Plaintiff-Appellant Mark Jordan was incarcerated in solitary confinement at the administrative maximum security facility in Florence, Colorado (“ADX”), when he commenced this action. Mr. Jordan was convicted of stabbing a fellow inmate while incarcerated in federal prison for several offenses, including three armed bank robberies. He brought a civil-rights action for a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief against specifically named officials of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”), pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, to challenge the constitutionality of a statutory and regulatory ban on the use of federal funds to distribute to federal prisoners commercially published materials that are sexually explicit or feature nudity. Following a two-day bench trial, the district court held that the ban did not violate the First or Fifth Amendments to the United States *1016 Constitution. Mr. Jordan now appeals the district court’s rejection of his First Amendment claims. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we conclude that Mr. Jordan’s subsequent transfer to other prison facilities has rendered his claims moot.
BACKGROUND
The BOP has regulated the distribution of sexually explicit publications to federal prisoners for over thirty years. In 1979, the BOP promulgated a regulation granting wardens the discretion to reject incoming publications.
1
Control, Custody, Care, Treatment, and Instruction of Inmates, 44 Fed.Reg. 38,254, 38,260 (June 29, 1979) (codified at 28 C.F.R. § 540.71(b)). As codified, this regulation authorizes wardens to reject “sexually explicit material which by its nature or content poses a threat to the security, good order, or discipline of the institution, or facilitates criminal activity.”
2
28 C.F.R. § 540.71(b)(7). Although this regulation vests wardens with considerable discretion to reject publications, it forbids them from rejecting a publication “solely because its content is religious, philosophical, political, social or sexual, or because its content is unpopular or repugnant.”
Id.
§ 540.71(b). Wardens also may not “establish an excluded list of publications,” meaning that they must review materials on an issue-by-issue basis.
Id.
§ 540.71(c). The Supreme Court upheld the facial constitutionality of this regulation in
Thornburgh v. Abbott,
In 1996, Congress altered the regulatory landscape with the enactment of the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act of 1997, Pub.L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996) (“Act”). In Section 614 of the Act, known as the Ensign Amendment, Congress exercised its power of the purse to ratchet up the restrictions on incoming publications at federal prisons.
See
§ 614,
In response to the Ensign Amendment, the BOP promulgated an implementing *1017 regulation that narrows the scope of the statute by defining key statutory terms. 4 See 28 C.F.R. § 540.72. Under this regulation, “nudity” means “a pictorial depiction where genitalia or female breasts are exposed.” Id. § 540.72(b)(2). “Features” means that “the publication contains depictions of nudity or sexually explicit conduct on a routine or regular basis or promotes itself based upon such depictions in the case of individual one-time issues.” Id. § 540.72(b)(3). The definition of “features” carves out an exclusion, which is not present in the Ensign Amendment, for “publications containing nudity illustrative of medical, educational, or anthropological content.” Id. “Sexually explicit” means “a pictorial depiction of actual or simulated sexual acts including sexual intercourse, oral sex, or masturbation.” Id. § 540.72(b)(4). Although the Ensign Amendment covers all material that is sexually explicit or features nudity, whether pictorial or text, this regulation narrowly interprets the Ensign Amendment to prohibit only pictorial depictions. See id.
The BOP has also adopted a program statement to establish procedures for federal prisons to effectuate the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation. See Aplt.App., Vol. Ill, at 661-69 (BOP Program Statement 5266.10, dated Jan. 10, 2003). In Program Statement 5266.10, which was in effect at all times relevant to this action, Section 7 elaborates on the restrictions in the Ensign Amendment and in 28 C.F.R. § 540.72. 5 For example, the BOP explains that it may distribute certain periodicals to prisoners — such as National Geographic, sports-magazine swimsuit issues, or lingerie catalogues — because they contain nudity without featuring nudity. The BOP also indicates that written text “does not qualify a publication as sexually explicit.” Aplt.App., Vol. Ill, at 669. Furthermore, the BOP notes that publications may be banned under 28 C.F.R. § 540.71 and Program Statement 5266.10 § 6(b)(7) even if they are not sexually explicit and do not feature nudity. Id.
BOP officials relied on § 540.72(b) and the program statement to reject four commercial publications addressed to Mr. Jordan. First, on February 26, 2003, BOP officials rejected a book entitled Divas and Lovers \—The Erotic Art of Studio Manassé, which is a study of portraits from “a golden age of cinema and cabaret in Vienna of the 1920s and 1930s,” ApltApp., Vol. Ill, at 471, because every page is sexually explicit or features nudity. Second, on April 15, 2004, BOP officials rejected the May/June 2004 issue of JUXTAPOZ Art & Culture Magazine because eleven pages contain images from an art show in Detroit that are sexually explicit or feature nudity. Third, on May 21, 2004, BOP officials rejected the July/August 2004 issue of JUXTAPOZ Art & Ctilture Magazine because one page contains a re-print of an oil painting of a nude woman. Fourth, on August 15, 2004, BOP officials rejected a book entitled Kama Sutra because depictions in the book are sexually explicit and feature nudity. 6 Mr. Jordan exhausted his admin *1018 istrative remedies in appealing the rejection of these publications.
On July 12, 2005, Mr. Jordan commenced this civil-rights action in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado against the Warden and the Inmate System Manager of the ADX, along with certain other BOP officials assigned to penal institutions in Colorado and California in their individual and official capacities. 7 Significantly, however, Mr. Jordan did not name as defendants either the Director of the BOP or the BOP itself. By way of relief, Mr. Jordan sought a declaratory judgment, an injunction, and damages, claiming that (1) the Ensign Amendment violated the First Amendment, facially and as applied to him; (2) the Ensign Amendment violated the Fifth Amendment; and (3) the implementing regulation, 28 C.F.R. § 540.72(a), violated the First Amendment, facially and as applied to him. 8 In a pre-trial order, the district court dismissed Mr. Jordan’s claims against the officials in their individual capacities along with his request for damages.
A bench trial was held on July 7 and 8, 2008. On July 11, 2008, the district court issued Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, upholding the constitutionality of the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation under the First and Fifth Amendments. 9 Mr. Jordan now appeals the district court’s order with respect to the First Amendment.
DISCUSSION
Mr. Jordan challenges the constitutionality of the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation. As an initial matter, we hold that Mr. Jordan has standing to challenge the Ensign Amendment only to the extent that it is embodied in the narrowly drafted implementing regulation. Additionally, because Mr. Jordan was transferred from the ADX to other BOP facilities while his appeal was pending, we must address whether any portion of this case is moot. We conclude that Mr. Jordan’s First Amendment facial and as-applied challenges are moot; thus, we need not consider whether the Ensign Amendment — insofar as it is implemented through 28 C.F.R. § 540.72 — is unconstitutional.
*1019 I. Standing
Article III of the United States Constitution limits the jurisdiction of federal courts to the adjudication of “Cases” or “Controversies.” U.S. Const, art. Ill, § 2, cl. 1. Although the parties and the district court neglected to address whether Mr. Jordan had standing to challenge the constitutionality of the Ensign Amendment, we raise the issue
sua sponte
“[b]e-cause it involves the court’s power to entertain the suit.”
Green v. Haskell Cnty. Bd. of Comm’rs,
The injury-in-fact element requires “an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a) concrete and particularized; and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
We evaluate the constitutionality of a statute by assessing the manner in which it is implemented and enforced by the governmental officials who administer it.
See, e.g., Forsyth Cnty., Ga. v. Nationalist Movement,
In so doing, we conclude that Mr. Jordan has standing to challenge the Ensign Amendment only to the extent that it is embodied in the BOP’s narrowly drafted implementing regulation. The record reveals that the BOP never applies the Ensign Amendment directly to incoming publications; to the contrary, a BOP official agreed at trial that prison staff apply a narrower interpretation of the statute through the implementing regulation and, secondarily, through the program statement, which establishes procedures to implement the prescriptions and restrictions of the regulation. The parties also stipulated that the BOP had rejected the publications at issue pursuant to 28 C.F.R. § 540.72 and the program statement and, throughout the administrative appeals process, the BOP issued several documents in which it confirmed that it had denied Mr. Jordan’s individual publications under its own regulatory scheme. Although some of these appellate documents reference the Ensign Amendment, the BOP generally denied Mr. Jordan’s appeals because it found that the rejection of the contested publications was consistent with its program statement, which effectuates the BOP’s regulation.
Because BOP officials apply the Ensign Amendment
through
that implementing regulation and program statement, Mr. Jordan has not suffered an injury in fact with respect to the portions of the Ensign Amendment that fall outside the scope of the implementing regulation.
10
See Amatel v. Reno,
II. Mootness
A. Factual Background
In reviewing documents in another case before this court, Jordan v. Wiley, No. 09-1355, the panel learned that Mr. Jordan may have been transferred from the ADX to another BOP facility. Taking judicial notice of this development, the panel issued a show-cause order that directed both parties to file supplemental briefs addressing: “(1) Mr. Jordan’s current location and conditions of confinement (e.g., prison facility and solitary-confinement status, if any); and (2) if Mr. Jordan is no longer housed in solitary confinement at ADX in Florence, Colorado, whether consequently this appeal is now moot, in whole or in part.” Order at 2, filed Nov. 26, 2010. 11
*1021 The parties’ simultaneous filings confirmed that Mr. Jordan had been transferred, but they reflected a puzzling disagreement concerning his new location. Mr. Jordan, through representations of his counsel and in his own affidavit, indicated that he was incarcerated in a federal penitentiary in Lee, Virginia. The government, through representations of counsel and an affidavit of a BOP official, initially indicated that he was being held at a federal penitentiary in Lee, Pennsylvania. Our review of the parties’ briefs (with attachments) and the record in the related case, Jordan v. Wiley, indicated (perhaps not surprisingly) that Mr. Jordan knew where he was — the United States Penitentiary in Lee County, Virginia. 12
Though the parties disputed Mr. Jordan’s precise geographic location, they, agreed that he was being held in administrative detention in a Special Housing Unit (“SHU”) at the time that they submitted their supplemental filings. 13 They also agreed that Mr. Jordan had been recommended for placement in a Special Management Unit (“SMU”). A subsequent filing by the government in February 2011 confirmed that a BOP Regional Director had approved Mr. Jordan’s transfer to a SMU on account of his “propensity for violence and continued disruptive behavior.” Aplee. Status Report at 1, filed Feb. 14, 2011. It further indicated that Mr. Jordan would therefore be transferred to a SMU “in the foreseeable future.” Id. at 2. According to the government, the BOP’s *1022 SMU facilities are located in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania; Talladega, Alabama; and Oakdale, Louisiana. Aplee. Supplemental Br. at 4. None of these facilities are within the jurisdiction of this court.
Our review of the BOP’s online Inmate Locator indicates that an inmate matching Mr. Jordan’s basic physical description (i.e., gender and race) and possessing the BOP registration number associated with Mr. Jordan in this case is currently being held at a SMU facility in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. Given that the parties have not informed us of any deviation from the BOP’s plan to place Mr. Jordan in a SMU, we are content to proceed on the premise that he is currently housed in a SMU facility and almost certainly the one located in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.
Inmates housed within a SMU, like those housed within a SHU, are not necessarily held in solitary confinement.' See Cook Deck, Attach. 4, at 5 (Special Management Units Program Statement, dated Nov. 19, 2008) (“Living quarters ordinarily house only the number of occupants for which they are designed. The Warden, however, may authorize additional occupants as long as adequate standards can be maintained.”); id. at 7 (“The Associate Warden is responsible for determining which inmates may be housed or participate in activities together, as necessary to protect the safety, security, and good order of the institution.”). However, the “[conditions of confinement for SMU inmates [are] more restrictive than for general population inmates.” Id. at 5. The SMU program consists of four progressive levels, differentiated by the degree of inmate interaction allowed, the amount of personal property that inmates are permitted to possess, and the programming that inmates must complete. Id. at 7-10; see also Cook Deck at 6. Inmates are expected to complete the SMU program within eighteen to twenty-four months. See Cook Deck, Attach. 4, at 1. The government concedes that SMU inmates remain subject to the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation, and a senior BOP official represented that the Amendment is likely to foreclose Mr. Jordan’s access to the requested publications while he remains in the SMU program. See Cook Deck at 12. Mr. Jordan himself represents that “[f]or so long as [he] remains in the BOP, the Ensign Amendment and the [applicable] mail regulations, and implementing [p]rogram [statements, will continue to apply to [his] receipt of correspondence and publications.” Jordan Deck at 6.
We must emphasize that these descriptions are lacking in concreteness and specificity, recounting only the general conditions of confinement prescribed by the BOP’s regulations and policy materials. Mr. Cook — the BOP official offering testimony via affidavit for the government — is based in Colorado, and he does not purport to have personal knowledge concerning Mr. Jordan’s current conditions of confinement outside of Colorado. Moreover, as Mr. Cook noted, wardens of BOP institutions ordinarily promulgate institutional supplements that provide institution-specific guidance to subordinates tasked with implementing BOP policy. Consequently, as relevant here, BOP facilities may differ in the manner in which they interpret and apply the Ensign Amendment through the BOP’s implementing regulation, 28 C.F.R. § 540.72. Significantly, we do not have any judicial findings of fact regarding Mr. Jordan’s current circumstances of confinement. In light of the foregoing, the details of Mr. Jordan’s current conditions of confinement are not entirely clear. In other words, we are not able to gain from the record a completely accurate and comprehensive picture of those conditions.
*1023 B. Constitutional and Prudential Mootness
Given Mr. Jordan’s multiple facility-transfers, we must consider whether any of Mr. Jordan’s claims are now moot. Mr. Jordan insists that his case is not moot because, “[rjegardless of his current or final placement, [he] remains in the custody of the BOP and is therefore subject to the Ensign Amendment, all published federal regulations governing incoming publications and correspondence, and the [BOP’s] ... [p]rogram [statements.” Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 4. More specifically, he claims that “[b]ecause his challenge is to the statute and the regulation, rather than to the specific conditions of confinement at ADX, his transfer to a new institution does not operate to moot his claims.” Id. The government acknowledges that the BOP enforces the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation in all of its facilities, including its SMUs. It is noteworthy that the government does not contend that Mr. Jordan’s First Amendment claims are constitutionally moot. Rather, the government argues that we should declare Mr. Jordan’s claims to be prudentially moot due to the changes in the location and circumstances of Mr. Jordan’s penal housing.
“The mootness doctrine provides that although there may be an actual and justiciable controversy at the time the litigation is commenced, once that controversy ceases to exist, the federal court must dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction.” 15 James W. Moore & Martin H. Redish,
Moore’s Federal Practice
§ 101.90, at 101—237 (3d ed.2010) (italicization omitted);
see United States v. Juvenile Male,
— U.S. -,
The mootness doctrine relates to both “[t]he constitutional case or controversy requirement of Article III ..., as well as the prudential considerations underlying justiciability.” 15 Moore,
supra,
§ 101.90, at 101-237. Accordingly, “[c]ourts recognize two kinds of mootness: constitutional mootness and prudential mootness.”
Rio Grande Silvery Minnow v. Bureau of Reclamation,
“Even if a case is not constitutionally moot, a court may dismiss [a] case under the prudential-mootness doctrine if the case ‘is so attenuated that considerations of prudence and comity for coordinate branches of government counsel the court to stay its hand, and to withhold relief it has the
power
to grant.’ ”
Rio Grande Silvery Minnow,
Where a plaintiff requests equitable relief, a mere showing that he maintains a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy is insufficient.
See City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
Moreover, a plaintiffs continued susceptibility to injury must be reasonably certain; a court will not entertain a claim for injunctive relief where the allegations “take[ ] [it] into the area of speculation and conjecture.”
Id.
at 497,
The mootness of a plaintiffs claim for
injunctive relief
is not necessarily dispositive regarding the mootness of his claim for a
declaratory judgment.
Where a plaintiff seeks both an injunction and declaratory relief, “the [district [c]ourt ha[s] ‘[a] duty to decide the appropriateness and the merits of the declaratory request irrespective of its conclusion as to the propriety of the issuance of [an] injunction.’ ” Super
Tire Eng’g Co. v. McCorkle,
Thus, where a plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment against his opponent, he must assert a claim for relief that, if granted, would affect the behavior of the particular parties listed in his complaint.
See Rhodes v. Stewart,
That a declaration might guide
third parties (i.e.,
those not parties to the lawsuit) in their future interactions with a plaintiff is insufficient. “Under the [fjederal Declaratory Judgment[ ] Act, Congress has authorized declaratory judgements only ‘[i]n ... case[s] of actual controversy.’”
Olin Corp. v. Consol. Aluminum Corp.,
Consequently, in a mootness inquiry in the declaratory judgment context, it is critically important to determine whether the plaintiff has named, as defendants, individuals or entities that are actually situated to have their future conduct toward the plaintiff altered by the court’s declaration of rights. If the plaintiff has not named such individuals or entities, courts are likely to determine that they cannot accord the plaintiff effective declaratory relief and that the action is moot.
See id.;
Note,
Cases Moot on Appeal: A Limit on the Judicial Power,
103 U. Pa. L.Rev. 772, 775 (1955) [hereinafter
Cases Moot on Appeal
] (“For obvious reasons, courts prefer not to enter decrees which will have no effect on the present status of the parties, and will dismiss such cases in order to devote their time to the decision of live controversies, which do give relief to those whose rights have been violated.”);
cf. Pritikin v. Dep’t of Energy,
C. Prisoner Transfers and Mootness
When a prisoner files suit against prison officials who work in the institution in which he is incarcerated, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief on the basis of alleged wrongful conduct by those officials, and then that prisoner is subsequently transferred to another prison or released from the prison system, courts are presented with a question of possible mootness.
See, e.g., Green,
conditions of confinement at the penal institution at which the prisoner is no longer incarcerated, courts have concluded that they are unable to provide the prisoner with effective relief.
16
Because a prisoner’s transfer or release “signal[s] the end of the alleged deprivation of his constitutional rights,”
McKinnon v. Talladega Cnty., Ala.,
However, where a prisoner brings a lawsuit challenging policies that apply in a generally uniform fashion throughout a prison system, courts have been disinclined to conclude that the prisoner’s declaratory or injunctive claims are moot, even after he has been transferred to another prison in that system.
See Abdulhaseeb,
D. Mootness of Mr. Jordan’s Claims
Applying these principles to the present case, we conclude that Mr. Jordan’s facial and as-applied First Amendment challenges are moot. Specifically, unlike the government, we conclude that Mr. Jordan’s claims are constitutionally moot: we cannot accord him prospective relief that would have any effect in the real world. Moreover, even if we were to conclude that Mr. Jordan’s challenges were not constitutionally moot, considerations of prudence and comity would lead us to stay our hand in resolving them on the merits. In other words, we would conclude that his claims are prudentially moot. We therefore dismiss Mr. Jordan’s appeal.
1. Constitutional Mootness
Mr. Jordan contends that injunctive and declaratory relief are effective remedies for his First Amendment claims because he does not challenge conditions of confinement that are “specific to the transferring institution,” the ADX. Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 7. Rather, as Mr. Jordan reasons, his claims involve First Amendment challenges to the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation — both of which are applied throughout the BOP system in which he remains incarcerated. He therefore argues that his transfer to another BOP facility — at which the Ensign Amendment and implementing regulation continue to apply — does not prevent this court from fashioning effective equitable relief. In other words, “because Mr. Jordan [allegedly] remains under the threat of irreparable injury — the very real threat that future publications will be rejected pursuant to the Ensign Amendment and 28 C.F.R. § 540.72,” id., he reasons that he maintains a justiciable interest in seeking a declaration that those legal pronouncements are unconstitutional under the First Amendment and enjoining their enforcement against him.
However, there is a critical flaw in Mr. Jordan’s argument: he has never sought relief on a system-wide basis against the BOP in this case. Instead of suing the BOP or its director, he has pursued injunctive and declaratory relief only with respect to individual BOP officials at specific penal institutions — most notably, the Inmate Systems Manager and the Warden at the ADX in Florence, Colorado, where Mr. Jordan was incarcerated at the time that he commenced his lawsuit. Even a cursory examination of Mr. Jordan’s litigation history reveals that he has not always taken this approach and that he knows how to seek system-wide relief.
18
But he
*1030
did not do so here. Therefore, Mr. Jordan has not sued defendants who are actually situated to effectuate any prospective relief that this court might afford him.
See Abdulhaseeb,
Any prospective relief that we might order against the named defendants would be too abstract and lacking in real-world impact to satisfy the requirements of the Constitution. For example, if we issued an injunction ordering those named officials to cease applying the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation to any sexually explicit publications that Mr. Jordan may request in the future, such an injunction would have no “effect in the real world.”
Abdulhaseeb,
A similar problem would arise were we to issue a declaratory judgment proclaiming the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation unconstitutional. While a declaratory judgment opining that the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation violated the First Amendment could be directed toward the named officials, it would not affect the behavior of those officials
toward Mr. Jordan
because he is no longer housed in a penal institution over which they exert authority. Consequently, such “a declaratory judgment in [Mr. Jordan’s] favor would amount to nothing more than a declaration that he was wronged, and would have no effect on the defendants’ behavior towards him.”
Green,
In resisting a conclusion of mootness, Mr. Jordan suggests that although he has sued only certain subordinate BOP officials who operate at individual penal institutions, the fact that he has sued those officials in their official capacity requires us to construe his suit as effectively against the entity that they represent — the BOP. Thus, as Mr. Jordan argues, this court is situated to grant an injunction and declaratory judgment against the BOP in its entirety rather than against the individual defendants that he has named in his complaint. This argument, however, finds no support in this circuit’s ease law.
Mr. Jordan relies upon our decision in
Simmat v. United States Bureau of Prisons,
Simmat
turned upon whether the district court had
statutory
subject matter jurisdiction to entertain a claim for,
inter alia,
injunctive relief against prison officials. Our attention, therefore, was neither upon the mootness doctrine generally nor upon the more specific question of whether the district court was situated to fashion effective prospective relief against the BOP in light of the identity of the named federal defendants.
Simmat,
Thus, the fact that Mr. Jordan’s suit against individual subordinate BOP officials — most notably, those at the ADX — in their official capacities constitutes a suit against the United States for statutory subject-matter jurisdictional purposes does not necessarily mean that it constitutes a suit against the BOP for purposes of the mootness analysis at issue here. Indeed, Simmat’s reasoning — recognizing a distinction between suits against individual BOP officials and suits against the BOP itself — suggests to the contrary. Absent further supportive authority, we cannot endorse Mr. Jordan’s position, and we decline to read Simmat in the manner that he proposes.
This rejection of Mr. Jordan’s reasoning is critical to our mootness inquiry: it *1032 means that the nationwide conduct of the BOP in enforcing the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation cannot directly enter into our assessment of whether Mr. Jordan’s facial and as-applied claims are moot. Instead, we must focus upon whether granting Mr. Jordan injunctive or declaratory relief against the named BOP defendants will have any effect in the real world, given that Mr. Jordan is no longer incarcerated at the ADX or any other BOP facility that the named BOP officials administer and, as discussed further below, there is no concrete prospect that Mr. Jordan will be returned to any of those facilities in the foreseeable future.
As to the latter point, we reiterate that prisoners assigned to a SMU — as Mr. Jordan has been — remain in SMU housing for at least eighteen to twenty-four months. Moreover, the government represents that the “BOP has no plans in the foreseeable future to transfer Jordan to a BOP facility within the Tenth Circuit.” Aplee. Supplemental Br. at 10. Though Mr. Jordan asserts to the contrary, his representation that “[tjhere is ... a reasonable possibility that Mr. Jordan will be returned to the ADX in Florence, Colorado” is entirely speculative and based upon faulty premises. Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 14 (emphasis added).
It should go without saying that we are disinclined to opine on important constitutional issues based upon the speculative suggestion that a plaintiff
might
be returned to a setting where he would be subject to allegedly unconstitutional practices.
See Preiser,
Indeed, the only evidence that Mr. Jordan offers in support of his assertion that he may be returned to the ADX actually undercuts his position. Mr. Jordan avers that “if the [BOP’s Designation and Sentence Computation Center] disapproves the SMU referral!,] [he] will then be considered for return to the ADX in Florence, Colorado.” Jordan Decl. at 3 (emphasis *1033 added). Of course, the SMU referral was actually approved for Mr. Jordan; thus, the factual predicate for his (already speculative) belief that he might be returned to the ADX in Colorado has not materialized.
In sum, we must center our mootness analysis upon the individual BOP officials that Mr. Jordan has identified as defendants, remaining mindful of the fact that Mr. Jordan is no longer subject to their authority. With that focus, we are hard-pressed to conclude that we may grant Mr. Jordan injunctive or declaratory relief that would have any effect in the real world.
See McAlpine v. Thompson,
2. Prudential Mootness
Even if we were to conclude that Mr. Jordan’s claims could survive our constitutional-mootness inquiry, we would bar those claims on prudential-mootness grounds. Fúst, if we were to issue an injunction or declaratory judgment to Mr. Jordan, we would be doing so without the benefit of specific, concrete information concerning his current conditions of confinement. In particular, we operate without the benefit of a district court’s findings of fact. 19 The affidavit that the government submitted regarding the conditions of confinement at SMU facilities is a poor substitute. The affiant is a BOP official, stationed in Florence, Colorado, who does not purport to have any personal knowledge concerning Mr. Jordan’s current conditions of confinement. See Cook Decl. at 1. Indeed, the BOP affiant was apparently unaware that Mr. Jordan had been incarcerated in a SHU facility in Lee, Virginia. See id. at 2 (noting his belief that Mr. Jordan is “currently confined at [USP] Lee, Pennsylvania ” (emphasis added)).
Mr. Jordan’s as-applied arguments highlight the problems created by the dearth of information regarding his current conditions of confinement. Mr. Jordan contends that his possession of the banned materials would have no impact upon his fellow inmates because he “has no contact with other prisoners and is under tight supervision from guards at all times.” *1034 Aplt. Opening Br. at 39. This argument, however, pertains entirely to Mr. Jordan’s solitary-confinement status at the ADX. As discussed above, the regulatory provisions governing SMU housing suggest that it is unlikely that Mr. Jordan will be segregated from other inmates in his current housing circumstances. Indeed, as an inmate progresses through the SMU program, he is allowed greater contact with fellow inmates. See, e.g., Cook Deck, Attach. 4, at 7-10. Thus, a critical factual predicate for Mr. Jordan’s as-applied argument — he., solitary confinement — no longer applies to his current penal placement, and any prospective relief that we might fashion with respect to the named BOP defendant officials would not fully take into account Mr. Jordan’s current confinement circumstances.
Furthermore, to the extent that Mr. Jordan’s requested prospective relief could be said to have any effect in the real world, it would be only with respect to
non-party
BOP officials
outside of
this circuit. Even assuming,
arguendo,
that such an attenuated effect could permit us to conclude that this action was constitutionally viable, considerations of prudence and comity would lead us to stay our hand in according such relief. We have rejected the notion that “we [a]re bound by opinions handed down in other circuits,”
Hill v. Kan. Gas Serv. Co.,
We therefore conclude that even if Mr. Jordan’s First Amendment facial and as-applied challenges were not constitutionally moot, considerations of comity and prudence would lead us to stay our hand and decline to reach the merits of his claims. That is, those considerations would lead us to conclude that Mr. Jordan’s claims are prudentially moot.
3. Capable of Repetition Yet Evading Review
Alternatively, Mr. Jordan contends that, even if his as-applied claims would otherwise be moot, they are saved from a determination of mootness “because they are capable of repetition yet evade review.” Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 12;
see Rex v. Owens ex rel. State of Oklahoma,
doctrine [has been] limited to the situation where two elements combine! ]; (1) the challenged action was in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there [is] a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subjected to the same action again.
Weinstein v. Bradford,
Referencing the BOP’s initial rejection of certain publications in 2003 and 2004, Mr. Jordan contends that “[i]n the seven years that have elapsed during the course of this litigation, it is reasonable to expect that Mr. Jordan’s placement or conditions of confinement would change at some point in that span of time.” Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 13. Thus, he appears to reason that if we were to conclude that these types of First Amendment challenges are rendered moot by changes in prison placement or conditions of confinement over the course of several years, claims such as his would consistently evade review. However, contrary to the kind of duration evidence proffered by plaintiffs in prior cases,
see, e.g., Napier v. Gertrude,
4. Voluntary Cessation
Finally, Mr. Jordan contends that “[t]he doctrine of voluntary cessation also counsels against a finding of mootness” with regard to his as-applied claims. Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 15. As we recently explained:
One exception to a claim of mootness is a defendant’s voluntary cessation of an alleged illegal practice which the defendant is free to resume at any time. The rule that voluntary cessation of a challenged practice rarely moots a federal case ... traces to the principle that a party should not be able to evade judicial review, or to defeat a judgment, by temporarily altering questionable behavior. In other words, this exception exists to counteract the possibility of a defendant ceasing illegal action long enough to render a lawsuit moot and then resuming the illegal conduct.
Rio Grande Silvery Minnow,
Mr. Jordan has not cited to one case in which the voluntary-cessation doctrine has been applied to facts such as these — where the defendants’ allegedly unconstitutional conduct actually has not ceased but plaintiff has been (involuntarily) removed from the ambit of that conduct. Therefore, Mr. Jordan has done little to aid his cause. Furthermore, the most apposite case that we are aware of works against him. In
McKinnon,
the Eleventh Circuit rejected a prisoner’s argument, predicated on the voluntary-cessation doctrine, that “the [prison official] defendants should not be permitted unilateral determination over the mootness of his case” because “he should not be penalized with dismissal” where “he had no control over his transfer.”
McKinnon,
*1038 CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Mr. Jordan’s First Amendment claims are moot. We therefore DISMISS Mr. Jordan’s appeal.
Notes
. The BOP promulgated this regulation pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1791(a)(2) and (d)(1)(G), among other statutory authorities. Under § 1791(d)(1)(G), a federal prisoner is prohibited from obtaining "any ... object that threatens the order, discipline, or security of a prison, or the life, health, or safety of an individual.”
. In general, this regulation allows wardens to "reject a publication only if it is determined detrimental to the security, good order, or discipline of the institution or if it might facilitate criminal activity.” 28 C.F.R. § 540.71(b). Although the regulation provides criteria for potentially banned publications, such as "sexually explicit material,” the specified criteria are not exhaustive. Id.
. The Ensign Amendment applies only to commercial publications. Nevertheless, the BOP interprets its statutory authority as permitting it to grant wardens the discretion to reject non-commercial materials that contain sexually explicit information or feature nudity. Incoming Publications: Nudity and Sexually Explicit Material or Information, 67 Fed. Reg. 77,425, 77,426 (Dec. 18, 2002) (stating that wardens regulate such materials under the general restriction in 28 C.F.R. § 540.12(a), which allows wardens to "establish and exercise controls to protect individuals, and the security, discipline, and good order of the institution”). The BOP claims that 28 C.F.R. § 540.12(a) "encompasses [its] discretion to reject photographs featuring nudity and explicit sexuality from noncommercial sources, such as an inmate's wife or girlfriend” because "[s]uch personal photographs typically cause disciplinary problems among inmates and compromise institution security and good order.” Id.
.The BOP continues to enforce the prior regulation, 28 C.F.R. § 540.71(b)(7), against incoming publications that pose a threat to "the security, good order, or discipline of the institution, or [that might] facilitate[] criminal activity,” but that fall outside of the scope of 28 C.F.R. § 540.72. Aplt.App., Vol. Ill, at 662-66 (BOP Program Statement 5266.10, dated Jan. 10, 2003);
see Ramirez v. Pugh,
. Program Statement 5266.10 references a pre-codification version of the Ensign Amendment. For purposes of this analysis, however, the pre-codification version is substantially similar to the codified version.
. The record casts doubt on whether this was the classic ancient Sanskrit treatise or instead, as Mr. Jordan puts it, "a more recent photographic version of someone’s interpreta *1018 tion of the Kama Sutra.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 9.
. Specifically, Mr. Jordan identified the following people as defendants: Mary H. Sosa, ADX Florence Acting Inmate Systems Manager; Robert A. Hood, ADX Florence Warden; (First Name Unknown) Tucker, FCI Englewood Inmate Systems Manager; J.L. Nor-wood, USP Victorville Warden; and W.A. Sherrod, FCI Englewood Warden.
. In his Complaint, Mr. Jordan neglected to specifically challenge the implementing regulation, as applied to the individual publications. Because Mr. Jordan proceeded pro se before the district court, we liberally construe his complaint to raise those arguments.
See Haines v. Kerner,
.Mr. Jordan’s Complaint also failed to challenge the program statement. Nevertheless, the district court struck down the portion of the program statement that allows the warden to return the rejected publication to the publisher prior to the completion of administrative review. The district court held that this portion of the program statement ”deprive[s] [Mr. Jordan] of meaningful administrative review and therefore does not meet the requirements of due process” under the Fifth Amendment. Aplt.App., Vol. I, at 179 (Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law, filed July 11, 2008).
. The Ensign Amendment covers certain materials that are exempt from the implementing regulation. For example, the Ensign Amendment (1) bans non-pictorial material that is sexually explicit or features nudity; and (2) contains no exception for “publications containing nudity illustrative of medical, educational, or anthropological content." Compare 28 U.S.C. § 5300(b)(6), with 28 C.F.R. § 540.72(b)(3)-(4).
. The parties' failure to inform the court of this significant development is inexplicable and inexcusable. It is the parties, not the *1021 court, who are positioned to remain abreast of external factors that may impact their case; this is of particular importance where, as here, those factors directly pertain to this court’s substantive inquiry. We look to the parties to inform us of such developments, and we should be assured that they will do so diligently. Their failure to do so in this case has resulted in the expenditure of significant judicial resources on issues that, in light of the current procedural posture of this case, are irrelevant.
. The Administrative Detention Order designating Mr. Jordan for placement in a Special Housing Unit listed the institution to which Mr. Jordan was to be transferred as "USP Lee, VA.” Aplee. Supplemental Br., App., Decl. of Clay C. Cook [hereinafter “Cook Deck”], Attach. 3 (Administrative Detention Order, dated July 10, 2010). Presumably, the “VA” refers to the State of Virginia. Additionally, in Jordan v. Wiley, Mr. Jordan submitted a notice of change of address and a document seeking to supplement the record, both of which indicated that he had been relocated to a penal facility in Lee County, Virginia.
. SHU inmates are generally subject to the same conditions of confinement, and afforded the same privileges, as inmates housed within the general population. See 28 C.F.R. § 541.22(d) (“If consistent with available resources and the security needs of the unit, the Warden shall give an inmate housed in administrative detention the same general privileges given to inmates in the general population.”). Accordingly, SHU inmates may be housed with other inmates, and Mr. Jordan’s counsel represented that he had a cell mate throughout his term of incarceration at the SHU facility. See Aplt. Supplemental Br. at 14.As a SHU inmate, Mr. Jordan also retained the right to possess reasonable amounts of personal property including magazines, books, and other commercial publications, as well as the right to receive mail. The government concedes that the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation apply with full force to prisoners held in SHU administrative detention, and Clay Cook, a Senior Attorney Advisor at the BOP, stated in a sworn declaration that Mr. Jordan was unlikely to receive the commercial publications at issue in this case in light of the Amendment. See Cook Deck at 12. Mr. Jordan himself has declared, under penalty of perjury, that his "conditions of confinement ha[d] not materially changed” at the time that he was being held in a SHU; thus, he "remained] subject to the Ensign Amendment and the published [fjederal regulations governing incoming publications and correspondence.” Aplt. Supplemental Br., Ex. 1, at 4 (Deck of Mark Jordan, at 4) [hereinafter “Jordan Deck”].
. As we noted in
Rio Grande Silvery Minnow,
a district court's constitutional and prudential mootness determinations are accorded different standards of review. ‘‘[W]e apply a de novo standard of review [where] the case presents a question of
constitutional
mootness.”
. We rely in our mootness analysis to a limited extent on cases involving standing questions, recognizing that standing and mootness are "closely related doctrines."
Utah Animal Rights Coal.,
. An analogous situation arises where a plaintiff sues a government official who is subsequently "divested of responsibility for the challenged conduct or activity during the pendency of the action.” 15 Moore,
supra,
§ 101.94[3], 101-257. In that situation, as in the prisoner-transfer context, "mootness occurs either because the plaintiff is no longer exposed to harm by that particular defendant, or because the defendant can no longer comply with the remedy that may be ordered by the court.”
Id.; see also Spomer v. Littleton,
in lawsuits against governmental officials based on specific actions taken during their tenure in office, when the relief sought is other than monetary damages, the potential of a mootness challenge exists because once the governmental officials no longer hold that position, the requisite adversity of interest between the parties, which must exist throughout the duration of the action, may be lost, and any remedy that might otherwise have been provided by the court would therefore serve no effective purpose.
15 Moore, supra, § 101.94[3], at 101-257. The courts' treatment of this analogous situation is therefore instructive here.
. Therefore, under our holdings in
Green
and
Abdulhaseeb,
where a prisoner is no longer housed at the penal institution having the conditions of confinement that form the basis of his suit, declaratory relief — as well as injunctive relief — is ordinarily not available. Yet, we would be remiss if we did not briefly mention our decision in
Love v. Summit County,
However, there is virtually no discussion of mootness in Love. In particular, the court did not expressly undertake a mootness analysis with respect to the claim for declaratory relief. Moreover, Love has never been cited by us for a proposition contrary to the holdings of Green and Abdulhaseeb. Consequently, we would be hard-pressed to conclude that Love is actually at odds with those cases; indeed, reaching such a conclusion from the snippets of conceivably relevant text in Love would be more an act of speculation than judicial explication. Thus, at bottom, Love does not meaningfully inform our analysis in this case. Instead, Green and Abdulhaseeb (among other cases) chart the path for our mootness analysis.
. Mr. Jordan has previously filed suit against the BOP Director and the BOP. For instance, in a 1997 lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey — identified in his complaint in this action — Mr. Jordan named Kathleen Hawk, then the Director of the BOP, as a defendant in an action seeking unspecified relief for an Eighth Amendment violation.
See
Aplt.App., Vol. I, at 25 (Compl., filed July 12, 2005).
See generally Shakur v. Hawk,
. Although the government has raised the possibility of a remand to the district court for a resolution in the first instance of the mootness question, we decline that invitation and, more specifically, reject the notion of remanding to the district court to conduct factfinding regarding Mr. Jordan's current conditions of confinement. Our conclusion regarding constitutional mootness primarily turns on a legal assessment of the mootness implications of Mr. Jordan's designation of defendants, in view of his transfer from the ADX. Moreover, although the availability of judicial factfinding concerning Mr. Jordan's current conditions of confinement would aid our prudential-mootness analysis, considerations of prudence disincline us to remand this case. This litigation has been ongoing for almost six years and involved the expenditure of significant judicial resources. We do not see the wisdom of starting down a path that would invariably result in the passage of a considerable amount of time and the consumption of a good deal more judicial resources, especially when the prospects of fashioning effective prospective relief are so uncertain. Mr. Jordan is apparently not entirely unsympathetic to this reasoning. See Aplt. Supplemental Reply Br. at 7 ("[C]onsidering the fact that this litigation has been pending since 2005, it would seem a waste of judicial resources to delay a decision any further unless necessary to do so.”).
. We note at the outset that Mr. Jordan's capable-of-repetition argument may be misguided. By its terms, and in the manner that it is typically applied, the "duration” element of the exception’s two-prong test pertains to the duration of the
governmental entity’s
alleged infringement on a plaintiff's rights, not upon external circumstances pertaining to the
plaintiff
that may shorten the duration of his exposure to the otherwise ongoing governmental action.
See, e.g., Ill. State Bd. of Elections v. Socialist Workers Party,
Mr. Jordan's argument, however, is premised upon the fact that his subsequent facility transfers purportedly shortened the term of his exposure to the Colorado ADX's application of the Ensign Amendment and its implementing regulation. Because this argument pertains to Mr. Jordan's change in circumstances rather than to the duration of the allegedly unconstitutional actions of the ADX officials named in Mr. Jordan's complaint, it does not seem to comport with the vast majority of the case law in which the capable-of-repetition exception has been applied. Ultimately, however, we need not definitively opine on this subject. As discussed infra, even as Mr. Jordan has framed it, his capable-of-repetition argument fails.
