Appellant-Defendants, SRG Consulting, Inc., Hospitalist Physicians, Inc., and Dr. Steven Gerst, (“Appellants”) appeal the imposition of sanctions and entry of a default judgment in favor of Plaintiff-Appel-lee, Eagle Hospital Physicians (“Eagle”). The district court struck Appellants’ answer and counterclaims after discovering that Gerst had been secretly monitoring Eagle’s confidential email communications and entered a default judgment against Appellants. We hold that thе district court neither violated Gerst’s Fifth Amendment rights nor abused its discretion and therefore affirm the imposition of sanctions and the entry of a default judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
Eagle operates a business contracting hospitalists — doctors who specialize in the care and treatment of hospitalized patients — out to hospitals with whom it establishes contractual relationships. Gerst, principal owner of SRG and Hospitalist Physicians, Inc., owns approximately 10% of Eagle, personally or through his other companies. In July 1999, SRG and Eagle entered into a marketing and sales agreement (the “Agreement”) pursuant to which SRG would provide marketing and sales services to Eagle to develop business contacts with hospitals for Eagle. Under the Agreement, “SRG [was] responsible for locating potential contractors, educating them about Eagle’s hospitalist programs, and performing any other services necessary to secure a hospitalist contract for Eagle.” The Agreement provided that SRG would be paid a commission “[f]or each contract for hospitalist services executed between Eagle and another party which either SRG, or its agent, has secured on behalf of Eagle.”
According to Eagle, the relationship between SRG and Eagle began to sour in 2002. Among other problems, the parties disagreed regarding the proper content for the website SRG mаintained on Eagle’s behalf, eaglehospitalphysicians.com. Eagle’s CEO wrote to Gerst and requested that the website be transferred from SRG to Eagle. When Gerst refused to give Eagle access to the website, Eagle *1302 registered and began developing its own website, ehphospitalists.com. SRG then registered 150 domain names containing versions of Eagle’s name and trademarks, including ehphospitalist.com — the singular form of Eagle’s new site. Gerst informed Eagle that hе would transfer the websites to Eagle only if Eagle paid him a large salary or gave him additional equity in Eagle. In his deposition, Gerst testified that, as a condition to transferring the domain names, he also requested hundreds of thousands of dollars from Eagle as compensation for the costs to create and maintain the websites, but later testified that the actual development costs were just over $67,000.
On October 21, 2003, Eagle sent written notice terminating the Agreement. Gerst responded that Eagle did not have the authority to unilaterally terminate the Agreement and that it therefore remained in effect.
In April 2004, Eagle filed the present suit, asserting claims under the Anti-ey-bersquatting Consumer Protection Act, the Federal Trademark Act of 1946, 15 U.S.C. § 1051, et seq., and various state laws. Eagle also sought declaratory relief as to whether it owed any outstanding commissions to SRG under the marketing contract. Appellants filed counterclaims, seeking pаyment of those commissions.
On September 26, 2005, Gerst submitted an affidavit to the court. Attached to the affidavit were email documents sent between Eagle personnel and Eagle’s attorneys. The documents were protected by attorney-client privilege. Eagle deposed Gerst in an attempt to find out how and when he had obtained the privileged and internal emails. Gerst invoked the Fifth Amendment throughout the deposition and refused to explain how and when hе had intercepted these emails, whether he had help doing so, and whether he continued to have the ability to intercept privileged internal and attorney-client email communications. Eagle filed a motion for sanctions against Appellants, asserting three grounds for sanctions: (1) Appellants’ refusal to answer questions concerning their ongoing ability to monitor communications between Eagle and its counsel; (2) Appellants’ failure to pаy attorney’s fees as ordered by the court; and (3) Appellants’ failure to produce all responsive documents in discovery. The district court determined that reasons (2) and (3) did not justify sanctions, and that only reason (1) supported sanctions. 1 The court held a hearing to discuss Gerst’s refusal to answer questions about how he obtained privileged information from Eagle. At the hearing, Eagle established that Gerst had accessed numerous privileged emails during a time period covering December 13, 2003 through September 13, 2005.
In its sanctions ruling, the court recognized, quoting
In re Sunshine Jr. Stores, Inc.,
After briefing from both parties, the court ruled on the appropriate damages and remedies resulting from the sanctions. Because the answer and counterclaims were struck, Appellants had defaulted. Due to their default, the court found that Appellants admitted all well-pleaded claims contained in the complaint and held that Eagle had established Appellants’ liability on the cybersquatting claim. The court awarded statutory damages of $1,000 for each of the twenty-four domain names the parties called “minor” and $10,000 for each of the three “main” domain names. The court also awarded attorney’s fees to Eagle in light of Appellants’ misconduct. Appellants timely appealed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews assertions of constitutional error
de novo. United States v. Anton,
We review a court’s imposition of sanctions under its inherent powers for abuse of discretion.
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
Finally, we review the sufficiency of a complaint
de novo. See Financial Security Assur., Inc. v. Stephens, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
Gerst’s Fifth Amendment Rights 2
Appellants contend that the district court erred twice in its decision to strike their answer and counterclaims. First, Appellants argue that the court violated Gerst’s Fifth Amendment rights by drawing adverse inferences from his refusal to testify. Second, Appellants argue that the court violated Gerst’s Fifth Amendment rights by sanctioning him and dismissing his suit in response to his assertion of his Fifth Amendment rights. We disagree on both counts.
Appellants’ first argument was not preservеd for appeal. Appellants failed to argue to the district court that adverse inferences could not be drawn from Gerst’s Fifth-Amendmentr-protected silence. In fact, during the October 22, 2007 hearing, Appellants’ attorney stated that he did not intend to challenge the district court’s order with respect to the drawing of inferences, and that “the law is clear” that “the court is entitled to draw adverse inferences” from Gerst’s silence. By failing to raise the issue to the district court, Appellants have waived their right to argue on appeal that the inferences were impermissible.
See BUC Int’l Corp. v. Int’l Yacht Council Ltd.,
We note, however, that in a civil suit such as this one, the court may draw adverse inferences against a party that invokes the Fifth Amendment.
United States v. Two Parcels of Real Prop. Located in Russell County, Ala.,
We turn next to Appellants’ assertions that Gerst’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated when the court entered a default judgment in favor of Eagle because Gerst invoked the Fifth Amendment. 3
The decision to invoke the Fifth Amendment does not have to be consequence-free.
United States v. White,
Here, Gerst’s assertion of the Fifth Amendment was not unduly burdened because the dismissal was not a punishment for invoking the Fifth Amendment. The court did not enter a dismissal
because
of Gerst’s use of the Fifth Amendment. Rather, Eagle had introduced evidence that Gerst had been improperly intercepting confidential emails of the opposing party and that Gerst refused to answer questions about whether he could continue to dо so. This evidence of misconduct established that Gerst had disrupted the litigation, and the district court felt it was necessary in light of the disruption to strike Appellants’ pleadings and enter a default judgment for Eagle. The dismissal issued as a result of the disruption, not as a direct result of Gerst’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment. Under the circumstances in this case, the court assigned the proper evidentiary weight to Gerst’s silence.
Baxter,
425
*1305
U.S. at 318,
Furthermore, even if the court’s dismissal can be said to flow directly from Gerst’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment, it was not improper under the circumstances of the case. In
Wehling,
the Former Fifth Circuit stated thаt an automatic dismissal for hiding behind the Fifth Amendment may be employed as a remedy of last resort to prevent unfairness to the other party.
Additionally, the dismissal did not occur as the result of an improper substitution of Gerst’s silence for necessary evidence because Gerst did not assert the Fifth Amendment in relation to an issue that impacted the merits of the litigation. The court did not infer liability on a claim from Gerst’s silence. Rather, the subject of Gerst’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment went to his litigation misconduct. The court made permissible, reasonable inferences about his misconduct from both Gerst’s silеnce about his ongoing activities and from Eagle’s evidence showing that Gerst had been intercepting privileged information for nearly two years. The court imposed sanctions based on these factual findings, not upon Gerst’s decision to invoke the Fifth Amendment.
The Court’s Use of Its Inherent Power to Impose Sanctions
Appellants argue that even if the district court could, without running afoul of the Fifth Amendment, impose sanctions against them, the court abused its discretion and violated their due process rights in selecting such a severe sanction. Appellants argue that the sanction was dis *1306 proportionately severe, was not specifically related to the misconduct, and lesser sanctions were available and would have been effective. We disagree.
A court may impose sanctions for litigation misconduct under its inherent power.
Chambers,
“The key to unlocking a court’s inherent power is a finding of bad faith.”
Barnes v. Dalton,
As the finding of bad faith properly unlocked the court’s inherent powers, we turn to the question of whether the court violated Gerst’s due procеss rights or abused its discretion in fashioning this particular sanction. The “[d]is-missal of a party’s complaint or answer, or striking its defenses, as a sanction ... is a heavy punishment,” appropriate “only as a last resort, when less drastic sanctions would not ensure compliance with the court’s orders.”
In re Sunshine Jr. Stores,
The court considered other lesser sanctions, and held a hearing with both parties to determine whether lesser sanctions would suffice. 6 The court felt that a severe sanction was necessary “to act as a deterrent to other litigants contemplating improper interception of communications between clients and their attorneys” because permitting this case to continue would be аn open invitation to others to abuse the judicial process. The court reasonably concluded that Gerst’s egregious misconduct disrupted the litigation, his ongoing ability to intercept confidential and privileged emails would make it untenable for Eagle to continue litigating against Gerst and his closely-held cor *1307 porations, and that extreme sanctions were necessary to punish Appellants and deter others. We agree that striking Appellants’ аnswer and counterclaims and entering a default judgment were commensurate with the level of misconduct and hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion.
Nor are we persuaded that the sanctions here were not specifically related to the misconduct and therefore constituted an abuse of discretion. This court has affirmed similar sanctions in response to egregious conduct. In
Buchanan v. Bowman,
Sufficiency of the Complaint as to Eagle’s Cybersquatting Claim
A “defendant, by his default, admits the plaintiffs well-pleaded allegations of fаct, is concluded on those facts by the judgment, and is barred from contesting on appeal the facts thus established.”
Nishimatsu Const. Co. v. Houston Nat’l Bank,
Cybersquatting is a form of trademark misuse. “This activity is defined to be the conduct of оne who reserves with a network information center a domain name consisting of the mark or name of a company for the purpose of relinquishing the right to the domain name back to the legitimate owner for a price.” McCaRthy ON TRADEMARKS AND UNFAIR COMPETITION, § 24:17 (4th ed.2008). Congress decreed cybersquatting a federal crime. 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d). A person commits cybersquat-ting
if, without regard to the goods or services of the parties, that person
(i) has a bad faith intent to profit from that mark, including a personal name which is protected as a mark under this section; and
(ii) registers, traffics in, or uses a domain name that — •
(I) in the case of a mark that is distinctive at the time of registration of the domain name, is identical or confusingly similar to that mark;
(II) in the case of a famous mark that is famous at the time of registration of the domain name, is identical or confusingly similar to or dilutive of that mark; or
(III) is a [protected] trademark, word, or name....
15 U.S.C. § 1125(d).
Appellants assert that the complaint did not allege they had a bad faith *1308 intent to profit from the mark as required by § 1125(d)(1)(A)(i). Parаgraph 53, however, states “Upon information and belief, Defendants continue to use the domain names with the bad faith intent of profiting unlawfully from Eagle’s trademarks.” The complaint thus alleged a bad faith intent to profit from the mark. Appellants further argue that accepting this allegation as true was improper because it conflicted with the court’s previous finding that Appellants’ creation of the websites was not done in bad faith. We believe Apрellants misunderstand the district court’s prior rulings. In an earlier ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court found that there was a possibility that Appellants did not act in bad faith and their conduct may be covered by the “safe harbor” provision of the cybersquatting statute, making summary judgment improper. The court did not make a finding that there was no bad faith.
Appellants raise additional arguments that the complaint was insufficient in their brief to this court. These arguments, however, were not rаised before the district court. As these alleged problems with the complaint were not raised below, we will not review them now.
See BUC Int’l Corp.,
Termination of Agreement and Commissions Earned
Because we hold that the sanctions and the default judgment were not improper, Appellants’ remaining challenges to the district court’s interlocutory rulings are moot.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s entry of judgment in favor of Eagle.
Notes
. Because the district court found that the alleged discovery violations were not sanc-tionable, the court’s power to issue sanctions arose pursuant to its inherent power rather than under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b).
. We note that corporations do not have any Fifth Amendment rights and so only Gerst’s Fifth Amendment rights are at issue.
See Braswell v. United States,
. Contrary to Eagle’s contention, the district court did not issue sanctions based on an aggregation of misconduct by Appellants, but rather just on the interception of emails. Although Eagle alleged various misdeeds in its motion for sanctions, the court discussed each potential ground for sanctions in its March 14, 2007 order and dismissed or addressed separately each instance of alleged misconduct except for Gerst’s surveillance of Eagle’s confidential emails.
. Fifth Circuit decisions rendered prior to September 30, 1981 are binding precedent on this court.
See Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. Additionally, some cases suggest that the rale barring dismissal for invoking the Fifth Amendment in a civil case only applies where the party assеrting the Fifth is also a defendant in a criminal case and his civil testimony would directly impact his criminal liability.
See United States
v.
Premises Located at Route 13,
. The extensive hearings and briefing on the issue of sanctions provided Appellants a sufficient chance to be heard.
See Chambers,
