges to lethal injection protocols in line with select strains of the Court’s conditions-of-confinement Eighth Amendment jurisprudence. Justices Stevens and Justice Breyer found simply that the petitioners had failed to meet their burden on the facts of this particular case, but for different reasons. And Justice Thomas, joined by Justice Scalia, concluded that the Eighth Amendment only prohibits deliberate efforts to inflict pain. Finally, Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justice Souter, adopted an “untoward, readily avoidable risk” test for assessing method-of-execution challenges. Id. at 1567 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
Ordinarily, we apply the standard or standards endorsed by a majority of Justices when interpreting Supreme Court precedent.
See Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey,
In
Marks v. United States,
the Supreme Court instructed that “[w]hen a fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five Justices, the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds[J”
Both the Supreme Court and this Court have recognized the difficulty of applying
Marks
under certain circumstances.
See Grutter v. Bollinger,
To understand how
Marks
works here, we find it useful to consider the genesis of the framework
Marks
constructed.
Marks
came to the Supreme Court following the petitioners’ convictions under a statute prohibiting the transportation of obscene materials in interstate commerce. The petitioners had argued in the district court that the jury instructions regarding what constitutes obscenity should be derived from the Court’s decision in
A Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure” v. Attorney General of Massachusetts,
In
Roth,
a majority of the Justices had established the following test for distinguishing obscenity from protected speech: “whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest.”
Id.
at 489,
The
Marks
Court reasoned that because Justice Black and Justice Douglas had concurred in the judgment based on their “position that the First Amendment provides an absolute shield against governmental action aimed at suppressing obscenity[,]” the plurality’s view “constituted the holding of the Court and provided the governing standards.”
Marks,
430 U.S. at
*222
193-94,
Marks’
“narrowest grounds” language in turn sprang from
Gregg v. Georgia,
For purposes of this appeal, the salient takeaway from Marks and Gregg, and the cases they examined, is that the Marks framework applies where one opinion is clearly “narrower” than another, that is, where one opinion would always lead to the same result that a broader opinion would reach. The controlling opinion in Memoirs, for instance, was the plurality opinion because that opinion would find material constitutionally protected in every instance in which Justices Black and Douglas would so find. Similarly, the non-controlling concurring opinions in Furman would strike down death penalty statutes as unconstitutional in all cases, while the controlling concurring opinions would do so in only a subset of those cases. The scenarios presented in Marks and Furman strongly resemble the one we confront here. The plurality standard in Baze would find some lethal injection protocols unconstitutional and others constitutional, while Justice Thomas and Justice Scalia would find any lethal injection protocol constitutional unless it were deliberately designed to inflict pain. Put another way, the plurality is controlling when combined with Justice Thomas’ concurrence in the judgment because any lethal injection protocol constitutionally acceptable to the plurality would invariably pass Justice Thomas’ per se rule. 15 The plurality opinion is clearly “narrower” than Justice Thomas’s concurrence in the judgment. Accordingly, we hold that the plurality opinion in *223 Baze controls Eighth Amendment method-of-execution challenges.
B. The Grant of Summary Judgment
To survive summary judgment under Baze, the Plaintiffs must point to record evidence from which a reasonable fact finder could infer that Delaware’s protocol does not meet the standards governing the constitutionality of an execution protocol as articulated by Chief Justice Roberts in the plurality opinion. 16
The parties do not dispute that Delaware’s protocol is in all material respects *224 identical to the protocol the Supreme Court found constitutional in Baze. Indeed, when the District Court asked the Plaintiffs to identify any differences between the two protocols, the Plaintiffs acknowledged that they had “not identified any substantive differences between the two protocols as written.” (App. 329 (emphasis in original).) As they did before the District Court, the Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the focus of judicial inquiry should be not on the two protocols’ written similarities but on extra-protocol elements that, in their view, establish the substantial risk that was found wanting in Baze. Those elements may be fairly divided into three classes: (1) Delaware’s historical noncompliance with its former protocol; (2) the current protocol’s lack of a backup plan; and (3) the existence of an allegedly better, one-drug protocol that has been implemented and used in Ohio. None of the evidence the Plaintiffs have adduced helps them meet their burden under Baze. We address each evidentiary proffer in turn.
1. Evidence of Historical Noncompliance
Evidence of Delaware’s noncompliance with its former protocol exists because of an important distinction between that protocol and the Kentucky protocol at issue in
Baze.
In
Baze,
Kentucky had executed but one inmate since its adoption of lethal injection.
See
The Plaintiffs spotlight, for instance, Delaware’s failure on several occasions to administer the correct dosage of potassium chloride. While it is uncontested that an inmate would very likely suffer immeasurable pain if given an injection of potassium chloride without being rendered unconscious by a proper dosage of sodium thiopental, the record is bereft of evidence that any of the thirteen inmates Delaware has executed using the three-drug protocol was still conscious when injected with potassium chloride.
17
The importance of that evidentiary deficiency cannot be understated, since the constitutionality of Kentucky’s protocol rested on the effective anesthetization of an inmate, as both the plurality and the dissent in
Baze
recognized.
See
The Plaintiffs also place great weight on Delaware’s execution of Brian Steckel in November 2005. During his execution, Steckel’s primary IV line became infiltrated during the administration of sodium thiopental. Steckel clearly was still conscious when the IV team noticed the problem. After unsuccessful attempts to repair the primary line, the IV team rerouted the sodium thiopental to Steekel’s backup line, thereby prolonging his execution. The Plaintiffs assert that the District Court erroneously credited deposition testimony reflecting that Steckel received the appropriate dosage of sodium thiopental while discounting other evidence indicating that he had not received the appropriate dosage of that drug. According to the Plaintiffs, if “Steckel did not receive an adequate dose of anesthesia, his execution was inhumane, which bears heavily on the likelihood of future maladministration.” (Appellants’ Op. Br. 41-42.)
As discussed above, the proper administration of sodium thiopental is an indispensable link in the lethal injection chain for Eighth Amendment purposes, as it ensures that an inmate will not suffer under the effects of the second two drugs.
See Baze,
The other evidence of Delaware’s noncompliance with its protocol is likewise unavailing. The Plaintiffs point to Delaware’s failure to maintain written records of the executions; to verify that the equipment used during the executions was in good working order; to undergo the training exercises mandated by the protocol; and to ensure that members of the IV team were shown the portion of the protocol relevant to their responsibilities. (App. 156-60, 169-71, 179.) The Plaintiffs have made no effort, however, to demonstrate how any of these deficiencies, standing either alone or together, poses a substantial risk of serious harm. The Plaintiffs in essence ask us to infer that inmates have experienced pain during previous executions based on Delaware’s admittedly often casual approach to the implementation of certain aspects of its former protocol. That invitation must be declined, as we cannot, in this posture, make inferences based on pure supposition.
See Acumed LLC v. Advanced Surgical Servs.,
561
*227
F.3d 199, 228 (3d Cir.2009) (“[Speculation and conjecture may not defeat a motion for summary judgment.” (citation omitted)). Of course, we do not reject the likelihood that an improperly-trained execution team would be more inclined to make a mistake than a well-trained team. It is just as plausible that faulty equipment could upset an otherwise smoothly-run execution. None of these possibilities, however, even obliquely suggest the existence of conditions that are “sure or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering” or “give rise to sufficiently imminent dangers.”
Baze,
At their core, the various instances of Delaware’s noncompliance with its former protocol that the Plaintiffs have presented to us in an effort to meet their summary judgment burden are but a string of isolated examples of maladministration. Significantly,
Baze
explicitly dismissed similar efforts by the petitioners in that case: “The risks of maladministration [the petitioners] have suggested — such as improper mixing of chemicals and improper setting of TV's by trained and experienced person
nel
— cannot
remotely be characterized as ‘objectively intolerable.’ ”
2. Lack of a Backup Plan
The Plaintiffs also maintain that Delaware’s protocol violates the Eighth Amendment because it lacks what the Plaintiffs refer to as a “Plan B.” (Appellants’ Op. Br. 48.) Specifically, they point to the deposition of Delaware’s expert anesthesiologist, who testified that peripheral IV access would be unobtainable in certain cases. That expert further testified that Delaware’s protocol should include a contingency plan in the event the backup IV line cannot be established after an attempt at establishing the primary IV line fails. This argument cannot surmount the wall erected by
Baze
for at least two reasons. First, there is no evidence that the Kentucky protocol examined in
Baze
had a contingency plan in place in the event its written protocol could not be put into effect. The absence of such a plan did not prevent seven Members of the Court from giving that protocol a passing grade on the constitutional test. Indeed, the Plaintiffs acknowledge as much in their brief.
{See
Appellants’ Reply Br. 12 (“[T]he Supreme Court approved Kentucky’s protocol, which does not have such a plan.”).) Second,
Baze
dictates that the Plaintiffs show not only a substantial risk of serious harm, but also that “the conditions presenting the risk are
sure or very likely
to cause serious illness and needless suffering, and give rise to sufficiently
imminent
dangers.”
3. Existence of a One-Drug Protocol
In their supplemental filings, the Plaintiffs ascribe great weight to Ohio’s recent substitution of a three-drug protocol with a one-drug protocol. Ohio made the switch in November 2009 after experiencing what the Sixth Circuit has called “serious and troubling difficulties in executing at least three inmates [under the old protocol.]”
Reynolds v. Strickland,
In essence, the Plaintiffs claim that Delaware’s protocol violates the Eighth Amendment because of the existence of a
*229
purportedly better alternative: a one-drug protocol that would eliminate the potential hazards sometimes occasioned by the maladministration of sodium thiopental. The critical weakness in that position is that it is remarkably similar, if not identical, to the one advanced by the
Baze
petitioners and specifically rejected by the
Baze
Court.
See
In sum, on this record we are compelled to conclude that the Plaintiffs have failed to show that Delaware’s lethal injection protocol violates the Eight Amendment under Baze. Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment for Delaware.
C. The District Court’s Stay
Delaware argues that the District Court erred when it kept in place the stay of Jackson’s execution that it entered shortly after these proceedings began. In essence, the District Court granted a stay pending appeal, and appears to have done so sua sponte, as there is no clue in the record that any party asked for such relief. Because we will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment for Delaware, we will dissolve the District Court’s stay and therefore have no occasion to reach the merits of Delaware’s cross-appeal.
We cannot leave this issue, however, without saying a word about the District Court’s decision not to provide any reasons for granting a stay pending appeal. In its order granting summary judgment for Delaware, the District Court stated only that “the stay entered on May 6, 2006, shall remain in effect pending appeal.” (App.59.) Under the circumstances presented here, we are not hard-pressed to divine potential reasons for the District Court’s decision to prolong the stay. The District Court might have thought there was a reasonable likelihood that the Plaintiffs would prevail on appeal. In light of that perceived likelihood, the District Court might have considered the possibility of irreparable harm to Jackson were he executed under an unconstitutional protocol. Both of these reasons might well be valid. But we are reluctant to rely purely on our own speculation, no matter how logically appealing or supported by a piecemeal gathering of elements in the record, in reviewing a district court’s grant of a stay pending appeal, or any other relief for that matter.
Explicit, on-the-record reasons for granting any relief, including a stay pending appeal, not only facilitate, but are often
*230
crucial to, effective appellate review.
See Protective Comm. for Indep. Stockholders of TMT Trailer Ferry v. Anderson,
IY. CONCLUSION
The safeguards drafted into Delaware’s new lethal injection protocol exceed those contained in the Kentucky protocol that seven Justices in
Baze
found constitutionally firm, and the Plaintiffs have failed to adduce evidence that the new protocol otherwise offends the Eighth Amendment. Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment for Delaware and dissolve the District Court’s stay. Our holding, of course, should in no way be construed as license for Delaware to stay the worrisome course it appears to have taken at times under its former protocol. As
Baze
aptly noted, “Reasonable people of good faith disagree on the morality and efficacy of capital punishment!.]”
Notes
. Because this is an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the class of death row inmates challenging Delaware’s execution protocol, the nonmoving party.
See Fagan v. City of Vineland,
. Delaware law provides that if its lethal injection protocol is held unconstitutional, executions must be carried out by hanging. Del. Code Ann. tit. 11, § 4209(f). Previously, Delaware permitted inmates to select whether they wished to be executed by lethal injection or hanging.
. Those specialists include a certified medical assistant, a phlebotomist, an emergency medical technician, a paramedic, and a military corpsman.
. Jackson was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1992 murder of Elizabeth Girardi.
See Jackson v. State,
. The complaint named the following defendants: Stanley W. Taylor, Jr., Commissioner, Delaware Department of Correction; Thomas L. Carroll, Warden, Delaware Correctional Center; Paul Howard, Bureau Chief, Delaware Bureau of Prisons; and other unknown Delaware officials. In February 2007, the District Court substituted Taylor with his successor, Carl C. Danberg.
. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 provides in part:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured!;.]
. Of course, no party had filed a notice of appeal at the time of the District Court's ruling. The District Court evidently presumed — correctly, as it turned out — that an appeal was forthcoming.
. Following the docketing of the parties' respective appeals, the Plaintiffs moved to remand for the District Court to reconsider its summary judgment ruling or, in the alternative, for additional fact-finding and supplemental briefing to be submitted to this Court. Delaware moved to strike that request. This Court granted the Plaintiffs' motion insofar as it sought permission to file supplemental briefs and denied Delaware's motion to strike as moot. Both parties have filed supplemental briefs.
. While he joined in the plurality opinion, Justice Alito also concurred separately "to explain ... how the holding should be implemented."
Baze,
. Justice Scalia, who joined in Justice Thomas’ concurrence in the judgment, wrote separately, in a concurrence in the judgment in which Justice Thomas joined, to respond to Justice Stevens’ personal repudiation of capital punishment.
See Baze,
. Some courts have assumed, with little or no explicit analysis, that the plurality opinion in
Baze
announced the holding of the Court and thus that the plurality's interpretation of the Eighth Amendment is binding on lower courts.
See, e.g., Harbison v. Little,
. The petitioners wanted Memoirs' standards to govern in their prosecutions because those standards were more favorable to the defense than those announced in Miller.
. Justice Black wrote nothing new in
Memoirs.
Instead, he referred to his dissenting opinion in
Mishkin v. New York,
. Like Justice Black, Justice Stewart referred to his dissenting opinion in another case,
Ginzburg v. United States,
.
Rappa v. New Castle County,
In a footnote in
Rappa,
we pointed out that while "it would be possible to predict the outcome in almost every case simply by counting the votes of the Justices!,]” which would "have the advantage of creating some predictability!,] ... such a system would be unprincipled” because it would not be "root
*223
ed in any consistent constitutional values.”
Id.
at 1060 n. 24. Importantly, these statements were mere dicta, and thus lack binding force.
See N. Jersey Media Group v. Ashcroft,
. The Plaintiffs argue that the District Court erred by applying
Baze’s
"substantially similar” standard to this case. That is, in their view the District Court impermissibly found Delaware’s protocol constitutional simply because it was substantially similar to Kentucky's. We disagree that the District Court did no more than apply that standard. But to the extent it did, we do not believe that such an approach is necessarily impermissible. We believe that in addition to establishing the substantial risk standard,
Baze
also stands for the proposition that Kentucky's protocol, on its face, did not present a substantial risk of serious harm. Therefore, any protocol substantially similar to Kentucky's protocol, without more, would survive under the plurality standard. That conclusion finds ample support in the case law.
See, e.g., Harbison,
The Plaintiffs also argue that whether a method of execution presents the degree of risk described by
Baze
turns not only on objective fact, but on whether state officials are deliberately indifferent to that risk. They point out that
Baze
drew heavily from the Supreme Court's prior cases involving conditions of confinement and Eighth Amendment concerns. To be sure,
Baze’s
"sure or very likely” and "sufficiently imminent” language was taken from the Court's decision in
Helling v. McKinney,
While
Baze
captured some of the language in
Helling
and
Farmer,
importantly, it did not import the "deliberate indifference” language used in those cases. The fact that
Baze
took such pains to extract certain language from
Helling
and
Farmer
suggests that the other standards announced in those cases do not govern Eighth Amendment method-of-execution challenges. That distinction makes sense, as the Supreme Court's Eighth Amendment conditions-of-confinement cases and method-of-execution cases have separate lineages in the Court's jurisprudence.
Cf. Taylor
v.
Crawford,
*224
Cir.2007) (noting the difference between a "conditions-of-confinement claim challenging prison conditions in general,” where a state-of-mind inquiry is obligatory, and cases involving "state-sanctioned punishment”). Furthermore, even a cursory comparison of the different circumstances giving rise to these two types of Eight Amendment challenges bears out why subjective conditions-of-confinement standards do not govern method-of-execution challenges. In
Farmer,
the Court explained that “[wjhether a prison official had the requisite knowledge of substantial risk is a question of fact subject to demonstration in the usual ways, including ... [by providing] evidence ... that the defendant-officials were at the time [the] suit was filed, and are at the time of summary judgment, knowingly and unreasonably disregarding an objectively intolerable risk of harm, and that they will continue to do so[.]”
In any event, to the extent the Plaintiffs maintain that they were denied purportedly vital discovery into Delaware officials’ state of mind, the record suggests otherwise. If the Plaintiffs wanted to show Delaware officials' deliberate indifference to the risks associated with the state's lethal injection protocol, the Plaintiffs had only to ask those officials if they were aware of those risks. Nothing in the record intimates that the District Court cut off that line of questioning. To the contrary, the record reflects that the District Court gave the parties relatively wide latitude in crafting their discovery inquiries. Thus, even assuming Helling s and Farmer’s subjective standards apply to method-of-execution cases, the Plaintiffs have given us no principled explanation for their failure to request the very information to which they now assert an entitlement. In other words, the Plaintiffs cannot now complain about discovery that they did not request in the District Court proceedings and that the District Court, as far as the record reveals, did not preclude them from requesting.
. As discussed in greater detail below, the delivery of sodium thiopental to one of the inmates whom Delaware has executed took longer than planned. Importantly, however, there is no suggestion in the record that the execution team proceeded with the administration of pancuronium bromide or potassium chloride before ensuring that the inmate was unconscious.
. In their supplemental filings, the Plaintiffs also assert, as they did in their initial brief, that a genuine factual dispute exists by virtue of the Delaware protocol's lack of a "Plan B.” This time, however, they highlight a similar lack in Ohio's old protocol, which they claim resulted in more than two hours of failed efforts to establish an IV line during the would-be execution of an Ohio inmate. In their view, Delaware could at any time go "off-protocol” in the event of a failure to establish an IV line during an execution. That view is singularly unconvincing. Delaware has a protocol firmly in place. There is nothing in the record to support the proposition, and no logical reason to assume, that Delaware will do anything other than what its protocol requires and what it has represented on the record it would do in the event of a failed administration of sodium thiopental. There is perhaps always an ethereal risk that a rogue execution team could deviate from a written protocol and depart on a whimsical frolic, a possibility the Plaintiffs appear to take as a given. There is no historical basis for such an eventuality, however, as nothing in the record suggests that Delaware officials have ever gone "off-protocol” during any of the thirteen executions already carried out in that state. In any event, such an occurrence is both grossly speculative and highly improbable and thus does not imply the existence of conditions that are "sure or very likely” to cause pain.
