Louis Mongelli and Robert Mongelli appeal from Judge Broderick’s order of July 12, 1993, denying their motion to terminate fines for civil contempt and granting the government’s motion to increase those fines. 1 In a *30 separate proceeding, appellants pled guilty and were sentenced to prison terms for racketeering, bribery, tax offenses, and money-laundering in connection with their waste-carting business. After the district court entered a compulsion order granting them immunity, appellants refused to testify before a grand jury as to the role of others in these crimes. The district court imposed fines of $4,000 per business day for civil contempt pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1826 (1988). Appellants paid the fines from May 14,1993 until July 9,1993. On July 12,1993, the district court denied appellants’ motion to eliminate the contempt fines and granted the government’s motion to increase those fines to $10,000 per day. Appellants were granted a stay of these fines pending appeal. We lifted the stay after oral argument and now affirm the order of the district court.
Appellants claim that the size of the fines are so great that they are no longer solely coercive but have become punitive. They claim further that the fines violate the excessive fines clause, U.S. Const, amend. VIII, the double jeopardy clause, U.S. Const, amend. V, and the putative rationale of this court’s cases limiting both criminal and civil contempt sanctions.
These arguments are meritless. Cases concerning civil forfeiture following criminal conviction, such as
United States v. Halper,
Moreover, because the fines in the instant matter are not punitive in nature, they do not implicate the protection of the double jeopardy or excessive fines clauses.
See United States v. 38 Whalers Cove Drive, Babylon, New York,
Our precedents in no way set a ceiling, save for the case of municipalities, see Yonkers, on fines for civil contempt. It may be that fines levied upon an individual who lacked access to any funds would be considered punitive because they could not coerce, but appellants do not fit that description. They are individually wealthy and have access to family funds as well. That the fines may, if appellants continue to refuse to testify, exhaust these funds hardly renders the fines punitive because the threat of impoverishment may be necessary to coerce appellants into testifying.
Appellants argue finally that their fears of retribution from organized crime figures about whom they might be called to testify are grounds to terminate the fines. However, appellants argued this before the district court, which carefully considered the argument and found the fines appropriate. In
Simkin v. United States,
We affirm.
Notes
. Appellants have requested that all papers in this appeal be sealed. The government asks for unsealing of its brief and the continued sealing of the appendices. It requests that appellants’ *30 brief, which contains an item of grand jury information, be redacted and unsealed. We unseal the government's brief but allow all other papers to be sealed. We also use the appellants' names rather than John Doe # 1 and # 2 because they were held in contempt in an open proceeding.
