Infomereialist Kevin Trudeau violated a court-approved settlement with the Federal Trade Commission by misrepresenting the content of his book
The Weight Loss Cure “They” Don’t Want You to Know About. FTC v. Trudeau,
On remand, the district court reinstated the $37.6 million remedial fine. This time, however, the court explained that it reached that figure by multiplying the price of the book by the 800-number orders, plus the cost of shipping, less returns. Addressing our questions about administration, the court instructed the FTC to distribute the funds to those who bought Trudeau’s book using the 800-num-ber; any remainder not paid to those victims or used in the administration of the sanction was to be returned to Trudeau. In addition, as a coercive sanction, the district court imposed a $2 million performance bond, effective for at least five years.
Trudeau appeals the sanctions. He argues that the $37.6 million remedial sanction was improperly based on consumer loss rather than his unjust gain. Against the coercive sanction, he argues that the district court’s modification of the consent order to include a performance bond was beyond its authority and, even if it had authority to modify the order, the bond requirement violates the First Amendment.
We disagree and therefore affirm the district court. The consent order was intended to protect customers from deceptive infomercials. The protections, unfortunately, were too weak: Trudeau aired infomercials in violation of the order at least 32,000 times. He should not now be surprised that he must pay for the loss he *950 caused. At a minimum, it was easily within the district court’s discretion to conclude that he should. And $37.6 million correctly measures the loss. The figure is conservative — it only considers sales from the 800-number, not sales in bookstores carrying his “As Seen on TV” titles — and reliable — Trudeau cited this figure himself in briefing Trudeau I. As for the coercive sanction, the district court properly modified the 2004 order to increase the likelihood that Trudeau will comply going forward. After so many violations, the district court did not have to stick with the old plan. And the new plan, and the performance bond in particular, does not violate the First Amendment. The government is not impotent to protect consumers — nor is the court powerless to enforce its orders — by imposing narrowly tailored restrictions on commercial speech.
I. The Remedial Sanction
We review the district court’s contempt rulings for abuse of discretion.
United States v. Dowell,
For Trudeau’s contempt, the district court imposed a remedial fine measured by consumer loss. That was not error. Longstanding precedent dictates that the district court had power to provide “full remedial relief,”
McComb v. Jacksonville Paper Co.,
It was within the district court’s discretion to decide that unless the remedial sanction was measured by consumer loss, the victims of Trudeau’s contempt would not receive full relief for their actual loss. This conclusion is informed — but not limited — by the remedies available in the underlying FTC action.
See FTC v. Kuykendall,
Trudeau misunderstands a Second Circuit case,
FTC v. Verity Int'l Ltd.,
To calculate his fine, the district court relied on Exhibit 20, a table of 800-num-ber sales figures for Trudeau’s
Weight Loss Cure
book, and the testimony of George Potts, ITV’s director of financial planning and analysis. According to the table, as explained by George Potts, the 800-number sales plus shipping and handling, minus returns, equals $37.6 million, the amount the district court ultimately concluded Trudeau should pay. Trudeau challenges the evidence supporting that number, but his arguments are unpersuasive: In his first appeal in this case
(Trudeau I),
Trudeau
himself
relied on the $37.6 million figure as the measure of ITV’s gross revenues from the
Weight Loss Cure.
The district court’s reliance on that evidence was not error, much less clear error.
See FTC v. Stefanchik,
II. The Coercive Sanction
We held in
Trudeau I
that a three-year infomercial ban was an improper coercive sanction because it did not give Trudeau the opportunity to purge.
Trudeau, again, is incorrect. It was well within the district court’s discretion to modify the consent order.
Lee v. Village of River Forest,
But
— unquestionably—Rufo did not overrule
United Shoe. Rufo
applies when a defendant seeks to modify an injunction in an institutional reform case.
Because the FTC is seeking to modify the original injunction to better achieve its purpose, this case falls squarely under
United Shoe.
So, if the FTC proved that the order was not achieving its purpose, the district court had discretion “to modify the decree so as to achieve the required result with all appropriate expedition.”
United Shoe,
And the bond requirement does not violate the First Amendment.
See id.
(holding that a similar performance bond did not violate the First Amendment). Trudeau raises a variety of First Amend
*953
ment arguments, but the only one that merits discussion is whether his right to engage in commercial speech is violated by the requirement that he post a bond before he participate, in
any
infomercial,
misleading or not.
Insofar as the court order applies to
misleading
commercial speech, there is no possible First Amendment violation, of course, because misleading commercial speech gets no constitutional protection.
Florida Bar v. Went For It, Inc.,
Therefore, it is the FTC’s burden to show that (1) there is a substantial interest supporting the restriction, (2) the restriction directly advances that substantial interest, and (3) the restriction is “narrowly drawn.”
Central Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
The tailoring prong requires more discussion but the result is the same.
Central Hudson
stated that a restriction on commercial speech must not be “more extensive than necessary.”
The performance bond meets this standard. First, a bond is required only if Trudeau decides to resume making infomercials. It does not limit Trudeau as an author; it does not curtail Trudeau’s attempt to pitch products in any print medium; it does not even apply if Trudeau makes a TV or radio ad under two minutes. Its application targets only the commercial conduct that has caused such tremendous consumer harm in the past— infomercials. Second, the district court set the performance bond at $2 million but took seriously Trudeau’s claim that it is beyond what he can afford by allowing him to file an audited financial statement *954 and prove as much in a hearing. Third, the bond requirement is proportional to the amount of harm Trudeau caused by previous deceptive infomercials. If anything, the number seems low given that, over the course of nearly a year, Trudeau’s Weight Loss Cure infomercial sold thousands of books each day for many months.
Affirmed.
