This сase presents a number of questions arising from a dispute between Plaintiff-Appellee The Southern New England Telephone Company (“SNET”) and Defendanb-Appellant Global NAPs Inc. (“Global”), its affiliated companies Global NAPs Networks, Inc., Global NAPs New Hampshire, Inc., and Global NAPS Realty, Inc., and its parent company Ferrous Miner Holdings, Inc. (“Ferrous Miner”) (collectively “defendants” or “appellants”) over Global’s alleged failure to pay SNET for twenty-six special access servers Global ordered from SNET between 2002 and 2004. On March 26, 2007, the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Janet C. Hall, District Judge) granted in part SNET’s motion for summary judgment on Count I of SNET’s *128 complaint, which alleged that Global owed SNET payment for twenty-one of the twenty-six servers at issue at a rate determined by SNET’s federal tariff. The district court thereafter granted SNET’s motion for a default judgment against both Global and the remaining appellants for failure to comply with various discovery orders related to their corporate structure and financial information, and the court entered a default judgment against all defendants on July 9, 2008. The default judgment in turn incorporated two earlier court orders: an order of July 9, 2007, sanctioning Global for civil contempt for failure to comply with separate discovery orders and an April 25, 2008, order imposing on Global the obligation to pay SNET’s fees and costs in connection with the litigation of SNET’s contempt motion. The default judgment resulted in a joint and several award to SNET in the amount of $5,247,781.45, plus $645,761.41 in fees and costs. We affirm, holding that 1) the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over this action, 2) the district court had personal jurisdiction over the appellants, and 3) the imposition of a civil contempt order and a default judgment as discovery sanctions pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 was not an abuse of the district court’s discretion. In a summary order filed contemporaneously with this opinion, we also conclude that the district court properly entered summary judgment in favor of SNET on the merits of Count I of its complaint.
I. Background
A.
In order to “promote competition and reduce regulation” in the provision of local telephone service, which up until that point had been supplied through a system of monopoly local carriers, Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-104, 110 Stat. 56 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 47 U.S.C.) (“Telecommunications Act” or “Act”).
See id.
pmbl., 110 Stat. 56;
see also Global NAPs, Inc. v. Verizon New England, Inc.,
The Act lays out a detailed procedure for carriers to follow in entering into ICAs. Carriers may adopt an ICA either through voluntary negotiation or through a process referred to as “arbitration” in the relevant state public utilities commission (“PUC”). Under the first option, upon receiving a request to interconnect from a CLEC an ILEC may enter into a binding agreement *129 with the CLEC for the provision of interconnection and related services. 47 U.S.C. § 252(a)(1). Alternatively, if the parties cannot agree privately on the terms of an agreement, either party may petition the relevant state PUC to “arbitrate” “any open issues.” Id. § 252(b) — (e). In either case, the state PUC must also approve the final ICA. Id. § 252(e)(1). The state PUC may reject a voluntarily negotiated agreement if it concludes that the agreеment results in “discrimination] against a ... carrier not a party to the agreement” or if the agreement is “not consistent with the public interest, convenience, and necessity.” Id. § 252(e)(2)(A). The PUC may reject an agreement adopted after an arbitration proceeding if it finds that the agreement does not conform to the standards for ICAs laid out in § 251 of the Act. Id. § 252(e)(2)(B). 1
The Telecommunications Act provides varying routes to judicial review at this “approval stage” of an ICA, depending on whether the state PUC has acted on the agreement within a statutory time limit. The PUC has a limited amount of time in which to grant or deny its final approval of an ICA. Id. § 252(e)(4). If the PUC makes a “determination” under § 252, “any party aggrieved by such determination may bring an action in an appropriate Federal district court to determine whether the agreement ... meets the requirements of [§§ 251 and 252].” Id. § 252(e)(6). If, however, a state PUC fails to take an action either granting or denying its final approval to an ICA within the § 252(e)(4) time limits, the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) may “preempt[]” the state PUC’s jurisdiction over the ICA and undertake to itself the role of approving or rejecting the agreement. Id. § 252(e)(5). In such a case, the FCC proceeding and any judicial review that follows is the “exclusive remed[y]” for a state PUC’s failure to act on an ICA. Id. § 252(e)(6).
As a separate matter, beginning with the Communications Act of 1934, ch. 652, 48 Stat. 1064 (1934) (codified as amended at 47 U.S.C. § 151
et seq.),
federal law has required common carriers of сommunications to file a list of tariffs with the FCC specifying the charges the carriers will impose for the transmission of communications over their systems and between their systems and others.
See
47 U.S.C. § 203(a);
ICOM Holding, Inc. v. MCI WorldCom, Inc.,
B.
In 2000, Global, a CLEC, asked SNET, an ILEC, to enter into an ICA pursuant to the Telecommunications Act. Among the issues to be resolved in this agreement were “the terms and conditions under which the parties would physically inter
*130
connect their networks at a ‘point of interconnection,’ or ‘POL’ ”
S. New England Tel. Co. v. Global Naps, Inc.,
Between 2002 and 2005, Global ordеred a number of circuits and signaling links from SNET to carry Global traffic. According to SNET’s complaint, SNET billed Global for providing these services in accordance with the rates set out in SNET’s federal tariff, but Global refused to pay SNET for its purchases. SNET filed this action in December 2004; Count I of SNET’s complaint sought payment from Global for its failure to pay the tariffed rates for the services SNET had rendered. 2 Global countered that the parties’ ICA allocated responsibility to SNET to provide the circuits.
In December 2005 SNET moved for a prejudgment remedy against Global as well as disclosure from Global of its assets, including any and all cash, stocks, bonds, bank and investment accounts, real or personal property, and debts owing to Global. The district court, finding that SNET had shown a likelihood of success on the merits, granted SNET’s motions on May 5, 2006, awarding SNET a prejudgment remedy of $5.25 million and ordering Global to disclose its property and assets. There began a lengthy battle over discovery of those assets, detailed exhaustively in the district court’s opinion below.
See S. New England Tel. Co. v. Global NAPs, Inc.,
In June 2006, at the time of the disclosure and attachment dispute, SNET moved to amend its complaint to add the remaining appellants — Global NAPs New Hampshire, Inc., Global NAPs Networks, *131 Inc., Global NAPs Realty, Inc., and Ferrous Miner (collectively the “veil-piercing defendants”) — as defendants. In its amended complaint SNET alleged that the “purported corporate structure of Defendants is a sham” because the various “Global” entities are in fact one company, without independence from their owner Ferrous Miner. Am. Compl. ¶ 15. The complaint alleged that all the Global entities share the same officers and directors, who are also the owners, directors, and officers of Ferrous Miner. The various entities disregard their formal separation in their interactions with each other, according to SNET, sharing employees, commingling funds which are used to pay the debts and expenses of each entity indiscriminately, and transferring customers, revenues, and assets amongst themselves without documentation. According to the complaint, while Global NAPs Inc. was the only entity authorized to provide telecommunications service in Connecticut and was SNET’s counter-party in the ICA, Global NAPs Networks, Inc. had taken over Global NAPs Inc.’s network functions and customer contracts. SNET asserted, in addition, that Global NAPs New Hampshire, Inc. is the “financial arm” of the enterprise, but has no customers, operations, or employees of its own. SNET charged that the companies’ disregard of the corporate form facilitated a situation in which Global NAPs Inc. incurred liabilities, as it had pursuant to its business dealings with SNET, but had been stripped of any assets or revenue it might use to satisfy these obligations. SNET alleged that none of the defendants constituted “a stand-alone business” entity, but rather that each was “owned and controlled as part of a single enterprise.” Id. 1127. SNET therefore sought to pierce Global NAPs Inc.’s corporate veil and impose liability on the Global affiliates and on Ferrous Miner.
After permitting SNET to amend its complaint to include the allegations relevant to the veil-piercing defendants, the district court granted partial summary judgment in favor of SNET and against Global on the merits of SNET’s tariff claim.
See SNET I,
After it was allowed to amend its complaint, SNET sоught discovery regarding the allegations in its complaint on the corporate structure of Global and its affiliated companies, contended by SNET to be Global’s alter egos. In May 2007 the defendants were ordered to produce the companies’ financial documents.
SNET II,
*132 II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Global’s first contention on appeal is that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case and was thus without power to enter summary judgment in favor of SNET or to impose sanctions on the defendants. Global’s principal argument is that SNET’s claim required the district court to interpret the parties’ ICA, and that the Telecommunications Act provides that federal district courts lack jurisdiction to hear claims requiring the interpretation of ICAs in the first instance. Instead, parties seeking the interpretation or enforcement of an ICA must litigate their claim first in the relevant state PUC, the decision of which may then be appealed to а federal court. Global further contends that this requirement is jurisdictional, rather than simply an administrative exhaustion requirement, and is thus not waived or forfeited when a defendant fails to raise it as an affirmative defense. We review a district court’s determination of whether it had subject matter jurisdiction
de novo. See Mathirampuzha v. Potter,
A.
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, and “[t]he validity of an order of a federal court depends upon that court’s having jurisdiction over both the subject matter and the parties.”
Ins. Corp. of Ir., Ltd. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee,
In this case, SNET’s claim, pled on the face of its complaint,
see
Am. Compl. ¶¶ 29-31, 48-51, is that Global ordered circuits pursuant to the terms and conditions for services included in SNET’s federally filed tariff and that SNET is owed the applicable rate for such services
*133
under its tariff. It is well established that such a claim — to enforce the terms of a tariff, filed and approved pursuant to federal law — arises under federal law for the purpose of Article III and § 1331.
See, e.g., Fax Telecommunicaciones Inc. v. AT & T,
“The inadequаcy of a federal claim is ground for dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction
only
when the claim is
so
insubstantial, implausible, foreclosed by prior decisions of [the Supreme] Court, or otherwise completely devoid of merit as not to involve a federal controversy.”
Options Trading,
Once a federal court has determined that a plaintiffs jurisdiction-conferring claims are not insubstantial on their face, no further consideration of the merits of the claim is relevant to a determination of the court’s jurisdiction of the subject matter. Thus, the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction to entertain a suit based on a federal claim that is not wholly insubstantial, frivolous, or foreclosed by prior decisions of the Supreme Court, is not defeated by the defendant’s assertion of a position that is properly characterized as an affirmative defense.
Options Trading,
Global’s argument to the contrary would have the effect of transmuting any claim against which a party raised a contract as a defense into a claim
on
that contract. We found such an argument “frivolous” in
Kamakazi Music Corp. v. Robbins Music Corp.,
B.
Global next argues that even assuming SNET properly pled a tariff claim based on federal law, the Telecommunications Act divested the district court of jurisdiction over this claim because the claim raises a question regarding the interpretation of an ICA. Again, we disagree.
Global relies on § 252 of the Act, which provides in relevant part that “[i]n any case in which a State commission makes a determination under this section, any party aggrieved by such determination may bring an action in an appropriate Federal district court to determine whether the [ICA] meets the requirements of section 251 of this title and this section.” 47 U.S.C. § 252(e)(6). This provision says nothing, however, about the jurisdiction of the district courts to hear federal tariff claims, nor does it contain any language divesting the district courts of their general federal question jurisdiction over such claims.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1331. The only “determination^” referred to in § 252 that are potentially relevant in this context are decisions of a state PUC approving or rejecting a final ICA
(see id.
§ 252(e)) (and, potentially, decisions of the PUC in an arbitration proceeding, see
id.
§ 252(b)-(c)). Far from divesting the district court of jurisdiction over a properly pleaded tariff claim, the Act is thus silent even as to a state PUC’s authority to act in the situation presented in this case: namely, where a claim raises a question of the
interpretation of
an ICA that has
already
been framed and approved by the relevant PUC.
See, e.g., Core Commc’ns, Inc. v. Verizon Pa., Inc.,
The Supreme Court has held that the judicial review provisions set forth in § 252(e)(6) — which again, by their terms, only apply to judicial review of “determinations” of a state PUC made at the ap
*135
proval stage of the life of an ICA — do not divest the district courts of their jurisdiction under § 1331 over original actions challenging whether decisions of a state PUC
interpreting
an ICA conform with the requirements of federal law.
See Verizon Md. Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of Md.,
We see no reason why
Verizon Maryland’s
reasoning that § 252(e)(6) “does not
divest
the district courts of their authority under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 to review [state PUCs’ orders] for compliance with federal law” should not apply equally to the district courts’ authority under § 1331 to consider a federal tariff claim when the provisions of an ICA are asserted in defense.
Id.
at 642,
Global suggests that the doctrine of primary jurisdiction is applicable here, and that pursuant to this doctrine the district court should hаve dismissed this action until the DPUC had a chance to rule on the interpretation of the parties’ ICA. The doctrine of primary jurisdiction applies “to claims properly cognizable in court that contain some issue within the special competence of an administrative agency.”
Reiter v. Cooper,
*137
It is true that a number of our sister circuits have held or assumed that state PUCs have the authority to interpret ICAs in post-approval disputes over the meaning of those agreements, even though the text of the relevant provisions of the Telecommunications Act is silent regarding any authority PUCs might have other than their authority to arbitrate the formation of ICAs and
approve
them in the first instance. We note that the rationales underlying these decisions somewhat differ, though the majority of circuits appear to have concluded that this authority is implicit in § 252, which grants PUCs “plenary authority to approve or disapprove” ICAs.
Sw. Bell Tel Co. v. Pub. Util. Comm’n,
Global relies on these cases for the proposition that questions relating to the interpretation of ICAs
must
be presented in the first instance to state PUCs. However, none of these cases holds that a PUC’s authority to interpret interconnection agreements erects a
jurisdictional bar
to claims over which the district court has federal question jurisdiction pursuant to § 1331, such as SNET’s tariff claim here. Indeed, in two of the cases relied on by Global,
BellSouth
and
Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Public Utility Commission of Texas,
the claims at issue
were
presented to a state PUC in the first instance, so the cases did not even address the situation this case presents, in which an issue related to an ICA is first raised in a district court.
See BellSouth,
To summarize, we conclude 1) the district court had federal question jurisdiction over SNET’s tariff claim pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, and 2) nothing in the Telecommunications Act divested the district court of that jurisdiction.
III. Personal Jurisdiction over the Veil-Piercing Defendants
We next confront appellants’ argument that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over the veil-piercing defendants — Global NAPs Networks, Global NAPs New Hampshire, Global NAPs Realty, and their parent company Ferrous Miner — and that, accordingly, the court should have granted their motion to dismiss rather than enter a default judgment against them. Where, as here, a district court in adjudicating a motion pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) “relies on the pleadings and affidavits, and chooses not to conduct a full-blown evidentiary hearing, plaintiffs need only make a prima facie showing of personal jurisdiction.”
Porina v. Marward Shipping Co.,
Appellants’ principal argument is that SNET’s prima facie showing was deficient because the allegations in SNET’s amended complaint are “conclusory.” SNET allеges that each of the appellants was an “alter ego” of Global, a fact that, if established, would clearly support a finding of personal jurisdiction.
See Wm. Passalacqua Builders, Inc. v. Resnick Developers S., Inc.,
The factual allegations in SNET’s complaint, supported by declarations and deposition testimony, constituted a specific averment of facts that, if credited, would suffice to show that all of the Ferrous Miner — owned entities operate as a single economic unit and that Ferrous Miner dominates and controls the Global entities.
*139
Under either Connecticut law or a federal common law of veil piercing, this is sufficient to bring Ferrous Miner and the other Global entities within the district court’s personal jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Lowen v. Tower Asset Mgmt., Inc.,
Appellants further contend that SNET was required to present a prima facie case not only that the corporate entities here operated as a single economic unit dominated by Ferrous Miner, but that “the allegedly ‘sham’ [corporate] structure” laid out in the complaint was “used to further some evil purpose.” Global Br. 24. Under federal common law, however, SNET need only demonstrate that it would be unfair under the circumstances not to disregard the corporate form.
See Bhd. of Locomotive Eng’rs v. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co.,
IV. Discovery Sanctions
A.
Global next contends that the district court abused its discretion in sanctioning Global for civil contempt and in imposing a default judgment against both Global and the veil-piercing defendants for discovery-related misconduct. Again, we disagree.
1. The Prejudgment Remedy Discovery Orders and the Contempt Decision
The battle for discovery in this case began on May 5, 2006, when the district court granted SNET’s motion for a prejudgment remedy in the amount of $5.25 million and at the same time ordered the disclosure of Global’s assets. Specifically, SNET moved for disclosure of Global’s “cash, stocks, bonds[,] ... bank accounts and investment accounts, ... real or personal property[,] ...” and any debts owed to the company. Motion to Disclose, Doc. 64 (12/23/05). The court ordered Global to comply with SNET’s motion for disclosure within two weeks by providing SNET with sufficiently detailed information so that SNET could attach Global’s assets to satisfy the prejudgment remedy. As amply recounted in the district court’s opinion below,
see SNET II,
Separately, the district court authorized SNET to attach any property Global disclosed as an asset pursuant to the court’s May 5, 2006, order granting SNET a prejudgment remedy. As part of its obligation to disclose its assets, Global emailed a list of “all [its] known assets” in Connecticut to SNET’s counsel on May 22, 2006. The list did not indicate the specific locations of the disclosed assets or their value, and SNET moved to compel additional disclosure. Concluding that the disclosure was insufficient, the district court followed up with a new order on May 26, 2006, which required Global to disclose all of its assets within the State as well as their specific locations and value. Global responded on June 6, 2006, by sending a new list of assets that included the location and serial number of particular units of equipment. The district court concluded that this disclosure was vague regarding the location of several assets and, on October 3, 2006, ordered Global physically to show SNET representatives the locations of the disclosed assets in order to allow SNET to attach them. The court’s October 2006 order also restated clearly that SNET was entitled to attach “any ... real or personal property disclosed by [Global]” pursuant to the court’s earlier orders. Order Granting Prejudgment Remedy, Doc. 239, at 2 (10/3/06). Global then claimed that it had “replaced” the disclosed equipment, with equipment it had leased, moving the disclosed equipment to a storage unit in Mystic, Connecticut. SNET attached the equipment in the storage unit, but soon discovered that the equipment there was not in fact the same equipment that Global had disclosed. Global finally allowed SNET to visit two of its five Connecticut locations in December 2006, and during these visits SNET determined that the equipment disclosed on Global’s list of June 6, 2006, was still in use at the subject locations. After these initial visits, however, Global cut off SNET’s access to any further Global locations; the district court concluded that in the days after SNET’s visits, Global hurriedly replaced the equipment on its June 6 list with other equipment. At some point Global removed the equipment disclosed on its June 6 list to Massachusetts, where SNET was able to attach some of it in March 2007. As of the time of the district court’s ruling on SNET’s motion for contempt, SNET still had not been able to attach certain items *141 of equipment that Global had disclosed over a year earlier.
SNET’s contempt motion was based on Global’s alleged violation of the district court’s May and October 2006 orders authorizing SNET to attach Global equipment for the purpose of securing SNET’s prejudgment remedy. On July 9, 2007, the district court concluded that Global had “acted willfully in violating [the] court’s prejudgment Orders” allowing SNET to attach Global’s Connecticut property, and ordered civil contempt sanctions: the “reasonable costs of prosecuting [SNET’s] motion for contempt and sanctions, including attorney’s fees, expert fees, and other costs.” S. New England Tel. Co. v. Global NAPs Inc., No. 3:04-cv-2075, at 12-13 (D.Conn. July 9, 2007) (order on SNET’s motion for contempt and sanctions) (hereinafter “July 9, 2007 Contempt Order”).
2. The Veil-Piercing Discovery Orders and the Default Judgment
After SNET amended its complaint to add the veil-piercing defendants, it sought discovery on its allegations that the various Global entities were mere shell companies and controlled by Ferrous Miner. This move set off yet another round of discovery-related battles. As the district court described:
On April 17, 2007, SNET moved the court to compel Global to comply with twenty-nine requests for the production of documents relevant to SNET’s veil-piercing allegations. On May 31, 2007, this court granted SNET’s Motion and ordered each of Global NAPs New Hampshire, Global NAPs Networks, and Global NAPs Realty to produce to SNET within two weeks “the books of the company,” including “balance sheets, cash statements, registers, journals, ledgers” in “the form in which the records are kept,” and within a slightly longer period to produce other financial documents that may have had to be gathered from third parties. The court ... extended this Order [on June 18, 2007] to include defendant Ferrous Min[e]r Holdings, Ltd. Global was subject to the same discovery requests that were the subject of this Order.
On June 15, 2007, defendants Global, Global NAPs Networks, Global NAPs New'Hampshire and Global NAPs Realty ... produced documents; however, only about a dozen pages of which contained material not previously produced. In lieu of the bookkeeping records ordered to be produced by the court, the Global defendants wrote a letter to opposing counsel explaining that they were “unable to locate copies of all the ledgers from the relevant time period.” The letter relied on an Affidavit from James Scheltema, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs for Global NAPs, Inc. Scheltema claimed that, on June 12, 2007, he had undertaken a “thorough, unannounced search of all three Global NAPs locations in Massachusetts” where he located “limited documents relevant to the production requests.” He attested that he “searched the hard drive of the computer used by [the Global companies’ outside bookkeeper]. Although the hard drive had Peachtree [accounting] software, there was no data relating to a Global entity, merely the program.”
On June 21, 2007, Ferrous Min[e]r’s counsel reported to SNET via email that Scheltema’s search included a search for Ferrous Min[e]r’s documents. Ferrous Min[e]r did not produce any documents despite the fact that its Director, Frank Gangi, testified on June 12, 2007, in different litigation that “Ferrous Min[e]r generates its own separate financial statements,” and Richard Gangi [the Treasurer of the Global entities] had *142 testified on May 31, 2006, that Global’s accountants “would have the financial statements of Ferrous Min[e]r Holdings.”
SNET II,
Much of the wrangling in the district court had to do with a computer belonging to Janet Lima, the President of Select & Pay, Inc., a company used by the Global entities as a bookkeeping agent. Prior to the formation of Select & Pay, of which Lima testified she is the sole owner, Lima was a direct employee of Global NAPs. As the district court explained, the defendants claimed that the documents covered by the district court’s discovery orders had been lost due to a mishap with Lima’s computer:
Defendants have falsely argued to the court that documentation for periods prior to June 2006 ... did not exist because there had been “uncontroverted testimony that the computer Ms. Lima was using ‘crashed’ and all of her data was lost.” Defendants went on to speculate that the “crash occurred and [the] data [was] lost in the summer of 2006.”
Id. (alterations in original). Although there was some conflict in the defendants’ evidence regarding how the computer was allegedly destroyed, see id. at 87-88 & n. 4, the district court determined in any event that
the “crash” of this computer should have had absolutely no impact on the production of discovery because Janet Lima testified that she “dropped” the computer she had used for the last five years in late December 2006, after the court-ordered deadline for production had come and gone.
Id. at 87. The court further noted that the defendants had not explained why the data on the computer was irretrievable. See id. at 88.
In January 2007, SNET acquired excerpts of defendants’ financial documents through a third-party subpoena to defendants’ tax accountants; many of these documents had not previously been produced, although they clearly fell within the scope of the district court’s prior orders. Id. These documents included some financial statements for Ferrous Miner. Id. According to the testimony of a representative of the accountants, several of the records produced came from the Global entities themselves and had not been created by the accountants. The representative also testified that he had in the past seen a general ledger for Ferrous Miner or one of the Global companies, even though no such ledger had yet been produced in discovery.
Upon receiving the documents from the accountants, SNET investigated the replacement computer being used by Janet Lima, which Scheltema had previously claimed to have searched. Id. The investigations of two groups of forensic experts revealed that numerous files from the replacement computer had been destroyed using a program called “Window Washer.” According to the report of a group of forensic consultants, LECG, LLC (“LECG”), this application can be used in conjunction with a separate Shred utility, allowing the user of a file not simply to delete the file from the computer (which normally allows the file potentially to be recovered or at least its existence to be discovered) but to “shred” the file: the result is that the Shred utility “overwrites the contents of the file, scrambles the name, and deletes it.” LECG, LLC, Summary of Forensic Analysis, Mar. 16, 2008, at 6. The “shred” function is not the default setting of Window Washer; a user must affirmatively choose to use it. LECG discovered significant evidence of the use of the Shred utility and Window Washer on the replacement computer:
*143 Parts of this program [Window Washer] were initially created on the morning of June 12, 2007, the same morning Scheltema arrived to “search” for responsive documents.... Lima admitted installing and running Window Washer on her computer the morning Scheltema arrived on June 12, 2007.... She further testified that she never ran Window Washer again.
SNET II,
The forensic analysis concluded that, out of 93,560 items stored in a database on the computer that held the “metadata” (records) of all files that had once existed there, nearly 20,000 had been “erased using anti-forensic software such as Window Washer’s Shred utility.” Id. “At least 103 of these files were ‘user created files,’ that is, ‘substantive files created by a user as opposed to a computer generated record.’ ” Id. LECG was able to discern the names of three files that had been deleted: “2000 Sales Journal,” “cheekregisterNH7-122006,” and “NH check Jan thru May 06.”
Concluding that “all defendants [had] willfully violated the court’s discovery orders by,” among other things, failing to turn over records ordered disclosed, “lying to the court about the inability to obtain documents from third parties, and destroying and withholding documents that were within the scope of’ the court’s discovery orders, the district court granted SNET’s .motion for a default judgment against all defendants on SNET’s tariff claim on July 1, 2008.
SNET II,
B.
1. General Principles
Wе review “all aspects of a District Court’s decision to impose sanctions for abuse of discretion,”
United States v. Seltzer,
Rule 37 provides in relevant part that: If a party or a party’s officer, director, or managing agent ... fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, ... the court where the action is pending may issue further just orders. They may include the following:
(i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing party claims;
(vi) rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party; or
(vii) treating as contempt of court the failure to obey any order except an *144 order to submit to a physical or mental examination.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(A). We have indicated that “[s]everal factors may be useful in evaluating a district court’s exercise of discretion” to impose sanctions pursuant to this rule, including “(1) the willfulness of the non-compliant party or the reason for noneompliance; (2) the efficacy of lesser sanctions; (3) the duration of the period of noncompliance, and (4) whether the non-compliant рarty had been warned of the consequences of noncompliance.”
Agiwal v. Mid Island Mortg. Corp.,
With respect to the district court’s July 2008 imposition of a default judgment against appellants, dismissal or default imposed pursuant to Rule 37 is a “drastic remedy” generally to be used only when the district judge has considered lesser alternatives.
John B. Hull, Inc. v. Waterbury Petroleum Prods., Inc.,
With respect to the district court’s July 2007 order holding Global in civil contempt, the district courts have thе inherent power to find a party in contempt for bad faith conduct violating the court’s orders “even if procedural rules exist which sanction the same conduct.”
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
2. Global’s Challenges to the Contempt Sanction
The contempt finding here was not an abuse of discretion. First, contrary to Global’s primary contention on appeal, the district court’s May and October orders, which ordered Global to disclose “any and all cash, stocks, bonds[,] ... bank accounts and investment accounts, ... real or personal property[, and] debts owing” to Global and allowed SNET to attach “any ... real or personal property disclosed by [Global],” were perfectly clear. “A clear and unambiguous order is one that leaves no uncertainty in the minds of those to whom it is addressed, who must be able to ascertain from the four corners of the order precisely what acts are forbidden.”
King,
Finally, Global contends that SNET was not prejudiced by its inability
*146
to attach particular pieces of equipment that Global had disсlosed to it, as SNET was (eventually) able to secure sufficient attachments to satisfy the prejudgment remedy ordered by the district court.
8
This argument, however, is beside the point. Civil contempt sanctions may serve “dual purposes”: securing “future compliance with court orders” and “compensating] the party that has been wronged.”
Paramedics Electromedicina Comercial, Limitada v. GE Med. Sys. Info. Techs., Inc.,
3. Global’s Challenges to the Default Judgment
Global’s argument on appeal with regard to the default judgment is that it was an “overbroad” sanction with respect to the veil-piercing defendants, Global Br. 29, because, according to Global, the district court defaulted the veil-piercing defendants on matters other than the specific issue to which the discovery orders related — whether the defendants were alter egos of Global. Global argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Insurance Corp. of Ireland, Ltd. v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guiñee,
Insurance Corp. of Ireland
held that it does not violate due process for a district court to impose under Rule 37(b) an order subjecting a party to personal jurisdiction in that court as a sanction for the party’s failure to comply with a discovery order seeking to establish facts relating to the court’s personal jurisdiction over it.
9
Id.
*147
at 698-99, 706-07,
The district court did not commit any legal errors and its decision to impose default on all defendants was not an abuse of discretion. First, the record fully supported the district court’s determination that the defendants acted willfully and in bad faith.
See Agiwal,
Global responds by contending that its conduct did not merit the harsh sanctions the district court imposed because Global’s noncompliance did not prejudice SNET, and the district court never concluded that any destroyed evidence would have been relevant to the litigation. But of course, as the district court pointed out, the evidence that was the subject of the discovery orders related to the defendants’ corporate financial records, and was thus obviously germane to the alter ego determination that SNET was urging the district court to make.
See SNET II,
Even if SNET had suffered no prejudice from Global’s conduct, howevеr, we, along with the Supreme Court, have consistently rejected the “no harm, no foul” standard for evaluating discovery sanctions that Global would have us apply. Although
one
purpose of Rule 37 sanctions
*149
may in some cases be to protect other parties to the litigation from prejudice resulting from a party’s noncompliance with discovery obligations, see,
e.g., Design Strategy, Inc. v. Davis,
Disciplinary sanctions under Rule 37 are intended to serve three purposes. First, they ensure that a party will not benefit from its own failure to comply. Second, they are specific deterrents and seek to obtain compliance with the particular order issued. Third, they are intended to serve a general deterrent effect on the case at hand and on other litigation, provided that the party against whom they are imposed was in some sense at fault.
Update Art, Inc. v. Modiin Publ’g, Ltd.,
[I]f parties are allowed to flout their obligations, choosing to wait to make a response until a trial court has lost patience with them, the effect will be to embroil trial judges in day-to-day supervision of discovery, a result directly contrary to the overall scheme of the federal discovery rules. Moreover, ... compulsion of performance in the particular case at hand is not the sole function of Rule 37 sanctions. Under the deterrence principle of [National Hockey League ], plaintiffs hopelessly belated compliance should not be accorded great weight. Any other conclusion would encourage dilatory tactics, and compliance with discovery orders would come only when the backs of counsel and the litigants were against the wall.
Cine FoHy-Second St. Theatre,
Y. Conclusion
To summarize, we hold:
1) The district court had subject matter jurisdiction over this action because SNET’s claim for enforcement of its federal tariff arose under federal law, 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and nothing in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 “divested” the district court of its jurisdiction.
2) SNET’s allegations and supporting affidavits regarding the corporate structure of the various Global entities sufficed, under either Connecticut or federal common law, to support a prima facie case that the district court had personal jurisdiction over the veil-piercing defendants as Global’s alter egos.
3) The district court did not abuse its discretion in finding Global in contempt for willfully evading and violating the prejudgment remedy discovery orders and sanctioning Global in the amount of SNET’s fees and costs.
*150 4) The district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing a default judgment on the veil-piercing defendants by deeming the facts of SNET’s alter ego allegations to be established against these entities.
We have considered all appellants’ remaining arguments and conclude that they are without merit. For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Act also allows a CLEC to choose to adopt the terms and conditions of an existing ICA that the ILEC has entered into with another CLEC and which a state PUC has already approved. See 47 U.S.C. § 252(i).
. SNET brought other claims that are not the subject of this appeal. SNET alleged, inter alia, that Global participated in a scheme to misroute long distance calls to SNET customers over certain connection facilities in violation of SNET's federal and state tariffs and the parties' ICA. This misrouting scheme, SNET alleged, deprived it of certain charges it could have collected had Global routed these calls over the proper connection (so-called "trunking”) facilities. Counts II through IV of SNET's amended complaint relate to these misrouting allegations, while Counts V and VI, brought under the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act, address both Global's alleged failure to pay the tariffed rate for the circuits it ordered and its alleged misrouting of long distance calls. The district court stayed SNET’s claims relating to misrouting pending the conclusion of FCC proceedings related to these claims. In its decision on SNET's motion for a default judgment, the district court administratively dismissed these stayed claims without prejudice to reopening within thirty days of final administrative action by the FCC.
. We therefore need not address SNET's alternative argument that diversity jurisdiction existed in this case.
.
Global did move to dismiss on primary jurisdiction grounds before the district court early in this litigation and, as noted previously, the district court did in fact stay SNET’s claims relating to misrouting pending adjudication by the FCC, and ultimately dismissed these claims without prejudice. The district court rejected the application of the primary jurisdiction doctrine to SNET's claims relating to the special access circuits on the ground that these allegations do not "require the type of policy-minded interpretative analysis” for which the doctrine is designed. S.
New England Tel. Co. v. Global Naps, Inc.,
No. 3:04-cv-2075,
. For further authority concluding that a state PUC’s authority to interpret an ICA is implicit in § 252, see, for instance,
Ill. Bell,
. In Starpower, the FCC 6 interpreted § 252(e)(5), which provides that the FCC may ”preempt[]” a state PUC’s jurisdiction over a proceeding undеr § 252 ”[i]f [the] State commission fails to act to carry out its responsibility under this section.” The petitioner in Starpower filed a claim with a state PUC seeking a declaratory ruling on a question of the interpretation of the petitioner's interconnection agreement with the respondent. The state commission declined to exercise jurisdiction over the petition. 15 F.C.C.R. at 11,-277-78. The FCC concluded that the matter was one within the state commission’s "responsibility” under § 252, making possible preemption by the Commission, because "inherent in state commissions' express authority to mediate, arbitrate, and approve interconnection agreements under section 252 is the authority to interpret and enforce previously approved agreements.” Id. at 11,279.
. The district court in this case justified the contempt sanction under its inherent power, rather than Rule 37. Although the district courts possess this inherent power, its invocation may be "needless and confusing,” 8B Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Richard L. Marcus,
Federal Practice & Procedure
§ 2282 (3d ed. 2010), when a particular rule directly applies” to the specific problem confronting the district court,
Chambers,
. SNET was able to attach much of the originally disclosed equipment in March 2007, only after it had moved for contempt and sanctions in December 2006 and five months after the district court’s (second) order allowing SNET to attach Global’s property.
. Rule 37(b)(2)(A)(i) authorizes district courts to impose on a noncompliant party an order "directing that the matters embraced in the [discovery orders] or other designated facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing party claims." Fed. R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(A)(i);
see also Ins. Corp. of
*147
Ir.,
. Global's contention that Janet Lima's conduct should not be imputed to any of the defendants merits little remark. Apart from the point that the sanctions imposed might well be justified even leaving aside any conduct of Lima's, the evidence supported a conclusion that Lima acted on the defendants' behalf.
. At the time of the district court’s decision in this case, Global was engaged in litigation in the District of Massachusetts against Verizon New England, and that court also concluded that Global was engaged there in "repeated efforts to block discovery."
Verizon New England,
