MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Introduction
The United States (the government) has moved to compel the disgorgement of attorneys’ fees paid to attorneys for Stephen Saccoccia on the ground that payment of the fees was an act of civil contempt because it violated a Protective Order prohibiting Saccoccia from transferring $144 million that Saccoccia was accused of obtaining by laundering the proceeds of illegal drug sales. The questions presented *27 are whether the government’s motion is barred by the doctrine of laches; and, if not, whether the government has proven, by clear and convincing evidence, that payment of the fees was an act of civil contempt.
Because the Court answers the first question in the negative and the second question in the affirmative, the motion to compel disgorgement is granted and attorneys Jack Hill and Kenneth O’Donnell are ordered to pay the government the sums of $254,985 and $42,000, respectively, which are the portions of the fees paid to them after Saccoccia was convicted of RICO conspiracy.
Background
In 1991, Saccoccia and several other defendants were indicted for RICO conspiracy and a variety of other offenses arising out of a scheme to launder $140 million in proceeds from the unlawful distribution of controlled substances. The indictment contained a count seeking forfeiture of the proceeds and, four days after the indictment was returned, Judge Boyle, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1963(d), entered an ex parte Protective Order (the “Protective Order”) enjoining the defendants from transferring property that included “$140,000,000 in U.S. currency for which the defendants are jointly and severally liable.”
Saccoccia was convicted in March of 1993; and, on June 4, 1993, this Court entered an order requiring him to forfeit the “proceeds” of the RICO conspiracy which amounted to more than $136 million.
In 1998, the government, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1963, sought an order requiring two of Saccoccia’s trial attorneys, Jack Hill and Kenneth O’Donnell (the “Attorneys”), as well as Stephen Finta, an attorney representing Saccoccia in connection with money laundering charges brought in California, to turn over all of the fees paid to them. The government claimed both that the fees were forfeitable under RICO and that payment of the fees violated the Protective Order.
This Court conducted an evidentiary hearing and, on July 31, 2001, issued a Memorandum and Order finding that the amounts paid to the three attorneys were “proceeds” of Saccoccia’s racketeering activities. Because this Court determined that, once Saccoccia was convicted, the attorneys had reasonable cause to believe the fees were “tainted assets” subject to forfeiture, it ordered that those portions of the fees paid to the attorneys
after
Saccoc-cia’s 1993 conviction be forfeited to the government.
United States v. Saccoccia,
The Court of Appeals affirmed the order as to Finta, but held that, under RICO’s forfeiture provisions, the fees paid to Hill and O’Donnell were not subject to forfeiture. The Court of Appeals held that, since Hill and O’Donnell had spent the fees paid to them, the amounts they were being asked to forfeit were not “proceeds” of racketeering; but, rather, were substitute assets of a third party that were not subject to forfeiture.
Saccoccia,
The government has chosen to proceed on a civil contempt theory and relies largely on the findings made by this Court in its previous Memorandum and Order, 165 *28 F.Supp.2d 103 (D.R.I.2001). 1 Hill and O’Donnell argue that the government’s claim is barred by the doctrine of laches and that, in any event, the government has failed to prove the elements of contempt by clear and convincing evidence.
Analysis
I. Laches
Laches is an affirmative defense which permits a claim to be dismissed when there was an unreasonable delay in bringing it and the delay has prejudiced the party against whom the claim was brought.
Iglesias v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York,
Since laches is an equitable defense, it generally is “unavailable in actions at law governed by a statute of limitations.”
U.A. Local 343 v. Nor-Cal Plumbing, Inc.,
A. Timeliness of Laches Defense
The government argues that laches was not raised in a timely manner. It relies on the principle that, because laches is an affirmative defense, a defendant’s failure to assert it in his answer ordinarily constitutes a waiver of the defense.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 8(c) (“In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth affirmatively ... laches ... and any other matter constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense.”);
see also, Jakobsen v. Massachusetts Port Auth.,
However, as the Attorneys point out, no answer was required in this case because there was no complaint given that the government’s claim arises as part of the criminal case against Saccoccia. Consequently, the Attorneys had no occasion to raise the defense of laches until the government sought disgorgement on a civil contempt theory. Since the Attorneys asserted the laches defense promptly thereafter, there was no waiver.
B. Applicability of Laches to the Government
The general rule is that laches cannot be asserted as a bar to an action brought by the United States to enforce a public right or protect the public interest.
United States v. Summerlin,
One exception to the general rule is that laches may be asserted in contract actions brought by the government.
Id.
at 72. (“[T] he United States is subject to laches in certain restricted contexts, such as commercial suits.”);
United States v. Lee,
C94-2026RMW EAI,
There is no need to decide whether the laches defense may be applied against the government in this case because, in any event, it lacks merit.
C. The Merits of the Laches Defense
As already noted, in order to establish the affirmative defense of laches, the Attorneys must show that the government unreasonably delayed in seeking to recover the fees at issue and that they have been prejudiced by the delay. The Attorneys have failed to do either.
The gist of the Attorneys’ unreasonable delay argument is that the fees in question were paid in 1993 but the government waited until 1998 to file its motion to forfeit and until 2004 to allege that the Attorneys are in contempt for violating the 1991 Protective Order. That argument ignores the fact that the forfeiture proceedings have been ongoing since Saccoccia’s conviction and that the government’s efforts to recover the fees paid to the Attorneys began shortly thereafter. The government’s efforts began with attempts to discover the nature and source of the fees, a process that consumed a considerable period of time, due partly to the Attorneys’ resistance to revealing that information.
See United States v. Saccoccia,
The Attorneys’ argument also ignores the fact that the Court of Appeals expressly invited the government, on remand, to seek disgorgement on a civil contempt theory.
Saccoccia,
In addition, the Attorneys have failed to demonstrate that they have been unfairly prejudiced by the delay. The Attorneys argue that requiring them to disgorge the fees in question would prejudice them because the fees have been spent. That argument is not persuasive because the Attorneys were on notice, long before re- *30 eeiving the fees, that the government was asserting a claim to that money. The Protective Order was entered nearly two years before the fees in question were paid and the Attorneys do not deny having actual notice of that order. Furthermore, the Attorneys knew, at least as far back as 1996, when the government sought to depose them, that the government was attempting to recover those fees.
Finally, the initial forfeiture motion filed by the government was accompanied by a claim that the fees in question should be disgorged because their payment violated the Protective Order, a claim virtually identical to the civil contempt claim.
Consequently, any hardship arising from the fact that the Attorneys may have chosen to spend the money transferred to them in violation of the Protective Order is self-inflicted and does not insulate them from the consequences of that violation.
II. Contempt
A court has the inherent authority to enforce its lawful orders through contempt proceedings.
Shillitani v. United States,
Civil and criminal contempt also are distinguishable by the state of mind that is required. Willfulness is an element of criminal contempt, but not civil contempt.
United States v. Mourad,
In order to prevail on its civil contempt claim, the government must prove by clear and convincing evidence that:
1. The Attorneys had notice of the Protective Order;
2. The order was clear, definite and unambiguous;
3. The Attorneys had the ability to comply with the order; and
4. The Attorneys violated the order.
See McGregor v. Chierico,
Proof by “clear and convincing evidence” means proof that it is “highly probable” that the facts alleged are true.
Colorado v. New Mexico,
A. Notice of the Order
A person cannot be held in contempt for failing to comply with a court order unless that person has notice of the order and its terms.
Project B.A.S.I.C.,
Ordinarily, actual notice is required.
See Quinter v. Volkswagen of America,
In any event, personal service is not required to establish notice.
Vuitton,
In this case, the Attorneys, to their credit, do not deny knowing of the Protective Order when the fees in question were paid. Even if they did, as Saccoccia’s trial counsel, they had a duty to monitor the progress of the litigation and ascertain the terms of all orders entered. Consequently, the notice requirement has been satisfied.
*32 B. Clarity of the Protective Order
One may not be held in contempt for violating a court order unless the order clearly and unambiguously describes the kind of conduct that is required or forbidden.
NBA Properties, Inc. v. Gold,
The Attorneys argue that the Protective Order is not “clear and unambiguous” because it was impossible for them to determine whether a particular one hundred dollar bill paid to them as part of their fees came from the “$140 million in U.S. currency for which the defendants ... [were] jointly and severally liable.” That argument lacks merit.
The Attorneys appear to rely on what some courts have referred to as the “four corners” rule which states that prohibited conduct must be ascertainable from the “four corners” of the order.
Dystar Corp. v. Canto,
What the Attorneys really are arguing is that they lacked the ability to comply with the Protective Order because they had no way of determining whether the fees they received were derived from the $140,000,000 in money laundering proceeds.
C. Ability to Comply with the Order
As explained in this Court’s July 31, 2001, Memorandum and Order, when the fees in question were paid, Saccoccia had been convicted and it was clear that virtually all of his assets were proceeds of his money laundering activities. 165 F. Supp 2d at 111-113. That finding was based, in part, on evidence that Saccoccia’s “legitimate businesses” were not profitable and served primarily as “fronts” for the defendants’ money laundering activities. The finding that the fees paid to the Attorneys were part of the proceeds was buttressed by the suspicious circumstances under which the fees were paid. Some payments were in the form of wire transfers from Switzerland, where Saccoccia had secreted some of his assets, and others consisted of large amounts of cash delivered by anonymous individuals. See id.
Consequently, there was no need for the Attorneys to distinguish one $100 bill from another in order to determine whether the fees that they received were part of the $140 Million that was the subject of the Protective Order. Once Saccoccia was convicted, it was readily apparent that all of the amounts being paid to the Attorneys “constituted or were derived from the proceeds of the Saecoecias’ racketeering conspiracy,” id. at 111.
Since the Attorneys obviously could have refrained from accepting fees from Saccoccia after he was convicted, they had the ability to comply with the Protective Order.
D.Violation of the Order
Because there is no question that the fees at issue were part of the $140,000,000 referred to in the Protective Order, there can be no question that acceptance of these fees was a violation of the Order.
Conclusion
For all the foregoing reasons, the government’s motion is granted: Hill is hereby ordered to disgorge $254,985 of the fees *33 paid to him and O’Donnell is hereby ordered to disgorge $42,500 of the fees paid to him.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The government seeks to recover only those fees paid after Saccoccia was convicted. It does not challenge this Court's finding that the attorneys are entitled to the fees paid before conviction.
