In August 1994, while incarcerated in a federal facility, Johnnie Louis McAlpine (“McAlpine”), a member of the Native American Church, brought a pro se action in federal court under the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (“RFRA”), seeking to compel Warden Ron Thompson (“Thompson” or “Warden”) to provide him with peyote and other “necessary items” to conduct Native American Church ceremonies. The district court reached the merits of McAlpine’s claims and granted the Warden’s motion to dismiss, or in the alternative, for summary judgment. McAlpine appeals. We hold that McAlpine’s subsequent release from federal prison on supervised release moots his claims, thereby depriving us of jurisdiсtion. Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s order and REMAND with instructions to DISMISS.
BACKGROUND
According to the pleadings, McAlpine is a restricted Osage Indian and a member of the Native American Church. At the time he filed this action, on August 24, 1994, in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma, he was incarcerated at the Federal Prison Camp in El Reno, Oklahoma (“El Reno”), serving a forty-six mоnth sentence for mail fraud. McAlpine’s petition for mandamus, the denial of which is the subject of the present appeal, alleged that Warden Thompson’s refusal to provide peyote for Native American Church services violated his rights under the First Amendment and the RFRA, and prayed for the following prospective mandamus relief: “(1) ... the Court to ordеr Warden Thompson to provide peyote for the Native American Church Ceremonies. (2) ... plaintiff requests that the Court orders the Warden to provide the necessary items needed for the Native American Churches [sic] evening through noon services once a month (to include meals, peyote, tipi, and outside, visiting, roadmen, firemen and singers).”
The mаgistrate judge considered the merits of McAlpine’s claim and found that the Warden’s denial of peyote and other ceremonial items to McAlpine did not violate the First Amendment or RFRA, and thus recommended that the district court grant Thompson’s Motion to Dismiss, or in the Alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment. On March 25, 1996, the district court adopted the magistrate’s findings and recоmmendation, and granted Thompson’s motion. McAlpine filed his timely notice of appeal on April 1, 1996.
Thereafter, on November 1, 1996, McAl-pine completed his term of incarceration and was released from El Reno Prison Camp. Arguing that McAlpine sought relief regarding only the conditions of his *1215 confinement, and his ability to practice his religion while incarcerated, the Warden now claims that McAlpine’s claims have been mooted. 1 We agree. Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s order and REMAND to the district court with instructions to DISMISS McAlpine’s petition as moot.
DISCUSSION
Mootness
Before reaching the merits of McAlpine’s First Amendment and RFRA claims, we must consider the jurisdictional question of mootness. Warden Thompson argues that MсAlpine’s claims are moot because the only relief sought by McAlpine “deal[s] with desires during his incarceration,” and he is no longer incarcerated. McAlpine responds that because he “remains on supervised release (parole) through November 1, 1999” and “he is subject to revocation of his parole and reincarceration,” thе acts he complains of are capable of repetition, yet evading review. Thus, the issue before us is whether the claim of a prison inmate seeking prospective mandamus relief solely related to conditions of confinement becomes mooted by that inmate’s subsequent release on parole or supervised releаse. We answer that question in the affirmative.
Upon previous consideration of this question, this court has issued potentially conflicting decisions.
Compare White v. State of Colo.,
While our holding comports with the teachings of
Green
and
White,
we are aware that
McKinney,
which involved a somewhat similar factual scenario to the present case, supports a different result. In
McKinney,
the appellant was a Sioux Indian seeking damages as well as injunc-tive relief to (1) “prohibit Oklahoma prison authorities from enforcing a prison grooming code against him,” and (2) “require prisоn officials to return his medicine bag[ ] and to permit the construction of a sweat lodge at the correctional facility.”
We perceive some tension between McKinney and our subsequent cases of Green and White, and to the extent that there is a сonflict, the en banc court now overrules McKinney and adopts the rule articulated in Green and White. 3
A number of factors support departure from McKinney. First, under well-established Supreme Court and Tenth Circuit law, when a favorable decision will not afford plaintiff relief, and plaintiffs case is not capable of repetition yet evading review, wе have no jurisdiction under Article III. The Tenth Circuit has said that "Article III's requirement that federal courts adjudicate only cases and controversies necessitates that courts decline to exercise jurisdiction where the award of any requested relief would be moot-i.e., where the controversy is no longer live and ongoing." Cox v. Phelps Dodge Corр.,
As the Supreme Court explained in O'Shea v. Littleton,
Moreover, the narrow capable-of-repetition exception to the mootness doctrine applies only "where the following two circumstances [are] simultaneously present: `(1) the challenged action [is] in its duration too short to be fully litigated pri- or to cessation or expiration, and (2) there [is] a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subject to the same action again.'" Spencer v. Kemna,
Petitioner's cash satisfies neither of these conditions. He has not shown *1217 (and we doubt that he could) that the time between parole revocation and expiration of sentence is always so short as to evade review. Nor has he demonstrated a reasonable likelihood that he will once again be paroled and have that parole revoked.
Id.
Finally, in
Honig v. Doe,
Applying these principles to McAlpine’s ease demonstrates why the hypothetical possibility that McAlpine, a former inmate on supervised release, will violate the terms of that supervised release and be returned to the same prison and same conditions of confinement cannot save an otherwise moot claim for prospective injunctive relief relating to prison conditions. First, since McAlpine is currently on supervised release and no longer confined at El Reno, even a favorable ruling from this court could not in his present condition provide the prospective injunctive relief he seeks — i.e., an order compelling Warden Thompson to provide him with peyote and other Native American Church ceremonial items. Second, McAlpine has failed to establish either of the two requirements necessary to qualify for the exception tо mootness for cases capable of repetition, yet evading review: Even (1) if McAlpine violates the conditions of his supervised release, and (2) if he has his supervised release revoked, and (3) if he is reassigned to El Reno Prison Camp, 4 and (4) if Warden Thompson is still warden there, and (5) if-Warden Thompson still denies McAl-pine peyote, McAlpine has failed to demonstrate that there will be insufficient time in that event for him to obtain review in federal court of renewed First Amendment and RFRA claims to require the warden to provide him with peyote and other ceremonial religious items. As such, McAlpine’s case is moot and it does not fall into the exceptional class of cases capable of repetition, yet evading review. We believe McAlpine’s situation is typical, and thus we conclude that the controlling mootness cases counsel against McKinney.
Second,
other than (arguably) the Seventh Circuit,
5
our research indicates that
*1218
every circuit to consider the issue has decided that release to parole moots a claim regarding
prison
conditions and regulations, as opposed to
parole procedures or
conditions and regulations that affect
parole. See Hickman v. Missouri,
Third,
and related to the
O’Shea
Court’s assumption that citizens “will conduct their activities within the law and so avoid prosecution and сonviction,” we are not inclined to speculate that McAlpine will break the law or otherwise violate the conditions of their release agreement.
See Knox,
Applying traditional principles of the mootness doctrine, we hold that McAl-pine’s case is moot.
CONCLUSION
We VACATE the district court’s order and REMAND with instructions that the district court DISMISS this case as moot.
Notes
. Because he was incarcerated at the time he filed this action, McAlpine made no claim that supervised release guidelines prohibit use of peyote, or, if sо, that such a prohibition violates the First Amendment or RFRA. His claim related solely to the conditions of his confinement at El Reno.
. Nothing in
McKinney
indicates whether "pre-parole” status was equivalent to the "supervised release” status of McAlpine or whether it involved a greater degree of prison supervision or likelihood of reincarceration. Howеver, four years after
McKinney,
we observed that "pre-parole” is a statutory program in Oklahoma which "releases qualified inmates into society on a conditional basis.”
Harper v. Young,
. We have circulated this opinion to the entire court and have received the concurrence of all its active judges for our holding overruling McKinney to the extent that McKinney held that the pre-parole, parole, or supervised release status of a former inmate seeking in-junctive relief relating only to prison conditions saves that claim from dismissal on mootness grounds.
. At oral argument, counsel for Warden Thompson informed this court that if McAl-pine violated any conditions of his supervised release and was returned to incarceration it is unlikely that he would be returned to El Reno because that facility is an honor camp.
. The Seventh Circuit has issued somewhat conflicting opinions on this issue. In
Morales v. Schmidt,
