Aрpellants are Missouri state prisoners convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. George A. Lombardi is the Director of the Missouri Department of Corrections (DOC) and is ultimately responsible for executions in Missouri. Lombardi oversees and supervises the execution process, and has authority to change the type and dosage of drugs used in Missouri’s lethal-injection protocol. Terry Russell is the Warden of the Eastern Regional Diagnostic and Cоrrectional Center where the executions are performed.
Missouri’s lethal-injection protocol involves administering three drugs: sodium thiopental to anesthetize the prisoner and render him unconscious, pancuronium bromidе to paralyze him and stop his breathing, and potassium chloride to stop the prisoner’s heart. On December 2, 2010, appellants filed suit in the district court seeking a declaration that Missouri’s lethal-injection protocol violates the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), 21 U.S.C. § 801 et seq., and the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA), 21 U.S.C. § 301 et seq. Appellants also requested “an injunction prohibiting [Lombardi and the other appellees] from carrying out executions in a manner that violates these statutes.”
On August 15, 2011, the district court granted appellees’ summary judgment motion, concluding appellants lacked standing under Article III of the United States Constitution because they failed to “demonstrate a cognizable injury in fact.” Ap *796 pellants appeal from the district court’s final order and judgment. We conclude the case is moot, and we reverse and vacate the district court’s judgment.
I. DISCUSSION
“The exercise of judicial power under Art. Ill of the Constitution depends on the еxistence of a case or controversy.”
Preiser v. Newkirk,
“When a case on appeal no longer presents an actual, ongoing case or controversy, the case is moot and the federal court no longer has jurisdiction to hear it.”
Neighborhood Transp. Network, Inc. v. Pena,
“[A] federal court has neither the power to render advisоry opinions nor ‘to decide questions that cannot affect the rights of litigants in the case before them.’ ”
Preiser,
To be cognizable in a federal court, a suit must be definite and concrete, touching the legal relations of parties hаving adverse legal interests. It must be a real and substantial controversy admitting of specific relief through a decree of a conclusive character, as distinguished from an opinion advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.
Rice,
The difference between an abstract question and a ‘controversy’ contemplated by the Declaratory Judgment Act is necessarily one of degree, and it would be difficult, if it would be possible, to fashion a precise test for determining in ' every case whether there is such a controversy. Basically, the question in each case is whether the facts alleged, under all the circumstances, show that there is a substantial controversy, bеtween parties having adverse legal interests, of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant the issuance of a declaratory judgment.
Md. Cas. Co. v. Pac. Coal & Oil Co.,
Our review of the unusual circumstances in this appeal reveals no controversy of sufficient immediacy and reliability tо warrant declaratory relief. In challenging Missouri’s lethal-injection protocol, appellants assert appellees violate the CSA and FDCA both through the means by which they obtain lethal-injection drugs, including sodium thiopental, and thе manner in which they administer the drugs.
*797 Appellants’ claims are very specific about the drugs in the current protocol and the potential harm appellants could suffer as a result of the improper administration of those drugs. For еxample, appellants maintain Missouri’s protocol violates federal law because it “inalterably requires the use of sodium thiopental as the anesthetic, but without the prescription required by the statutes at issue.” In describing the risk of harm, appellants’ expert opined the lay administration of sodium thiopental “creates a gratuitous and substantial risk ... the execution will be agonizing.”
But the circumstances have changed considerably since appеllants filed their complaint on December 2, 2010. Hospira, Inc., Missouri’s supplier of sodium thiopental, no longer produces the drug, leaving no domestic manufacturer. Appellants do not dispute Missouri’s limited supply of sodium thiopental expired March 1, 2011, and has not been replenished or substituted. The DOC is unable to carry out the challenged protocol as written, and it appears unlikely it ever will.
Even before Hospira stopped manufacturing sodium thiopental, а nationwide shortage of the drug forced several states to try to import the drug or alter their lethal-injection protocols. Appellants state “[mjany states have changed their execution protocols” and substituted pеntobarbital as a result of Hospira’s withdrawal. Appellees report “there is great difficulty importing” sodium thiopental, and the record indicates the United States Drug Enforcement Agency denied one state department of corrections’ request for a waiver to allow it to import sodium thiopental for executions.
On March 27, 2012, a federal district court in the District of Columbia concluded the FDCA required the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to block the importation of sodium thiopental into the United States because the FDA never approved the drug.
See Beaty v. FDA,
— F.Supp.2d -, -, -, Civil No. 11-289,
The DOC reports it is “making efforts to obtain drugs of some sort,” but “not necessarily [sodium] thiopental.” On August 11, 2011, the DOC unsuccessfully attempted to obtаin pentobarbital, a drug for which appellants admit there is no evidence in the record. Despite its efforts, the DOC has been unable to obtain sodium thiopental or a substitute for more than a year, and appellees cаnnot provide this court with a time frame for resolving this issue. Appellees aver there is “no reason to believe that [the DOC] will come back with the same drugs or the same protocol.”
Appellants concede the factuаl developments in the case permit a reasonable inference that Missouri will change the protocol and the drugs used. Appellants speculate, “The state may indeed obtain a different drug. It may be a very similar drug. It may be a drug whose application and means of administration violates the same statute in similar ways.”
Appellants’ speculation illustrates the difficulty the court would have reviewing a claim in which the factual circumstances are fluid and do not present a concrete and definite controversy. How do we mean *798 ingfully evaluate whether the means by which the DOC obtains its lethal-injection drugs violate the CSA and FDCA when the DOC presently has no means of obtaining at least one оf the drugs? And how can appellees violate federal law in administering the lethal-injection drugs, as specified by the challenged protocol, when the DOC has no sodium thiopental and has no identifiable means to obtain it?
If the DOC does indeed obtain a different drug or otherwise modifies its protocol, any analysis we would conduct based on the existing protocol and the use of sodium thiopental as an anesthetic would become merely an acadеmic exercise.
See Cooey v. Strickland,
The barriers and uncertainty facing Missouri’s lethal-injection protocol deprive appellants’ claims of the immediacy and the reality required to establish “a present, live controversy of the kind that must exist if we are to avoid advisory opinions on abstract propositions of law.”
Id.
at 48,
We also reject appellants’ contention that their claims fall within the limited exception to mootness for claims that are capable of repetition, yet evading review. “To come within this narrow exception, the following two elements must exist: (1) there must be a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party will be subjected to the same action again, and (2) the challenged action must be of a duration too short to be fully litigated before becoming moot.”
Iowa Prot. & Advocacy Servs. v. Tanager, Inc.,
First, given the difficulty the DOC is having obtaining sodium thiopental, appellants fail to show a reasonable expectation the DOC will obtain sodium thiopental and resume executing prisoners without making any changes to its lethal-injection protocol. “A mere ‘physical or theoretical possibility’ is insufficient; a ‘demonstrated probability’ must be shown.”
McFarlin v. Newport Special Sch. Dist.,
Second, the duration of the alleged violations is not so short that “a similar future action could not be fully litigated before the case becomes moot.”
Iowa Prot. & Advocacy Servs.,
Whether Missouri follows the path of other states and alters its lethal-injection protocol or somehow obtains a supply of sodium thiopental and resumes executions under its existing protocol, we are not persuaded any claim appellants might file in the future will necessarily evade review.
See Hickman v. Missouri,
II. CONCLUSION
We reverse and vacate the judgment of the district court as moot and remand with directions to dismiss the complaint, without prejudice.
