In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
Nos. 13‐3801 and 14‐1682
LIGHTSPEED MEDIA CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
v.
ANTHONY SMITH, et al.,
Defendants‐Appellees,
Appeal of PAUL DUFFY, JOHN STEELE, and PAUL HANSMEIER,
Appellants.
____________________
Appeals from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of Illinois.
No. 12 CV 00889 — G. Patrick Murphy, Judge, and David R. Herndon,
Chief Judge.
____________________
ARGUED APRIL 7, 20141 — DECIDED JULY 31, 2014
____________________
1 No. 13‐3801 was argued before this panel. No. 14‐1682 was submit‐
ted to the same panel pursuant to Internal Operating Procedure 6(b). The
panel concluded that oral argument was unnecessary in the latter case,
which is submitted on the briefs in accordance with Fed. R. App. P.
34(a)(2)(C).
2 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and KANNE and SYKES, Circuit
Judges.
WOOD, Chief Judge. The first rule of holes, according to an
old saying, is to stop digging. The two appeals before us
bring that to mind, for reasons that will become apparent.
The first, No. 13‐3801, comes to us from the district court’s
order granting a motion for attorneys’ fees and costs under
28 U.S.C. § 1927 filed by SBC Internet Services, LLC (d/b/a
AT&T), Comcast Cable Communications, LLC (collectively
“the ISPs”), and Anthony Smith, defendants in the underly‐
ing litigation. The order imposed joint and several liability
for the fees against Paul Duffy, John Steele, and Paul Hans‐
meier. They have appealed from that order. They did not,
however, file a motion either to clarify the nature of the sanc‐
tions or to stay the order. Instead, they simply did not pay.
The defendants then moved for an order to show cause why
appellants should not be held in contempt for their failure to
pay, or in the alternative for immediate contempt. After a
hearing, the district court found that they had failed to pay
and that there was no excuse for their behavior. It thus held
them in civil contempt and ordered them to pay 10% of the
original sanctions award to cover the defendants’ additional
costs for the contempt litigation. It also assessed a daily fine,
in case payment was not forthcoming. The second appeal
before us, No. 14‐1682, is from the contempt proceeding.
I
A
Lightspeed Media operates online pornography sites.
Our story begins when it brought suit in St. Clair County,
Illinois, against one John Doe defendant, identified only
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 3
through his IP address. (An IP, or Internet Protocol, address
is the number assigned to a particular device on the Inter‐
net.) Doe’s IP address was allegedly associated with the un‐
lawful viewing of Lightspeed’s content, made possible by the
use of a widely shared, “hacked” password. Lightspeed then
identified approximately 6,600 others (through their IP ad‐
dresses only) as alleged “co‐conspirators” in a wide‐reaching
scheme to steal passwords and content. The only conspirato‐
rial act alleged was the use of the same password. Then, fol‐
lowing what seems to be appellants’ modus operandi, see, e.g.,
AF Holdings, LLC v. Does 1–1058, 752 F.3d 990, 993 (D.C. Cir.
2014), Lightspeed, acting ex parte, served subpoenas on the
ISPs (which at that point were non‐parties) for the personal‐
ly identifiable information of each of the 6,600 alleged co‐
conspirators, none of whom had been joined as parties. The
ISPs refused to turn over the information and instead filed a
motion to quash and for a protective order.
The state trial court denied the ISPs’ motion, and so the
ISPs sought appellate review. At the same time, Duffy called
an attorney representing the ISPs and requested the name
and title of each employee who decided that an ISP would
not comply with the subpoenas. Steele then submitted an
affidavit stating that the ISP attorney refused to provide that
information. The Illinois Supreme Court ultimately ruled
that the trial court erred by refusing to quash the subpoenas.
Lightspeed responded by amending its complaint on August
3, 2012, and formally naming as co‐conspirator parties the
ISPs and unidentified “corporate representatives” of the
ISPs. The complaint painted with a broad brush: it alleged
everything from negligence, to violations of the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1030 and 1030(g), to de‐
ceptive practices and aiding and abetting. “John Doe,” in the
4 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
amended complaint, became Anthony Smith. Then, ignoring
the fact that the Illinois Supreme Court had just rejected its
request for the same information, Lightspeed issued new
subpoenas seeking the personally identifiable information of
Smith’s purported 6,600 co‐conspirators.
On August 9, 2012, the ISPs removed the case to the Dis‐
trict Court for the Southern District of Illinois. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1446(b)(3). Lightspeed immediately filed an emergency
motion in advance of the routine Rule 26(f) conference, see
FED. R. CIV. P. 26(f), asking the federal court to order the ISPs
to produce the same “co‐conspirators’” personally identifia‐
ble information. At the same time, Hansmeier submitted a
motion for pro hac vice admission; he did not identify a law
firm on the form. Steele entered an appearance in which he
listed his firm as Prenda Law. The firm affiliations, however,
turned out to be provisional, to put it kindly. At the emer‐
gency motion hearing, Steele identified his firm as Steele
Hansmeier PLLC, Duffy said that he was with Prenda Law,
and Hansmeier was with something called Alpha Law Firm.
Steele Hansmeier and Prenda are listed at the same street
address, 161 North Clark Street, in Chicago, in different
suites.
Addressing the discovery motion at the emergency hear‐
ing, Steele spoke at length about the dire need for the re‐
quested information. Unconvinced, the district judge denied
the motion, stating in passing that he was “skeptical about
how this case could ever be put on, but my feet are not set in
stone on it. I’ve seen some cases that didn’t look too hot at
the start that got better with time. This may be one of those
cases.” Defendants then submitted both a motion to dismiss
and a motion to stay discovery pending a ruling on the for‐
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 5
mer motion. In November 2012, Hansmeier submitted a mo‐
tion to withdraw without indicating which firm he was with;
in March 2013, Steele withdrew.
This was not the only case Duffy, Steele, and Hansmeier
had at the time. While the motion to dismiss was pending in
the Southern District of Illinois, a court in the Central Dis‐
trict of California held a hearing for the express purpose of
exploring the role this trio, operating often as “Prenda Law,”
played in some underlying copyright infringement litigation.
That hearing did not go well for them; sanctions were im‐
posed on all three (among others) and the matter referred to
a variety of state and federal authorities. See Ingenuity 13
LLC v. John Doe, No. 12‐cv‐8333, 2013 WL 1898633 (C.D. Cal.
May 6, 2013). For our purposes the relevant fact is that the
district court there found that Steele, Hansmeier, and Duffy
owned and controlled Prenda Law. The court went on to say
that they
demonstrated [a] willingness to deceive not just [that]
Court, but other courts where they have appeared.
[Their] representations about their operations, rela‐
tionships, and financial interests have varied from
feigned ignorance to misstatements to outright lies.
But this deception was calculated so that the Court
would grant [their] early‐discovery requests, thereby
allowing [them] to identify defendants and exact set‐
tlement proceeds from them.
Id. at *3. After the show‐cause order was entered in the Cen‐
tral District of California but before any sanctions were im‐
posed, Duffy, Steele, and Hansmeier (along with others from
Prenda) began voluntarily to dismiss similar cases filed
across the country, including the one now before us. Four‐
6 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
teen days after the district court granted Lightspeed’s motion
for voluntary dismissal, defendant Smith filed a motion for
attorney’s fees under Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(2) and 28 U.S.C.
§ 1927. Duffy filed a response; Steele and Hansmeier did not.
In October, the district court granted Smith fees and costs
pursuant to section 1927. The order ran jointly and severally
against each appellant. Taking into account both the record
in the case before it and the rulings in other districts, the
court found that the litigation against Smith “smacked of
bullying pretense.” The court said that its decision to impose
sanctions was particularly informed by the emergency mo‐
tion for discovery. The next day, Hansmeier filed a motion to
vacate or reconsider, and a few days later Steele and Duffy
did the same. Hansmeier and Steele alleged that while Duffy
received notice that sanctions were being sought, they did
not.
After the district court granted fees and costs for Smith,
the ISPs filed a motion requesting the same. Hansmeier and
Steele opposed the motion, and so the district court held a
hearing to deal with both the motion to reconsider the fees
awarded Smith and the new ISP motion. On November 27,
2013, the district court denied the motion to reconsider
(which had been filed on behalf of all three appellants) and
awarded attorneys’ fees to the ISPs. Appeal No. 13‐3801 fol‐
lowed.
B
1. Notice and Opportunity to be Heard
Steele and Hansmeier contend that their due process
rights were violated because they never received proper no‐
tice of Smith’s motion for sanctions. The record, however,
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 7
does not support them. First, as the district court concluded,
even if we assume that they did not have notice originally,
that defect was cured when the district court granted rehear‐
ing on the sanctions issue. Indeed, in their briefs before this
court, Steele and Hansmeier seem to concede as much. Their
complaint has shifted to one focusing on the adequacy of
their opportunity to respond. It is too late to change theories,
however, and in any event, the district court correctly ruled
that whatever procedural flaw there may have been was ful‐
ly corrected by affording a new opportunity for a hearing.
Finally, they received adequate notice in the first place.
Due process requires “notice ‘reasonably calculated, un‐
der all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the
pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to
present their objections.’” United States Air Funds, Inc. v. Es‐
pinosa, 559 U.S. 260, 272 (2010) (citing Mullane v. Central Han‐
over Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314 (1950)). Actual notice
is not required. Id. We are not talking here about service of
process, which proceeds under a more restrictive set of rules.
See FED. R. CIV. P. 4. Instead, the motion for sanctions was
one step in an ongoing piece of litigation. Given the close
connections among the lawyers, it was reasonable for the
court to conclude that service on Duffy would suffice to give
notice to Steele and Hansmeier as well. The behavior each
one displayed throughout this litigation underscored their
ongoing relationship and communication: they used one an‐
other’s CM/ECF login information, filed motions on behalf of
each other, and submitted substantially similar documents.
It is also worth noting that Federal Rule of Civil Proce‐
dure 5(b)(2)(B)(i) permits leaving notice at a person’s office
with a clerk or someone in charge, or even in a conspicuous
8 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
place. Duffy received notice, he was in charge of Prenda
Law, and there was evidence that both Steele and Hansmeier
were working for Prenda as well. While appellants huff that
the district court “wholly gloss[ed] over the fact that Hans‐
meier noticed his appearance in the case for Alpha Law
Firm, not Prenda Law,” the district court had ample reason
to find the Prenda/Alpha distinction illusory at best, fraudu‐
lent at worst. Two days after Steele moved to withdraw from
this case, he declared in another action that he was “of coun‐
sel with the law firm, Prenda Law, Inc.” and that Hansmeier
was “also of counsel to the firm.” Declaration of John Steele,
Ingenuity 13 LLC v. John Doe, Case No. 2:12‐cv‐08333‐ODW‐
JC, ECF No. 83 ¶¶ 1, 4 (C.D. Cal. filed Mar. 8, 2013). And this
is to say nothing of the fact that at least once Hansmeier in‐
dicated in this case that he was of counsel to Prenda.
In separate proceedings in the Central District of Califor‐
nia, Duffy, Steele, and Hansmeier each took the Fifth instead
of answering the court’s questions about attorney miscon‐
duct and the relationship between Prenda and other poten‐
tial shell companies. See Ingenuity 13 LLC, 2013 WL 1898633,
at *2 n.3. See also Joe Mullin, “Judge smash: Prenda’s porn‐
trolling days are over,” ArsTechnica (April 2, 2013), available
at http://arstechnica.com/tech‐policy/2013/04/prenda‐porn‐
trolls‐clam‐up‐as‐their‐plans‐crumble‐in‐an‐la‐courtroom/
(all websites cited in this opinion were last visited on July 31,
2014). The Fifth Amendment, however, “does not forbid ad‐
verse inferences against parties to civil actions when they
refuse to testify in response to probative evidence.” Baxter v.
Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308, 318 (1976); see also LaSalle Bank Lake
View v. Seguban, 54 F.3d 387, 390 (7th Cir. 1995).
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 9
A quick look at publicly available documents supports
the district court’s finding that service on Duffy also accom‐
plished service on Steele and Hansmeier. In its application
for authorization to transact business in Florida, Steele
Hansmeier, a Minnesota corporation, listed its mailing ad‐
dress as 161 N. Clark St. No. 3200, Chicago, IL 60601. Paul
Hansmeier is listed as Manager and his address is listed as
1111 Lincoln Rd., Suite 400, in Miami Beach, Florida. See
http://search.sunbiz.org/Inquiry/CorporationSearch/Search
ResultDetail/EntityName/forl‐m11000004784‐c904d9dd‐
b0c6‐4096‐bce2‐4476d6ff780f/Steele%20Hansmeier/Page1.
Interestingly, 161 N. Clark St. Suite 3200 is also listed as
the principal place of business for Prenda Law, Inc., in its
2011 application for authorization to transact business in
Florida. Its registered agent, Mark Lutz, uses the same Mi‐
ami Beach address as Hansmeier did in the Steele Hansmeier
application. See http://search.sunbiz.org/Inquiry/
CorporationSearch/SearchResultDetail/EntityName/forp‐
f11000004516‐3c50423a‐5be3‐4bf9‐bf44‐36f37c29f9cc/Prenda
%20Law/Page1. See also Declaration of Brett L. Gibbs Sup‐
porting Motion for Indicative Ruling, Ingenuity 13 LLC v.
Doe, Case No. 2:12‐cv‐08333‐ODW, Doc. 240‐2, ¶¶ 12–13 (“I
accepted Hansmeier’s offer to work at Steele Hansmeier … I
worked at Steele Hansmeier PLLC and its successor, Prenda
Law, Inc., from late March 2011 until late February 2013.”).
Alpha’s connection to Steele Hansmeier and Prenda shows
up in a search for Steele Hansmeier on Minnesota’s business
filing site. There, Steele Hansmeier lists its registered ad‐
dress as 80 S. 8th St. #900 Alpha Law Firm, Minneapolis, MN
55402. See http://mblsportal.sos.state.mn.us/Business/Search
Details?filingGuid=7e930678‐96d4‐e011‐a886‐001ec94ffe7f.
See also DieTrollDie, “Down the Rabbit Hole – Pren‐
10 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
da/Steele/Hansmeier Wonderland,” (Feb. 28, 2012), available
at http://dietrolldie.com/2012/02/28/down‐the‐rabbit‐hole‐
prendasteelehansmeier‐wonderland/.
Little more need be said. We are disappointed that the
appellants’ own attorney, Daniel J. Voelker, was either una‐
ble or unwilling to tell us at oral argument about the precise
relationship between Prenda and Alpha Law, despite its rel‐
evance for the issues on appeal. No matter: we have enough
to conclude with confidence that notice to Duffy was reason‐
ably calculated to apprise Steele and Hansmeier of the pen‐
dency of the motion. For the icing on the cake, we add that
the district court also found that Steele received actual notice
via email. Smith sent notice to the email address that Steele
shared with Duffy. While Duffy argues that after he with‐
drew from the case he did not receive those emails, the dis‐
trict court did not find him to be credible. We have no reason
to upset that assessment.
2. Opportunity to be Heard
Steele and Hansmeier also argue that they were never
given an opportunity to be heard on Smith’s motion. Once
again, the record belies their assertion. As we have noted,
they had adequate notice of the hearing. Duffy submitted a
memorandum in opposition to Smith’s motion, but Steele
and Hansmeier did not. Nonetheless, the court gave all three
appellants another opportunity to be heard on the matter
after they submitted motions to vacate or reconsider the or‐
der granting Smith’s request for attorneys’ fees. Before the
rehearing, Steele and Hansmeier both submitted briefs in
opposition to Comcast’s fees. They chose not to submit addi‐
tional briefs (apart from what was presented in the motion to
vacate or reconsider itself) on any other aspect of the order.
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 11
At the hearing Hansmeier explained in detail why he
thought that sanctions should not be imposed against him;
Steele spoke as well. This more than sufficed as an oppor‐
tunity to be heard.
3. ISPs’ Motions for Fees
In addition to challenging the attorneys’ fees for Smith,
appellants also argue that the district court erred by granting
fees to the ISPs. Duffy argues he was not given an oppor‐
tunity to respond to the ISPs’ request, and all three argue
they were not given an opportunity to respond to the fee
itemization.
a. Duffy’s Opportunity to Respond
While Steele and Hansmeier submitted timely memoran‐
da in opposition to the ISPs’ motions, Duffy did not. He as‐
serts that he was not given an opportunity to respond be‐
cause the district court ruled on the motions before the time
to respond expired under the court’s local rules. This argu‐
ment is frivolous. Duffy does not cite any local rule for this
point, and had he taken the time to look at the rules, he
quickly would have realized that there was time to respond.
The ISPs electronically filed their motions on November 8,
2013. The local rules allow 17 days for any response to elec‐
tronically filed motions. See SDIL‐LR 7.1(g); SDIL‐LR 5.1(c).
The rules provide that “[f]ailure to file a timely response to a
motion may, in the Court’s discretion, be considered an ad‐
mission of the merits of the motion.” SDIL‐LR 7.1(g). Duffy
had until November 25, 2013, to submit his response, but he
did not file anything. The district court granted the ISPs’ mo‐
tion on November 27, 2013. Duffy had an opportunity to re‐
spond; he simply chose not to exercise it.
12 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
b. Fee itemization
All three appellants also argue they were not given an
opportunity to respond to both Smith and the ISPs’ fee item‐
ization and were prejudiced by this alleged omission. Once
again, they miss the mark. They had a full opportunity to
respond to Smith’s itemization but chose to focus on other
issues. With respect to the ISPs’ itemization, they are correct
that the district court erred when it ruled too quickly, but we
conclude that this error was harmless.
Smith filed his itemization on November 8, 2013; he
added a notice that he would raise the itemization at the
November 13 hearing. On November 10, Hansmeier filed a
notice of intention to file a response to Smith’s itemization on
or before November 22. On November 12, the court sent a
Notice of Striking, which required Smith to re‐file his
itemization with a corrected signature block; Smith complied
that same day. On November 13, the district court held a
rehearing on the matter of Smith’s fees and an initial hearing
on the ISPs’ request for fees. On November 25, the district
court ordered the docket text to be modified to describe
defendants’ November 12 re‐submitted itemization as a
supplement to the motion for sanctions. The court did not
indicate any change in the deadline for a response. The court
then issued its ruling finding the fees reasonable on
November 27—five days after the date by which Hansmeier
had promised his response to Smith’s itemization. While
appellants contend that the court reset the response deadline
on November 25 when it characterized Smith’s re‐submitted
itemization as a supplement, they give us no indication why
this should be so. Beyond the fact that the district court
never actually reset the deadline, there was no change to the
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 13
substance of Smith’s itemization. Moreover, appellants could
not have relied on that November 25 characterization,
because their deadline to submit their opposition was that
same day. In short, appellants had ample opportunity to be
heard on any questions related to Smith’s itemization of fees.
The time the court gave for responses to the ISPs’ itemi‐
zation was shorter than the 17 days called for by the local
rules. AT&T did not file its itemization until November 15;
Comcast’s filing was even later, November 22. The district
court ruled on the submissions on November 27, just 12 and
five days later. The court’s order noted that Duffy, Hansmei‐
er, and Steele had not filed responses to the specific itemiza‐
tion. It went on to explain that it found a response unneces‐
sary because, after having reviewed the itemizations, it con‐
cluded that the itemized fees were reasonable. We can as‐
sume that it was error for the court to accelerate the time for
ruling without informing the parties of the revised schedule.
Nevertheless, any such error was harmless. Appellants have
not given us any reason to believe that the ISPs’ itemization
was unreasonable. Indeed, in focusing on the errors in
Smith’s fees, appellants argue that Smith’s fees are unreason‐
able when compared to the fees requested by Comcast. We
see no reversible error here.
c. Timeliness of the ISPs’ Motion
Appellants next challenge the ISPs’ motion on the ground
that they delayed too long before filing it. They are correct
that motions under section 1927 must not be unreasonably
delayed. Overnite Transp. Co. v. Chi. Indus. Tire Co., 697 F.2d
789, 793 (7th Cir. 1983). But they push the point too far when
they assert that the delay divested the district court of juris‐
diction over their motion. In Overnite, the case on which they
14 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
rely, an appeal of the judgment was pending, and eight
months elapsed between the filing of the notice of appeal
and this court’s affirmance on appeal. During that period,
jurisdiction had shifted from the district court to the court of
appeals. After this court affirmed, the district court granted
attorneys’ fees pursuant to section 1927. Id. at 792. We held
that the district court was without jurisdiction to rule on the
motion for costs and attorneys’ fees. The district court had
not reserved jurisdiction over this issue after the notice of
appeal was filed; the statute did not leave jurisdiction in the
district court for this purpose; and no motions concerning
the case were directed to either this court or the district court
during the eight months the appeal on the merits was pend‐
ing. Id.
The circumstances here are entirely different. Between
the time the case was voluntarily dismissed to the time when
the ISPs filed their motion for sanctions, the district court re‐
tained jurisdiction; no appeal was pending. Smith moved for
sanctions on April 5, 2013, and the district court originally
granted his motion on October 30, 2013. Appellants moved
for reconsideration in late October and early November, and
at that point the ISPs moved for attorneys’ fees. It was up to
the district court to decide, in its discretion, whether that
motion was timely. The court concluded that it was, and we
see no abuse of discretion in that ruling.
4. Merits
Appellants next throw a variety of arguments regarding
the substantive ruling against the wall, with the hope that
one might stick. None does.
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 15
The court ordered the imposition of attorneys’ fees under
section 1927 from the inception of the suit. The statute reads
as follows:
Any attorney or other person admitted to conduct
cases in any court of the United States or any Territo‐
ry thereof who so multiplies the proceedings in any
case unreasonably and vexatiously may be required
by the court to satisfy personally the excess costs, ex‐
penses, and attorneysʹ fees reasonably incurred be‐
cause of such conduct.
Our review of fee awards under section 1927 is only for
abuse of discretion. Walter v. Fiorenzo, 840 F.2d 427, 433 (7th
Cir. 1988). Sanctions are proper if the attorney “has acted in
an objectively unreasonable manner by engaging in a serious
and studied disregard for the orderly process of justice … or
where a claim [is] without a plausible legal or factual basis
and lacking in justification.” Id. (internal quotation marks
and citations omitted). Bearing that standard in mind, we
consider whether the court abused its discretion by impos‐
ing fees for the entire course of this litigation and by making
liability joint and several.
a. Fees from Inception
Lightspeed’s suit against the ISPs was premised on the
notion that because the ISPs challenged appellants’ subpoe‐
na of the personally identifiable information of Smith’s 6,600
“co‐conspirators,” they somehow became part of a purport‐
ed plot to steal Lightspeed’s content. If there was any con‐
ceivable merit in that theory, then perhaps fees would have
been inappropriate. But there was not.
16 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
Count I alleged that the ISPs violated the Computer
Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1030 and 1030(g),
by failing to prevent hacking. The only alleged assistance to
hackers, however, was the challenge to the subpoena. As ex‐
pansive as the CFAA is, see Orin S. Kerr, Vagueness Challenges
to the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, 94 MINN. L. REV. 1561,
1563–65 (2010), this is a frivolous charge.
Court II alleged that the ISPs were unjustly enriched be‐
cause they collected subscriber fees from people who used
the internet to gain illegal access to Lightspeed’s website. To
this day, the appellants have provided no support for the
idea that every time an internet user does something unlaw‐
ful online, the user’s ISP is unjustly enriched because it con‐
tinues receiving subscriber fees from the malefactor. The law
in fact is to the contrary. See 17 U.S.C. § 512(a) (a “service
provider shall not be liable … for infringement of copyright
by reason of the provider’s transmitting, routing, or provid‐
ing connections for” material distributed by others on its
network).
Count III alleges that the ISPs were members of a civil
conspiracy to hack and steal from Lightspeed because the
ISPs supposedly knew of the alleged hacking and yet pro‐
tected the John Does by challenging the subpoena. Count III
also throws in an accusation that the ISP corporate repre‐
sentatives were co‐conspirators. These assertions are utterly
without legal merit. The complaint lacks even the most ru‐
dimentary allegation of agreement that would satisfy federal
pleading standards. In addition, a service provider does not
risk becoming a co‐conspirator every time it challenges a
subpoena. To argue that challenging a subpoena makes the
ISPs co‐conspirators in a fictional copyright infringement
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 17
ring is frivolous. Appellants’ theory is all the more outra‐
geous given the fact that the Illinois Supreme Court quashed
a functionally identical abusive subpoena.
Count IV alleges that the ISPs violated the Illinois Con‐
sumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, 815 ILCS
§ 505/2, by engaging in the deceptive practice of allowing
illegal access to plaintiff’s online content. More than this,
however, is needed to state a claim under the Illinois statute:
it requires “(1) a deceptive act or practice by the defendant;
(2) the defendant’s intent that the plaintiff rely on the decep‐
tion; and (3) the occurrence of the deception during a course
of conduct involving trade or commerce.” Robinson v. Toyota
Motor Credit Corp., 775 N.E.2d 951, 960 (Ill. 2002). The Act al‐
so covers unfair conduct. Id. Lightspeed’s complaint fails to
place the defendants on notice of how they may have violat‐
ed this statute.
Counts V and VI are similarly meritless. They allege that
the ISPs aided and abetted Smith and the thousands of John
Does by fighting the subpoenas. They also assert, somewhat
contradictorily, that the ISP corporate representatives acted
outside the scope of their employment when they helped
with that aiding and abetting. These claims are baseless.
The district court similarly did not abuse its discretion in
awarding attorneys’ fees to Smith from the inception of the
suit. Lightspeed raised baseless claims and pressed for a
meritless “emergency” discovery hearing. The district court
found that the litigation “smacked of bully pretense.” At the
November 13, 2013, hearing on fees, the court could not have
been more clear: it stated that appellants were engaged in
“abusive litigation … simply filing a lawsuit to do discovery
to find out if you can sue somebody. That’s just utter non‐
18 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
sense.” We see no need to belabor the point. The record am‐
ply supports the district court’s conclusions, as our discus‐
sion of the case thus far demonstrates. There was no abuse of
discretion in the court’s decision to grant either the ISPs or
Smith fees for the entire case.
b. Joint and Several Liability
We now turn to the question whether the district court
abused its discretion in holding appellants jointly and sever‐
ally liable for the fees awarded. Appellants begin by assert‐
ing that the district court misapplied section 1927 by holding
them vicariously liable for each others’ actions. They are mis‐
taken. While it is true that section 1927 liability is direct, see
Claiborne v. Wisdom, 414 F.3d 715, 724 (7th Cir. 2005), an order
holding parties jointly and severally liable for costs after de‐
termining that each one is individually liable is a finding of
direct liability.
Next, they contend that FM Industries, Inc. v. Citicorp
Credit Services, Inc., 614 F.3d 335 (7th Cir. 2010), stands for the
proposition that a lawyer cannot be held responsible for
documents that bear another’s name but not his own. FMI,
however, does not stand for such a broad proposition. There,
we upheld sanctions against an attorney, but we found that
they could not be levied against the copyright specialist re‐
tained by plaintiff’s principal counsel. The copyright special‐
ist, we said,
seems to have been sanctioned for making the mis‐
take of agreeing to help a careless lawyer [] who put
his name to frivolous and malicious documents …
[b]ut of course [the copyright specialist] was not en‐
gaged as a second‐tier reviewer … [H]e was engaged
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 19
to help [the attorney] get his bearings in copyright
law. That [the copyright specialist] failed at this task
does not make him responsible for documents that
bear [the attorney’s] name but not his own.
Id. at 340. The defendant had argued that the copyright spe‐
cialist should be liable because he did not prevent the lead
attorney from filing unreasonable and vexatious documents.
We rejected that reasoning and commented that “[s]ection
1927 does not require every lawyer who files an appearance
to review and vet every paper filed by every other lawyer.”
Id. at 341.
The relevant question thus relates to the scope of respon‐
sibility undertaken by each individual attorney. In our case,
the district court found that while Steele and Hansmeier
were not listed on every court document, the evidence
showed that they were “in cahoots” with Duffy and worked
with him to use the judicial system for a legally meritless
claim. Their efforts seem to have continued in this court.
While both Steele and Hansmeier now contend that they
showed up in this case only after the federal proceedings
were underway, the record shows that both were also in‐
volved in the shadows of the state court proceedings. Steele
called AT&T’s counsel about the subpoenas, and he ap‐
peared and argued against the ISPs’ motion to quash and
motion to stay. Hansmeier appeared at a conference before a
magistrate judge and was the sole signatory of the 10‐page
opposition to the ISPs’ motion for the stay of discovery.
While Steele and Hansmeier insist that they had only mini‐
mal activity with this case, the district court did not abuse its
discretion when it found otherwise.
20 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
II
We turn now to case No. 14‐1682, the appeal from the or‐
der holding Duffy, Steele, and Hansmeier in civil contempt
and fining each one one‐third of 10% of defendants’ costs
stemming from the first appeal.
A
As we noted at the outset, after the district court ordered
appellants to pay the section 1927 sanctions within 14 days
of the order, they failed to do so. As a result, defendants
submitted a joint motion for contempt, or in the alternative,
for an order to show cause why they should not all be held
in contempt. At the show‐cause hearing, each appellant ad‐
mitted that he had not paid any part of the sanctions. None‐
theless, appellants argued that contempt was unavailable
because the sanctions order should be regarded as a money
judgment and thus something that is not enforceable
through contempt proceedings. In the alternative, they
claimed an inability to pay. The court thought the sanctions
order was equitable and enforceable by use of contempt
power. Based on appellants’ claimed inability to pay, the dis‐
trict court ordered each to submit a financial statement from
a certified public accountant that verified his asserted lack of
resources. Although the financial statements were submit‐
ted, they opened Pandora’s Box. Attached to each financial
statement was a bombshell letter from appellants’ certified
public accountant stating that appellants had “elected to
omit substantially all of the disclosures required by general‐
ly accepted accounting principles.” Not surprisingly, the dis‐
trict court found the statements insufficient to establish an
inability to pay. It also took notice that these same attorneys
had posted large bonds in other cases. In conjunction with
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 21
the failure even to mention these other cases, the court saw
this as an attempt to impede its ability to make an accurate
assessment of their current ability to pay.
The court found that appellants had willfully violated the
sanctions order and made no effort to comply. The magni‐
tude of harm was significant, it added, particularly as the
underlying case was baseless and a misuse of the courts.
Additionally, the court found appellants to have made mis‐
representations and presented “half‐truths” at the show‐
cause hearing, showing clear disrespect for the court. Taking
all of this into account, the court sanctioned appellants in the
amount of 10% of the original sanction and ordered the sum
to be divided equally among them. It also set up a schedule
of additional fines if they failed to comply.
B
Our review, as before, is for abuse of discretion. See Au‐
totech Techs. LP v. Integral Research & Dev. Corp., 499 F.3d 737,
751 (7th Cir. 2007). To succeed on a contempt petition, de‐
fendants had to demonstrate by clear and convincing evi‐
dence that the appellants violated the express and unequivo‐
cal command of a court order. Id. Broken down into its ele‐
ments, the evidence had to show that (1) the order set forth
an unambiguous command; (2) appellants violated that
command; (3) appellants’ violation was significant; and (4)
appellants failed to take steps reasonably and diligently to
comply with the order. See id.; see also FTC v. Trudeau, 579
F.3d 754, 763 (7th Cir. 2009) (citing Prima Tek II, LLC v. Klerk’s
Plastic Indus., B.V., 525 F.3d 542 (7th Cir. 2008). We take the
elements in turn.
22 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
The district court’s original order was unambiguous. The
court made clear that it was imposing sanctions pursuant to
28 U.S.C. § 1927 and explicitly commanded appellants to pay
within 14 days. Appellants try to evade it by arguing that
they thought the order was for a money judgment. But this
was neither private nor public litigation against the attor‐
neys. What was at stake was the court’s power to govern its
bar. As section 1927 (and for that matter 28 U.S.C. § 1651) re‐
flect, courts have the authority, through contempt proceed‐
ings, to sanction attorneys and to enforce their orders. See
Cleveland Hair Clinic, Inc. v. Puig, 106 F.3d 165, 166 (7th Cir.
1997) (“Use of the contempt power is an appropriate way to
enforce a sanction for misconduct, which is not an ordinary
money judgment.”); Alpern v. Lieb, 11 F.3d 689, 690 (7th Cir.
1993) (“[Rule 11] directs the imposition of sanctions for un‐
professional conduct in litigation, and while the form of
sanction is often and was here an order to pay attorneyʹs fees
to the opponent in the litigation, it is still a sanction, just as
an order of restitution in a criminal case is a sanction even
when it directs that payment be made to a private person
rather than to the government.”). The money‐judgment de‐
fense gets appellants nowhere.
Appellants next argue that there is no evidence that they
did not substantially comply with the order, or at least take
reasonable and diligent steps to do so. This position ignores
the record. At the show‐cause hearing appellants made clear
that they had not paid anything and, when questioned about
payment, they never pointed to any step in that direction.
They elected instead to defend on the ground that they were
unable to pay. Inability to pay is indeed a valid defense in
contempt proceedings, In re Resource Tech. Corp., 624 F.3d
376, 387 (7th Cir. 2010), but the question whether the sanc‐
Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682 23
tions were paid is different from the question why payment
was not made. The district court was entitled to answer the
first one in the negative, given appellants’ admission on the
record that they had neither paid the required amount to de‐
fendants nor posted a supersedeas bond.
Appellants next argue that even if civil contempt might
have been proper, that was not the type of contempt im‐
posed against them. They urge that the fine imposed was
criminal in nature and they are therefore entitled to a sepa‐
rate prosecution and full due process. We see nothing here,
however, that would justify characterizing these fines as
criminal. Civil contempt proceedings may be either coercive
or remedial. See United States v. Dowell, 257 F.3d 694, 699 (7th
Cir. 2001). They are “designed either to compel the contem‐
nor into compliance with an existing court order or to com‐
pensate the complainant for losses sustained as a result of
the contumacy.” Id. This fine was remedial. It was paid to the
defendants, see Hicks on Behalf of Feiock v. Feiock, 485 U.S. 624,
632 (1988), and it corresponded to the attorneys’ fees and
costs incurred by defendants during the course of litigating
the contempt motion. The fact that the court chose a fine
equal to 10% of the original sanction without consulting bill‐
ing statements does not convert this into a fine for criminal
contempt. See Evans v. City of Evanston, 941 F.2d 473, 477 (7th
Cir. 1991).
Appellants’ related argument that the court’s inability‐to‐
pay analysis was an abuse of discretion is equally unavail‐
ing. Where “there has been no effort at even partial compli‐
ance with the court’s order, the inability‐to‐pay defense re‐
quires a showing of a ‘complete inability’ to pay”; appellants
“had the burden of establishing ‘clearly, plainly, and unmis‐
24 Nos. 13‐3801 & 14‐1682
takably’ that ‘compliance is impossible.’” In re Resource Tech.
Corp., 624 F.3d at 387 (citing Huber v. Marine Midland Bank, 51
F.3d 5, 10 (2d Cir. 1995)).
**********************
Appellants’ burden in each of these proceedings was
high and the record supports the district court’s holdings
that they did not meet it. Any arguments that we have not
discussed do not merit separate attention. We AFFIRM the or‐
der of sanctions imposed against appellants in No. 13‐3801.
We also AFFIRM the order in No. 14‐1682 holding appellants
in civil contempt and imposing the stated fine. Costs of ap‐
peal are to be taxed against appellants jointly and severally.
See FED. R. APP. P. 39(a).