Carman Licciardello brought this action in the Middle District of Florida against Rendy Lovelady under the Lanham Act for trademark infringement and related claims arising out of Lovelady’s allegedly unauthorized use of Licciardello’s name, photograph, and apparent endorsement of Lovelady on a website. Lovelady, who resides in Tennessee, filed a Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Personal Jurisdiction, which the district court granted. Licciar-dello filed a timely notice of appeal. For the following reasons, we shall reverse.
I.
Carman Licciardello (“Carman”) has been a nationally-known Christian musician and entertainer for over twenty-five years. From 2000 to 2001, Lovelady was employed by Carman as his personal manager and Lovelady managed Carman’s concert tour during that year. The tour had live performances in approximately eighty major cities in the United States, including three or four in Florida. Lovela-dy accompanied the tour to Florida for those performances.
Under his agreement with Carman, Lo-velady received commissions from Car-man’s gross income derived from catalogue record sales, from Carman’s service contracts on specific items, including endorsement and sponsorship contracts, and his master recordings, musical compositions and other activities occurring during the contract. Carman terminated his contract with Lovelady at the end of 2001.
Carman alleges that Lovelady also managed several other artists who performed in Florida during this time period, including one group that performs regularly in Orlando, Florida. Lovelady was in Florida for these performances on three occasions in 2006 and 2007.
Carman alleges that in early 2006, Love-lady posted a website on the Internet that was accessible to the public in Florida that promoted Lovelady as a personal manager for music artists. The website used Car-man’s trademarked name and his picture, implying that Carman endorsed Lovelady’s skill as a personal manager. The website offered CD’s for sale that provided man *1283 agement advice and other career assistance.
Carman brought this action asserting trademark infringement by Lovelady. On motion, the district court dismissed the action for lack of personal jurisdiction. We review this dismissal
de novo. Stubbs v. Wyndham Nassau Resort and Crystal Palace Casino,
II.
A federal district court in Florida may exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant to the same extent that a Florida court may, so long as the exercise is consistent with federal due process requirements.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(e)(1), (h), and (k);
Sculptchair, Inc. v. Century Arts, Ltd.,
1. The Florida Long-Arm, Statute
The Florida “long-arm” statute permits the state’s courts to exercise jurisdiction over nonresident defendants who commit certain specific acts. Fla. Stat. § 48.193. For example, § (1)(b) of the statute permits a Florida court to assert jurisdiction over any person who “commit[s] a tortious act within this state.” Fla. Stat. § 48.193(1)(b).
Carman claims that jurisdiction over then nonresident Lovelady is appropriate under this section of the Florida statute. Carman argues that Lovelady’s creation in Tennessee of a website containing an allegedly infringing and deceptive use of Carman’s trademark is a tortious act “within this state” as contemplated by the statute because the injury from trademark infringement occurs where the holder of the mark resides — in this case, Florida. He relies upon
Nida Corp. v. Nida,
We have held that § 48.193(b) of the Florida long-arm statute permits jurisdiction over the nonresident defendant who commits a tort outside of the state that causes injury inside the state.
Posner v. Essex Ins. Co.,
We need not decide whether trademark injury necessarily occurs where the owner of the mark resides, as the Florida district courts have held, because in this case the alleged infringement clearly also occurred in Florida by virtue of the website’s accessibility in Florida. 1 On motion to dismiss, and under our precedent, then, Carman’s *1284 allegations in the complaint are sufficient to invoke the Florida long-arm statute. 2
Having determined that the Florida long-arm statute authorizes jurisdiction over Lovelady, we must address whether the due process clause of the United States Constitution permits the statute to be employed in this case.
2. Constitutional Due process
Even though a statute may permit a state to assert jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant, the due process clause of the United States Constitution protects an individual’s liberty interest in not being subject to the binding judgments of a forum with which he has established no meaningful “contacts, ties, or relations.”
International Shoe Co. v. Washington,
Even where a defendant has purposefully established constitutionally significant contacts within the forum state, jurisdiction must also be evaluated in light of several other factors to determine whether its exercise would comport with “fair play and substantial justice.”
International Shoe,
Therefore, in order to determine whether the due process clause permits the exercise of personal jurisdiction over Lovelady, we must assess whether he has purposefully established such constitutionally significant contact with the state of Florida that he could have reasonably anticipated that he might be sued here in connection with those activities. If so, we must consider whether the forum’s interest in this dispute and the plaintiffs interest in obtaining relief are outweighed by the burden on the defendant of having to defend himself in a Florida court.
A. Lovelady’s contacts with Florida
Lovelady maintains that he has no constitutionally significant contacts with Florida. He has no office, no agents, no employees or property in Florida. His sporadic travel to Florida in connection with his management of Carman and other music groups, he argues, is both constitutionally insufficient and unrelated to this cause of action. 3 Although apparently con *1285 ceding that his website is related to Car-man’s claim, 4 Lovelady contends that it not a sufficient contact upon which to predicate personal jurisdiction in Florida. 5
As we have discussed above, the constitutional litmus test for personal jurisdiction is whether the defendant “purposefully established ‘minimum contacts’ in the forum State.’ ”
Burger King,
Intentional torts are such acts, and may support the exercise of personal jurisdiction over the nonresident defendant who has no other contacts with the forum.
Calder v. Jones,
Similarly, in
Keeton,
decided the same day as
Calder,
the Court emphasized that states have a special interest in exercising jurisdiction over those who commit intentional torts causing injury to their residents.
Many courts have employed the
Calder-
“effects” test when the plaintiffs claim involves an intentional tort. The Seventh Circuit upheld the exercise of personal jurisdiction in a trademark infringement action by the Indianapolis Colts football team against a nonresident Canadian football team, also calling themselves the “Colts.”
Indianapolis Colts, Inc. v. Metropolitan Baltimore Football Club Ltd. Partnership,
Similarly, the Ninth Circuit has recognized that the defendant’s connection with the forum in an intentional tort case should be evaluated under the
Calder
“effects” test, rather than the eontracts-oriented “minimum contacts” test.
Ziegler v. Indian River County,
We apply different purposeful availment tests to contract and tort cases .... Consistent with the Supreme Court’s holding in Burger King, merely contracting with a resident of the forum state is insufficient to confer specific jurisdiction over a nonresident. In tort case, however, jurisdiction may attach if an out-of-forum defendant merely engages in conduct aimed at, and having effect in, the situs state.
Similarly, in
Panavision Int’l, L.P. v. Toeppen,
In a recent case, the Ninth Circuit explained that “something more” is required under
Calder
than the mere “foreseeability” that an act may have effects in the forum, and concluded that
Calder
requires that the defendant “expressly aim” his wrongful conduct, individually targeting a known forum resident.
Bancroft & Masters, Inc. v. Augusta National Inc.,
Recently the Middle District of Florida recognized that “a number of courts” have held that “where a defendant’s tortuous conduct is intentionally and purposefully directed at a resident of the forum, the minimum contacts requirement is met, and the defendant should anticipate being haled into court in that forum.”
New Lenox Industries v. Fenton,
Finally, in
Allerton v. State Department of Insurance,
In this case, Lovelady is alleged to have committed an intentional tort against Carman — using his trademarked name and his picture on a website accessible in Florida in a manner to imply Car-man’s endorsement of Lovelady and his products. The use was not negligent, but intentional. The purpose was to make
*1288
money from Carman’s implied endorsement. The unauthorized use of Carman’s mark, therefore, individually targeted Car-man in order to misappropriate his name and reputation for commercial gain. These allegations satisfy the
Calder
effects test for personal jurisdiction — the commission of an intentional tort, expressly aimed at a specific individual in the forum whose effects were suffered in the forum. The Constitution is not offended by the exercise of Florida’s long-arm statute to effect personal jurisdiction over Lovelady because his intentional conduct in his state of residence was calculated to cause injury to Carman in Florida.
See Calder,
B. Fair Play and Substantial Justice
Having established that Lovelady has a constitutionally sufficient contact with Florida, we must ascertain whether the exercise of jurisdiction over him comports with fair play and substantial justice.
International Shoe,
In this case, the Florida plaintiff, injured by the intentional misconduct of a nonresident expressly aimed at the Florida plaintiff, is not required to travel to the nonresident’s state of residence to obtain a remedy. The Supreme Court in
Calder
made clear that “[a]n individual injured in California need not go to Florida to seek redress from persons who, though remaining in Florida, knowingly cause the injury in California.”
Additionally, Florida has a very strong interest in affording its residents a forum to obtain relief from intentional misconduct of nonresidents causing injury in Florida.
Allerton,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s grant of the motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Even under the alternative rule, that the injury occurs where the mark was “passed off,” injury would occur in Florida as the website is alleged to have been accessible in Florida.
Cf. Vanity Fair Mills v. T. Eaton Co.,
. Because the court holds that Fla. Stat. § 48.193(l)(b) is satisfied, we do not address Carman's assertions that jurisdiction lies under other sections of the statute as well.
. It is unclear whether Lovelady’s travel to
*1285
Florida and income from his management of several music groups that have performed in Florida are related to Carman’s claim for trademark infringement on the website. We note, however, that it is not enough that there be some
similarity
between the activities that connect the defendant to the forum and the plaintiff’s claim. Rather, the plaintiff’s claim must "arise out of” the defendant’s contacts with the forum.
Burger King,
. Although Lovelady does not discuss whether the website and Carman's claim are related, it is clear that they are inasmuch as the website is the location of the offending trademark use.
See JB Oxford,
. Lovelady also argues that the website was never fully functional nor advertised and never generated any income. Carman alleges in the complaint and proffers an affidavit attesting that he accessed the website in Florida over several weeks, to which is attached a printout of the offending material on the website. On motion to dismiss, this affidavit suffices to require the court to accept as true that the website was operational and available to the public at large.
See Madara,
. Mere negligent use of an infringing mark would not satisfy the
Calder
test.
. In
Conseco, Inc. v. Hickerson,
. We do not, by our decision today, intend to establish any general rule for personal jurisdiction in the internet context. Our holding, as always, is limited to the facts before us. We hold only that where the internet is used as a vehicle for the deliberate, intentional misappropriation of a specific individual’s trademarked name or likeness and that use is aimed at the victim’s state of residence, the victim may hale the infringer into that state to obtain redress for the injury. The victim need not travel to the state where the website was created or the infringer resides to obtain relief.
