OPINION AND ORDER
In an opinion issued May 16, 2002, the Ninth Circuit,
m banc,
affirmed the judg
*1057
ment entered on the jury verdict and the Amended Order and Permanent Injunction in this case “in all respects but for punitive damages, as to which we remand.”
Planned Parenthood v. Amer. Coalition of Life,
The case is now before me on remand. Specifically, in the en banc decision, the Ninth Circuit instructed as follows:
ACLA submits that the * * * punitive award amounts to judgment without notice contrary to BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore,517 U.S. 559 ,116 S.Ct. 1589 ,134 L.Ed.2d 809 (1996). We have since discussed the subject in depth in In re Exxon Valdez,270 F.3d 1215 , 1241 (9th Cir.2001). Although our review is de novo, the district court should be given the opportunity to evaluate the punitive damages and to make findings with respect to its propriety. Therefore, we vacate the award of punitive damages and remand for the district court to consider in the first instance whether the award is appropriate in light of Exxon Valdez.
In connection with the remand, defendants have filed motions (# 790) that, in essence, invite the court to reexamine almost all of the key rulings in the case, and/or to grant a new trial on all issues, including liability. Plaintiffs, in turn, move to strike (# 793) defendants’ motions except to the extent that they address the issue of punitive damages. The parties engage in an extensive debate about the “rule of mandate,”
see, e.g., U.S. v. Kellington,
Thus, I decline to address the multitude of other issues defendants now raise, and specifically deny defendants’ demand for a new trial. Plaintiffs’ motion to strike (# 793) is, therefore, denied as moot. For the reasons stated below, I conclude that the jury awards of punitive damages in this case are reasonable and constitutional, and therefore affirm the awards on remand.
DISCUSSION
The parties are quite familiar with the underlying facts and the procedural history of this litigation, which will not be repeated here except as necessary to explain my decision.
1. The Verdict
Following several weeks of trial, in February 1999, the jury rendered a verdict, which, as relevant here, found in favor of all plaintiffs against all defendants on plaintiffs’ claims under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, 18 U.S.C. § 248 (“FACE”). The jury calculated an amount of damages to compensate each plaintiff for harm suffered, and awarded that same amount against each of the 14 individual defendants. The compensatory damage awards to each individual plaintiff on the FACE claims were as follows:
Compensatory Plaintiff Damages
Dr. Robert Crist $ 39,656.00
Dr. Warren Hern $ 14,429.00
Dr. Elizabeth Newhall $ 15,797.98
Dr. James Newhall $ 375.00
Planned Parenthood of the $405,834.86 Columbia/Willamette, Inc.
Portland Feminist Women’s $ 50,243.30 Health Center
Total: $526,336.14
The jury then assessed each of the six plaintiffs punitive damages against each of the 14 defendants on the FACE claims. The amounts varied, but the jury consis *1058 tently made the most significant awards against the two entity defendants (American Coalition of Life Activists (“ACLA”) and Advocates for Life ' Ministries (“ALM”)), and the least significant awards against defendants Catherine Ramey and Dawn Stover. The total punitive damages award against each defendant, in descending order of size, is as follows:
Defendant Punitives Total By Defendant
ACLA $16,750,000.00
ALM $16,750,000.00
Michael Bray $ 8,000,000.00
Andrew Burnett $ 8,000,000.00
David Crane $ 8,000,000,00
Roy McMillan $ 8,000,000.00
Donald Treshman $ 8,000,000.00
Charles Wysong $ 8,000,000.00
Michael Dodds $ 5,000,000.00
Timothy Dreste $ 5,000,000.00
Joseph Foreman $ 5,000,000.00
Bruce Murch $ 5,000,000.00
Catherine Ramey $ 3,500,000.00
Dawn Stover $ 3,500,000.00
2. Standards for Review of Punitive Damages Awards
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits “grossly excessive or arbitrary punishments on a tort-feasor,” because such an award “furthers no legitimate purpose and constitutes an arbitrary deprivation of property.”
BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore,
(1) the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s misconduct; (2) the disparity between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages award; and (3) the difference between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
The
post-Gore
Supreme Court decision in
State Farm,
and the Ninth Circuit decision in
In re Exxon Valdez,
A. Reprehensibility of Defendants’ Conduct
The “ ‘most important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct.’”
State Farm,
Defendants suggest that “it is impossible to conclude that the conduct of the defendants, not trained in the law, was reprehensible * * Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 10. To the contrary, based on the overwhelming evidence presented at trial, both the jury, following the court’s instructions, and this court found *1059 the defendants’ conduct to be sufficiently blameworthy as to justify substantial punitive damages awards on the one hand, and a permanent injunction to stop the conduct on the other.
Defendants also suggest that the instructions permitted the jury to award punitive damages based on “merely unreasonable conduct.” Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 11. Defendants are incorrect. In rendering the verdict against each defendant on the FACE claims, the jury found that each defendant “made a [true] threat of force,”
i.e.,
a statement that a reasonable person “would foresee * * * would be interpreted by those to whom it is communicated as a serious expression of an intent to bodily harm or assault.” Jury Instruction Nos. 10, 11. The jury also found that each defendant “made the threat of force to intimidate or interfere with, or attempt to intimidate or interfere with, the plaintiffs or any other person’s ability to obtain or provide reproductive services.” Jury Instruction No. 11. As the Ninth Circuit explained in affirming this court’s instructions, the statutory standard for liability under FACE subsumes an intent requirement: “FACE itself * * * requires that the threat of force be made with the intent to intimidate. * * * [A defendant] could not be liable under FACE unless
it
made a true threat
with the intent to intimidate
physicians.”
Planned Parenthood,
In awarding punitive damages against each defendant on the FACE claims, the jury necessarily found that each defendant’s conduct
was malicious, or in reckless disregard of a plaintiffs rights. Conduct is malicious if it is accompanied by ill will, or spite, or if it is for the purpose of injuring another. Conduct is in reckless disregard of a plaintiffs rights if, under the circumstances, it reflects complete indifference to the safety and rights of others.
Jury Instruction No. 27. Moreover, in determining the size of each punitive damage award, I specifically instructed the jury to consider the degree of reprehensibility of each defendant’s conduct and the relationship of any award to the actual harm inflicted. Id. The sizeable awards reflect the jury’s application of those factors.
Although defendants contend that the only relevant benchmark against which the punitive damages award should be measured is “what the
jury
found,”
1
my findings, set forth at length in the Amended Order and Permanent Injunction, were based on the same evidence the jury heard and reflect the severity and reprehensibility of defendants’ conduct.
See generally Planned Parenthood of the Columbia/Willamette, Inc. v. American Coalition of Life Activists,
1. All defendants used intimidation as a means of interfering with the provision of reproductive health services;
2. All defendants acted with malice, in reckless disregard of plaintiffs’ rights and with specific intent in threatening the plaintiffs;
3. All defendants acted with specific intent and malice in a blatant and illegal communication of true threats to kill, assault, or do bodily harm to each of the plaintiffs and with the specific intent to interfere with or intimidate the plaintiffs from engaging in legal medical practices and procedures;
4. Each day, plaintiffs’ lives and security are endangered because of defendants’ unlawful threats against them;
*1060 5. All plaintiffs have undertaken a variety of security measures in order to ensure their safety;
6. All plaintiffs remain threatened by the defendants’ threats; and
7. In the absence of an injunction, plaintiffs would continue to live as they did before the trial: clad in bulletproof vests and disguises, borrowing cars and varying routes to avoid detection, and constantly in fear of the bodily harm with which they were threatened. 2
In State Farm, the Supreme Court instructed courts to determine reprehensibility by considering the following factors:
the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic; the tortious conduct evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health or safety of others; the target of the conduct had financial vulnerability; the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident; and the harm was the result of intentional malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.
Defendants caused plaintiffs both emotional distress and economic harm, and did so with malice and in reckless disregard of plaintiffs’ rights, with specific intent to threaten plaintiffs. Plaintiffs are financially vulnerable, and defendants targeted this vulnerability. Indeed, the evidence showed that the defendants intended to scare the plaintiffs sufficiently to 'cause them to quit performing abortions out of fear for their lives. Moreover, defendants are, as plaintiffs put it, “recidivists of the worst order.” Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Response, p. 21. Not only did the defendants repeatedly republish their threats against these plaintiffs, but all have histories of disobeying laws, serving jail time, avoiding judgments (including the judgment in this case), and violating court orders and injunctions, all with respect to their anti-abortion activities. 3 See Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Response, pp. 21-23 (summarizing the evidence, with citations);
As defendants acknowledge in their reply memorandum, “[a] defendant who harbors actual ill will and subjectively wishes the injurious consequences of his action is truly reprehensible * * Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 11. These defendants could not be better or more accurately described. Thus, with respect to the first Gore guidepost, I find defendants’ conduct to be sufficiently reprehensible to support the awards of punitive damages.
B. Ratio Analysis
The second indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the ratio of the award to the actual or potential harm inflicted on the plaintiff.
Gore,
The Supreme Court has “consistently rejected the notion that the constitutional line is marked by a simple mathematical formula, even one that compares actual
and potential
damages to the punitive award.”
Id.
at 582,
low awards of compensatory damages may properly support a higher ratio than high compensatory awards, if, for example, a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of economic damages. A higher ratio may also be justified in eases in which the injury is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneconomic harm might have been difficult to determine. It is appropriate, therefore, to reiterate our rejection of a categorical approach. Once again, “we return to what we said ... in Haslip: 4 “We need not, and indeed we cannot, draw a mathematical bright line between the constitutionally acceptable and the constitutionally unacceptable, that would fit every case. We can say, however, that [a] general coneer[n] of reasonableness ... properly enter[s] into the constitutional calculus.’ ”
Gore,
In State Farm, the Supreme Court further elaborated on the ratio guidepost, stating:
We have been reluctant to identify concrete constitutional limits on the ratio between harm, or potential harm, to the plaintiff and the punitive damages award. * * * We decline again to impose a bright-line ratio which a punitive damages award cannot exceed. Our jurisprudence and the principles it has now established demonstrate, however, that, in practice, few awards exceeding a single-digit ratio between punitive and compensatory damages, to a significant degree, will satisfy due process. * * * Nonetheless, because there are no rigid benchmarks that a punitive damages award may not surpass, ratios greater than those we have previously upheld may comport with due process where “a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of economic damages.” * * * [A] higher ratio might be necessary where the injury is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneco-nomic harm might have been difficult to determine. * * * The precise award in any case, of course, must be based upon the facts and circumstances of the defendant’s conduct and the harm to the plaintiff.
In sum, courts must ensure that the measure of punishment is both reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm to the plaintiff and to the general damages recovered.
State Farm,
Accordingly, the relevant inquiry is whether, in view of each defendant’s conduct toward these plaintiffs, the punitive damages awards are reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm each defendant caused. Before addressing that issue, however, I must decide two preliminary issues. The first is whether each plaintiff is entitled to 14 separate judgments for the same compensatory damages, or the compensatory awards are joint *1062 and several as to all defendants. Second, I must decide which proposed comparison of compensatory damages to punitive damages, defendants’ or plaintiffs’, yields the appropriate ratio for purposes of my review.
With respect to the first issue, it should be beyond cavil that the compensatory awards in this case against these joint tortfeasors and co-conspirators are joint and several,
5
and I so find.
See, e.g., U.S. v. Gregg,
This brings me to the second issue, what is the appropriate comparison for purposes of determining ratios. Defendants assert that the only fair calculation is to compare the compensatory damages recoverable by each plaintiff with the total punitive damages awarded each plaintiff against all defendants. See Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 17. That comparison yields ratios of compensatory damages to punitive damages, by plaintiff, as follows: Crist (366:1); Hern (901:1); E. Newhall (886:1); J. Newhall (37,333:1); Planned Parenthood (73:1); and Portland Feminist (467:1). See Defendants’ Reply Memorandum, p. 17.
Plaintiffs, in turn, propose an approach that compares the total joint and several liability of each defendant ($526,336.14) to the total punitive damages awarded against that defendant. That comparison yields ratios of compensatory damages to punitive damages, by defendant, as follows: ACLA (31.8:1); ALM (31.8:1); Bray (15.2:1); Burnett (15.2:1); Crane (15.2:1); Dodds (9.5:1); Dreste (9.5:1); Foreman (9.5:1); McMillan (15.2:1); Murch (9.5:1); Ramey (6.65:1); Stover (6.65:1); Treshman (15.2:1); and Wysong (15.2:1). See Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Response, p. 8.
A third possible approach, not proposed by either side, would be to compare each plaintiffs individual compensatory damages and punitive damages awards as to each defendant. This approach yields extreme variations in ratio, depending on the amount of the compensatory award. Thus, the ratios with respect to plaintiff Crist, calculated in this manner, range from a high of 56.7:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 12.6:1 (Ramey and Stover); for plaintiff Hern, a high of 103.9:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 34.65:1 (Ramey and Stover); for plaintiff E. Newhall, a high of 126.6:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 31.6:1 (Ra-mey and Stover); for J. Newhall, a high of 5333:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 1333.3:1 (Ramey and Stover); for Planned Parenthood, a high of 14.78:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 1.85:1 (Ramey and Sto-ver); and for Portland Feminist, a high of 59.7:1 (ACLA and ALM) to a low of 14.9:1 (Ramey and Stover).
I have carefully considered all three options, and conclude that the fairest and most appropriate comparison is that proposed by plaintiffs, which compares the aggregate compensatory damages award against each defendant with the aggregate
*1063
award of punitive damages against
that defendant.
This approach thus compares the joint and several liability of each defendant for compensatory damages with the defendant’s individual liability for punitive damages, which comports with due process and is the proper approach.
See Bell v. Clackamas County,
Thus, the relevant ratios 6 under my consideration are as follows:
Defendant Ratio
ACLA 31.8:1
ALM 31.8:1
Bray 15.2:1
Burnett 15.2:1
Crane 15.2:1
Dodds 9.5:1
Dreste 9.5:1
Foreman 9.5:1
McMillan 15.2:1
Murch 9.5:1
Ramey 6.7:1
Stover 6.7:1
Treshman 15.2:1
Wysong 15.2:1
These ratios “can be contemplated while maintaining normal respiration,”
Lee v. Edwards,
This case presents the type of situation the Supreme Court anticipated in
Gore
and
State Farm,
where a higher ratio can comport with due process where “a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of economic damages,” or “the injury is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneconomic harm might have been difficult to determine.”
Gore,
The present case was rife with evidence that plaintiffs suffered harm from the conduct of these defendants, harm that likely was difficult for the jury to quantify. Defendants forced the plaintiffs, out of fear, to restructure their lives and those of their children, to undertake various security measures, to change their habits and routines, and to view the world around them with suspicion. Much more than the bedbug bites in Mathias, even more than racial slurs and harassment in Swinton, the personal harm to these plaintiffs caused by *1064 defendants’ threats of violence might be difficult to quantify but justifies a higher ratio in the award of punitive damages.
In summary, I cannot say that the ratios in this case are constitutionally excessive or “jar[ ][my] ‘constitutional sensibilities.’”
Swinton,
C. Comparable Penalties
The third indicium of “excessiveness” involves a comparison between the punitive damages awards and the civil penalties that could be imposed for comparable conduct.
State Farm,
In action commenced by the United States Attorney General or state attorneys general, the available civil remedies include injunctive relief, compensatory damages to the persons aggrieved, and civil penalties. As relevant, 8 the civil penalty for a first offense is $15,000, and $25,000 for each subsequent violation. 18 U.S.C. §§ 248(c)(2)(B) and (c)(3)(B). Notably, in an action commenced by the person or persons aggrieved, FACE places no limit on the amount of compensatory or punitive damages that may be recovered, but does provide for statutory damages in lieu of actual damages in the amount of $5,000 per violation. 18 U.S.C. § 248(c)(1)(B).
In this case, defendants engaged in repeated violations of FACE by republishing the same threats over several years’ time, from 1995 through at least early 1999. Defendants unveiled the Deadly Dozen poster in Washington, D.C. in January 1995 and the Crist poster in August 1995, and revealed the so-called “Nuremberg Files,” in hard copy form, at a January 1996 ACLA event in Washington, D.C.
See Planned Parenthood,
Defendants’ suggestion that until the Ninth Circuit issued its en banc decision in May 2002, they had “no” notice that their conduct crossed the First Amendment line is, at best, untenable. As the Ninth Circuit recounted in the en banc decision,
By January 1995, ACLA knew the effect that “WANTED,” “unWANTED,” OR “GUILTY” posters had on doctors named in them. For example, in a September 1993 issue of Life Advocate which reported that an “unwanted” poster was being prepared for [Dr.] Britton, ALM remarked of the [Dr;] Gunn murder that it “sent shock waves of fear through the ranks of abortion providers *1065 across the country. As a result, many more doctors quit out of fear for their lives, and the ones who are left are scared stiff.” * * * Of another doctor who decided to quit performing abortions after circulation of a “Not Wanted” poster, Bray wrote that “it is clear to all who possess faculties capable of inductive analysis: he was bothered and afraid.” Wysong also stated: “Listening to what abortionists said, abortionists who have quit the practice who are no longer killing babies but are now pro-life. They said the two things they feared most were being sued for malpractice and having their picture put on a poster.” And Burnett testified with respect to the danger that “wanted” or “guilty” posters pose to the lives of those who provide abortions: “I mean, if I was an abortionist, I ivould, be afraid.”
Planned Parenthood,
While the comparable civil penalties in FACE provide some guidance in this court’s determination of the reasonableness of the punitive damages awards, they are a starting point, not an upper limit.
See State Farm,
Turning to the punitive damages awards in this case, and considering the awards individually by defendant and not in the aggregate, as defendants would desire, I cannot say that the awards are excessive when compared to the civil penalties available per FACE violation. As plaintiffs aptly describe it, the evidence at trial left no doubt that through use of the posters and Nuremberg Files, defendants embarked on a “reign of terror” intentionally designed to make the plaintiffs fear for their lives. Defendants continued their unlawful threats throughout the proceedings in this court and did so without apology, even after the verdict was announced. See Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Further Support, p. 3 n. 2. Each of defendants’ multiple publications qualify as “subsequent violation[s]” of FACE; presumably, any civil penalties imposed under FACE consequently would be substantial.
In summary, I cannot say that the jury’s awards of punitive damages were grossly disproportionate or excessive. I therefore conclude that the awards comport with the due process requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment and are proper. 9
CONCLUSION
Defendants’ Motions on Remand (# 790) are DENIED. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike (# 793) and defendants’ Motion to Preclude Further Briefing (# 808) are DENIED as MOOT. The jury awards of punitive damages are affirmed in full.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants' Reply Memorandum, p. 11 n. 2 (emphasis in original).
.
See Planned Parenthood,
. I reject defendants' characterization of this evidence as irrelevant under
State Farm,
.
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip,
. Liability is joint and several when " 'the creditor may sue one or more of the parties to such liability separately, or all of them together, at his [or her] option.'"
U.S. v. Gregg,
. The numbers have been rounded as appropriate.
. The criminal penalties can include prison time and criminal fines. Offenses involving exclusively nonviolent physical obstruction carry fines of not more than $10,000 and six months imprisonment for the first offense, and fines of not more than $25,000 and 18 months imprisonment for each subsequent offense. Offenses involving bodily injury can bring prison terms of 10 years, and offenses involving death can result in any term of years up to life. See 18 U.S.C. § 248(b).
. Defendants' threats do not qualify as "nonviolent physical obstruction[s],” which carry lesser penalties. See 18 U.S.C. § 248(c)(2)(B)(i) and (ii).
. I acknowledge Judge Kozinski’s concern that as a result of the liability verdict and punitive damages awards, defendants “will be destroyed financially by a huge debt * * * [that] will * * * prevent them from ever again becoming financially self-sufficient.”
Planned Parenthood,
