Opinion ID: 793859
Heading Depth: 3
Heading Rank: 3

Heading: Preliminary injunction and contempt

Text: 19 On December 13, 2000, the district court entered a preliminary injunction that imposed an asset freeze on Verity, Green, and Shein to preserve funds for a possible monetary remedy. The preliminary injunction also required each of them to complete and return to the FTC a financial-disclosure form. The FTC proposed the financial-disclosure requirement as a way to evaluate the reasonableness of Green's and Shein's requests to unfreeze assets for living expenses, so Green and Shein did not contest the requirement at the time. Green and Shein contend that upon seeing the enormous amount of information requested by the disclosure form, they decided not to seek a release of their frozen assets and not to complete the disclosure form. But the court's order to do so stood. Accordingly, the district court ordered Green and Shein held in contempt of court for their failure to comply with the preliminary injunction's financial-disclosure requirement, an order from which Green and Shein appeal. The district court imposed a coercive per-day fine for their noncompliance and ordered their civil confinement, should they be found within the United States, until they complied with the financial-disclosure requirement. Soon thereafter, the district court denied their motion to lift the financial-disclosure requirement and held that disclosure was necessary to assure enforcement of an asset freeze or to recover proceeds of wrongdoing that are the subject of an equitable claim for disgorgement. To date, neither Green nor Shein has completed the financial-disclosure form. As of October 7, 2005, the date on which this appeal was argued, the coercive monetary fines totaled $16.1 million per contemnor.