Sealed Case (PUBLIC REDACTED OPINION) ( 2019 )


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  •        PUBLIC COPY     -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    njI $tat Iourt nf ppca1
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued July 12, 2019                        Decided July 30, 2019
    Reissued August 6, 2019
    No. 19-5068
    IN RE: SEALED CASE
    Consolidated with 19-5 100, 19-5 102, 19-5 103
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:18-mc-00175)
    (No. 1:18-mc-00176)
    (No. 1:18-mc-00177)
    Before: TATEL, MILLETT,      and PILLARD, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
    TATEL, Circuit Judge:* The three appellant banks,
    headquartered in China, hold records that the United States
    government thinks may clarify how North Korea finances its
    nuclear weapons program. The government therefore procured
    subpoenas for those records, obtaining two from a grand jury
    (for the two banks with U.S. branches) and one from the
    *
    NOTE: Portions of this opinion contain sealed
    information, which has been redacted.
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    Attorney General under the Patriot Act (for the bank that has
    no U.S. branch). The banks resisted on multiple fronts,
    claiming that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction, that
    the Patriot Act subpoena exceeded the government’s statutory
    authority, and that compelling production would run afoul of
    comity principles because turning over the records—even in
    response to a U.S. court order—would trigger penalties under
    Chinese law. In a thorough and thoughtful pair of opinions, the
    district court overruled those objections and, when the first
    opinion failed to elicit the records, held the banks in civil
    contempt. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
    I.
    For decades, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea
    (better known as North Korea) has aspired to a battle-ready
    nuclear weapons program. Seeking to defuse the threat, the
    U.S. government has imposed stiff financial sanctions on the
    North Korean regime and its instrumentalities, exercising
    authority located in the International Emergency Economic
    Powers Act. See 50 U.S.C. §S 170 1—02 (granting the President
    the power to “prohibit” various “transactions” after declaring a
    “national emergency” posed by “any unusual and extraordinary
    threat. to the national security, foreign policy, or economy
    .   .
    of the United States”). Relevant to this case, those sanctions are
    intended to cut off North Korea’s access to American markets
    and currency. See Executive Order No. 13,382, § 1, 
    70 Fed. Reg. 38,567
    , 38,567 (June 28, 2005) (authorizing various
    cabinet officers to “block[J” entities that further nuclear
    proliferation by preventing any “property or interests in
    property” from being “transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn,
    or otherwise dealt in”). According to government investigators,
    however, North Korea manages to evade the sanctions by using
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    Chinese front companies that cloak the true ownership of the
    funds involved.
    The facts uncovered by this investigation so far are a case
    in point. The U.S. government has collected substantial
    evidence that a now-defunct Chinese company called
    (“the Company”)
    acted as a front for                           ,   a North Korea-
    owned entity (“the NKE”), by facilitating transactions that
    violated the sanctions orders. In fact, to date the government’s
    “investigation [has] not yield[ed] any evidence that” the
    Company       “was ever used as a legitimate business.”
    Declaration of                                              (“FBI
    Declaration”) ¶ 10, Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 864.
    Unsurprisingly, then, in addition to the NKE itself, the
    government has sanctioned the Company and two of its alleged
    founders. Actions Taken Pursuant to Executive Order 13382,
    (designating the
    NKE); Notice of [Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC)]
    Sanctions Actions,
    (designating the Company); Notice of OFAC Sanctions
    Actions,  •
    (designating alleged co-founder
    —
    ); Notice of OFAC
    Sanctions Actions,
    (designating alleged co-founder                      ).
    According to the government, the scheme operated like
    this: Hobbled by the worthlessness of North Korea’s currency,
    the NKE would use the Company to make or receive payments
    in U.S. dollars. These transactions helped North Korea access
    resources that would otherwise have been beyond its reach. For
    example, the Company’s assistance allegedly enabled North
    Korea to export hundreds of millions of dollars of coal and
    other minerals, generating revenue in U.S. currency that North
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    Korea could then use to requisition other commodities vital to
    its weapons program.
    In these transactions, the Company routinely took
    advantage of U.S. correspondent bank accounts—that is,
    accounts held by banks outside the United States at banks
    located inside the United States. See 
    31 U.S.C. § 53
     18A(e)(1)(B) (defining “correspondent account” to mean
    “an account established to receive deposits from, make
    payments on behalf of a foreign financial institution, or handle
    other financial transactions related to such institution”). Such
    accounts allow foreign “banks to conduct business and provide
    services for their customers in” the United States even if “the
    banks have no physical presence” here. Minority Staff of the
    Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations,
    Correspondent Banking: A Gateway for Money Laundering,
    S. Hrg. 107-84, 107th Cong., app. 287 (2001). This, in turn,
    enables a foreign bank’s customers to “receive many or all of
    the services offered by [a] U.S. bank” without forming a direct-
    client relationship with an American institution. 
    Id.
    Correspondent banking arrangements are fairly ubiquitous:
    “[d]ue to U.S. prominence in international trade and the high
    demand for U.S. dollars due to their overall stability, most
    foreign banks that wish to provide international services to
    their customers have accounts in the United States capable of
    transacting business in U.S. dollars.” 
    Id.
     In short, then,
    correspondent bank accounts allow foreign banks to offer their
    clients services—including obtaining and transacting in U.S.
    currency—without opening a U.S. branch.
    These accounts are how the appellant banks (collectively,
    the “Banks”) enter the story. All three are China-based—
    indeed, the Chinese government owns a substantial minority of
    each—and hold correspondent accounts in the United States.
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    Banks One and Two also operate branches in the United States,
    but according to the government the Company relied on the
    three Banks’ U.S. correspondent accounts to execute its
    scheme.
    To better grasp the full scope of the Company’s
    operations, the government seeks certain records from the
    Banks. The United States and China have a bilateral agreement
    for obtaining just these kinds of records. Known as the Mutual
    Legal Assistance Agreement (MLAA), it obligates the two
    countries to assist each other “in proceedings related to
    criminal matters,” including by “providing    .   .  records or
    .
    articles of evidence” and “executing requests for inquiry,” and
    specifies the “[f]orm and [c]ontents” of any requests.
    Agreement Between the Government of the United States of
    America and the Government of the People’s Republic of
    China on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters, arts. 1,
    4, June 19, 2000, T.I.A.S. No. 13,102. Absent an MLAA
    request, Chinese law prohibits banks from disclosing records
    to international investigators.
    In this case, however, the United States chose not to go
    through the MLAA. Stymied by what it perceives as sluggish
    and typically fruitless cooperation from Chinese authorities in
    the past, the government unilaterally issued subpoenas to all
    three Banks in December 2017. The two banks with branches
    in the United States
    (“Bank One” and “Bank Two,”
    respectively)—received grand jury subpoenas. See Federal
    Rule of Criminal Procedure 1 7(e)(1). The third
    (“Bank Three”)—has no branch in
    the United States and received a subpoena from the Attorney
    General pursuant to the Patriot Act, which gives the Attorney
    General and the Treasury Secretary special investigatory tools
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    when it comes to U.S. correspondent bank accounts. See 
    31 U.S.C. § 53
     18(k)(3)(A)(i). The subpoenas seek all records
    dated 2012 to 2017 concerning all correspondent banking
    transactions associated with certain accounts linked to the
    Company, defining records to include signature cards, ledger
    cards, account statements, and documentation of deposits,
    withdrawals, and transfers. Through this investigation, the
    government hopes to learn whether the Company or any other
    entities have committed various federal crimes, including
    engaging in unlicensed financial transactions (violating 
    50 U.S.C. § 1705
    ), money laundering (violating 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
    ), or failing to exercise due diligence in correspondent
    banking as required by the Bank Secrecy Act (violating 
    31 U.S.C. § 531
    $ and 5322). The government does not currently
    suspect the subpoenaed Banks of any wrongdoing.
    In correspondence with the U.S. government, the Banks
    and the Chinese government protested that complying with the
    subpoenas would violate multiple Chinese laws, including the
    law designating the MLAA process as the exclusive
    mechanism for disclosures. They claimed that failure to use the
    MLAA channel would expose the Banks to administrative and
    criminal penalties. In response, the U.S. government took the
    position that such a request would be futile, given China’s slow
    and spotty history of providing records requested through that
    process.
    There matters stood for about a year. Despite traveling
    twice to China for what proved to be unproductive negotiations
    with the Chinese government, there were no major
    breakthroughs: the United States refused to submit an MLAA
    request, and the Banks continued to withhold the records. At
    last, in November 2018, things kicked back into gear when the
    government moved the district court to compel enforcement.
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    Still resisting, the Banks disputed the district court’s personal
    jurisdiction and contended that enforcing the subpoenas would
    violate deeply ingrained principles of international comity.
    Bank Three also protested that the scope of its subpoena
    exceeded the Attorney General’s Patriot Act authority.
    The district court granted the government’s motion to
    compel. In re Grand Jury Investigation ofPossible Violations
    of 18 USC. §‘ 1956 and 50 US.C. 1705, Nos. 1:18-mc-175,
    -176, -177, slip op. at 3 (D.D.C. Mar. 18, 2019) (“March op.”).
    The court found that Banks One and Two had consented to
    personal jurisdiction when they signed an agreement with the
    federal Reserve permitting them to open branches in the
    United States. Id. at 11—13. As for Bank Three, which has no
    branch in the United States, the court determined that (along
    with Banks One and Two) it had sufficient contact with the
    United States as a whole and the subpoenas sufficiently related
    to that contact so as to support the court’s personal jurisdiction.
    Id. at 13—27; see also International Shoe Co. v. State of
    Washington, Office of Unemployment Compensation and
    Placement, 
    326 U.S. 310
    , 316 (1945) (personal jurisdiction
    requires “minimum contacts” with the forum such that
    jurisdiction is consistent with “traditional notions of fair play
    and substantial justice” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The district court also perceived no problems with the scope of
    the Patriot Act subpoena. March Op. 27—31. Finally, although
    the government conceded that compliance with the subpoenas
    would entail violating at least some Chinese laws, the district
    court concluded that comity principles did not require the
    subpoenas to be quashed. 
    Id.
     at 32—5 8. The court found that,
    based on past practice, China’s preferred MLAA procedure
    would likely be futile and determined that the U.S.
    government’s strong national security interests outweighed
    China’s stake in enforcing the identified laws. 
    Id.
     at 42—51. The
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    court was unmoved by a series of letters from the Chinese
    Ministry of Justice promising to “promptly review and
    process” any MLAA request in this case. Id. at 45 (quoting
    Letter from Du Yaling, Director General of International
    Cooperation Department of the Ministry of Justice, to Chief
    Judge Beryl A. Howell (Feb. 26, 2019), J.A. 966).
    About a month later, after the Banks made clear they
    would not comply with the compulsion order, the district court
    held them in contempt. In re Grand Jury Investigation of
    Possible Violations of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1956
     and 50 US.C. § 1705,
    Nos. 1:18-mc-175, -176, -177, slip op. at 1—3 (D.D.C. Apr. 10,
    2018) (“April Op.”). It imposed a $50,000 per day fine against
    each bank but stayed that penalty contingent on the parties
    seeking an expedited appeal. Id. at 14—15. They obliged, and
    we agreed to accelerate our consideration of the case. Per
    Curiam Order, In re: Sealed Case, No. 19-5068 (D.C. Cir. Apr.
    25, 2019). We now turn to the Banks’ arguments, beginning
    with personal jurisdiction before examining the merits.
    II.
    The Constitution forbids federal courts from exercising
    personal jurisdiction absent sufficient “minimum contacts” to
    satisfy “traditional notions of fair play and substantial
    justice.” International Shoe, 
    326 U.S. at 316
     (quoting Milliken
    v. Meyer, 
    311 U.S. 457
    , 463 (1940)). That protection extends
    to private foreign entities—such as the Banks—just as to
    American citizens. See Livnat v. Palestinian Authority, 
    851 F.3d 45
    ,48 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (delineating the “general rule” that
    restrictions on personal jurisdiction “protect{J all litigants in
    our courts”). Unlike subject-matter jurisdiction, however,
    personal jurisdiction “can. be waived,” meaning a party
    .   .
    may “consent” to a court’s personal jurisdiction. Insurance
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    Corp. of Ireland v. Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee, 456
    U.s. 694, 703 (1982). Because neither the government nor the
    Banks suggests that these principles operate differently in
    grand jury investigations than in ordinary civil litigation, we
    shall treat these two contexts as identical for purposes of this
    case. But see Boydv. Meachum, 77 f.3d 60,66 (2d Cir. 1996)
    (“While the federal constitutional requirements of personal
    jurisdiction in a civil setting are reasonably well-defined,
    this is not so in a criminal case.”).
    All three Banks contest personal jurisdiction. “Reviewing
    the district court’s assertion of personal jurisdiction de novo,”
    United States ex rel. Miller v. Bill Harbert International
    Construction, Inc., 
    608 F.3d 871
    , 886 (D.C. Cir. 2010), we
    conclude that the Banks’ challenges are meritless. Banks One
    and Two consented to jurisdiction when they opened branches
    in the United States. And although Bank Three has no U.S.
    branch and executed no such agreement, its choice to maintain
    correspondent accounts in the United States establishes an
    adequate connection to the forum and the enforcement action
    to sustain jurisdiction.
    A.
    Congress requires any “foreign bank” to acquire “prior
    approval of the” Federal Reserve before it “may establish a
    branch or an agency” in the United States. 
    12 U.S.C. § 3
     105(d)(1). The Federal Reserve, in turn, has authority to
    “impose such conditions on its approval” of a foreign bank’s
    application “as it deems necessary,” 
    Id.
     § 3 105(d)(5), to,
    among other things, assure itself that the bank will be “in
    compliance with applicable United States law” and mitigate
    any “risk to the stability of the United States financial system,”
    id. § 350 1(d)(3)(D)—(E). See also 
    12 C.F.R. § 21
     1.24(c)(2)(vii)
    10
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    (Federal Reserve scrutinizes “[wjhether the foreign bank...
    has established adequate controls and procedures. to ensure                         .   .
    continuing compliance with U.S. law, including controls
    directed to detection of money laundering”).
    When Banks One and Two applied to open their U.S.
    branches, both executed agreements with the Federal Reserve
    to assure compliance with relevant provisions of American
    law. As part of that deal, they “consent[edj to the jurisdiction
    of the federal courts of the United States      for purposes of
    .   .       .
    any and all. proceedings initiated by. the United
    .   .                                                   .   .
    States. in any matter arising under U.S. Banking Law.”
    .   .
    Letter from            Vice Chairman & President,
    ,
    to Board of Governors of the
    Federal Reserve System 1                      l.A. 1659 (“Bank
    ,
    One Consent”); Assurances Commitment and Consent to
    Jurisdiction Commitment
    1, J.A. 1663 (“Bank Two Consent”). The agreements
    define “U.S. Banking Law” expansively to include “all federal
    criminal laws of which violation(s) arise(s):     under     .the    .   .                   .   .   .
    Bank Secrecy Act.” Bank One Consent 3 n.2, l.A. 1661; Bank
    Two Consent 1 n.2, l.A. 1663.
    The plain language of those agreements covers this case.
    This investigation is unquestionably a “proceeding[] initiated
    by. the United States” and, as the government explains, “the
    .   .
    grand jury is investigating whether those financial institutions
    that provided services in the United States”—for example, the
    American institutions hosting the foreign Banks’
    correspondent     accounts—”exercised       due     diligence.”
    Appellee’s Br. 18 (citing 
    31 U.S.C. § 5318
    , 5318A, 5322).
    The Bank Secrecy Act makes willful dereliction of that
    obligation a federal criminal violation. 
    31 U.S.C. § 5322
    . In
    short, then, the government has assembled the necessary
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    ingredients for jurisdiction: a criminal investigation initiated by
    the United States (the grand jury investigation) arising under
    U.S. Banking Law (the Bank Secrecy Act).
    The banks’ contrary arguments amount to nothing more
    than an unsuccessful effort to move the goalposts. They insist
    that there must be a reasonable showing that someone actually
    violated the Bank Secrecy Act. Bank Two Br. 8. Not so. All
    our precedent requires is a “reasonable probability that. the.   .
    facts necessary for the exercise of jurisdiction” exist. In re
    Sealed Case, $
    32 F.2d 1268
    , 1274 (D.C. Cir. 1987) (quoting In
    re Marc Rich & Co., 
    707 F.2d 663
    , 670 (2d Cir. 1983)). Here,
    nothing in the consent agreements requires the government to
    establish liability; they require only that the proceedings
    “aris[e] under U.S. Banking Law.” Bank One Consent 1,
    J.A. 1659 (emphasis added); Bank Two Consent 1, J.A. 1663
    (emphasis added). Whether a proceeding “arises under” a
    particular law is a question about its subject matter at the outset,
    not a question about its outcome. To look at the same phrase in
    a more typical context, when we ask whether a lawsuit “aris[es]
    under” federal law for purposes of subject-matter jurisdiction,
    U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, we look to whether the plaintiffs
    “assert a claim” based on “federal law,” not whether they will
    ultimately prevail, National farmers Union Insurance Cos. v.
    Crow Tribe of Indians, 
    471 U.S. 845
    , 850 (1985) (emphasis
    added); see also American Well Works Co. v. Layne & Bowler
    Co., 
    241 U.S. 257
    , 260 (1916) (“A suit arises under the law that
    creates the cause of action.”). Given this “legal lineage,” Hall
    v. Hall, 13$ S. Ct. 1118, 1125 (201$),agrand jury investigation
    plainly “arises under” a particular statute when it probes
    whether that statute has been violated.
    Read properly, the consent agreements demand only that
    “U.S. Banking Law” form the basis of the investigation. The
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    government has cleared that threshold here. Even if, as the
    banks suggest, this investigation’s potential to yield successful
    prosecutions is uncertain, the banks have offered no basis for
    doubting that “U.S. Banking Law” constitutes this
    investigation’s subject matter.
    The banks also suggest that there is a problem with
    personal jurisdiction because the subpoenaed records are
    located outside the United States. But that fact has no bearing
    on personal jurisdiction given that the banks’ consent
    agreements supply the basis for jurisdiction. The argument is
    better conceived as a challenge to the scope of the subpoenas—
    an understanding not evident from the banks’ briefs. Even were
    we to entertain the argument, however, it would go nowhere.
    Federal courts have long required the production of documents
    held abroad. See, e.g., In re Marc Rich, 
    707 F.2d at 667
     (A
    witness may not “resist the production of documents on the
    ground that the documents are located abroad.”); United States
    v. first National City Bank, 
    396 F.2d 897
    , 900—01 (2d Cir.
    196$) (“[A] federal court has the power to require the
    production of documents located in foreign countries if the
    court has in personam jurisdiction of the person in possession
    or control of the material.”). That practice makes sense: grand
    juries often investigate violations of criminal laws that
    obviously cover extraterritorial conduct. “It would be strange,
    indeed, if the United States could punish a foreign corporation
    for violating its criminal laws  .   .   but a federal grand jury
    .   ,
    could not   investigate to ascertain the probability that a crime
    had taken place.” In re Marc Rich, 
    707 F.2d at 666
    .
    B.
    Bank Three, by contrast, has neither opened a U.S. branch
    nor consented to personal jurisdiction. We therefore must
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    determine whether it “has purposefully directed” its relevant
    “activities” at “the forum.” Burger King Corp v. Rudzewicz,
    
    471 U.S. 462
    , 472 (1985) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    That, of course, requires us to correctly identify “the
    forum,” a task ordinarily linked to where Congress has
    authorized service of process. See BNSF Railway Co. v.
    Tyrrell, 
    137 S. Ct. 1549
    , 1555—56 (2017) (“Congress’ typical
    mode of providing for the exercise of personal jurisdiction has
    been to authorize service of process” because “a basis for
    service of a summons on the defendant is prerequisite to the
    exercise of personal jurisdiction”). In many situations,
    Congress limits the territorial reach of federal district courts to
    that of the state in which they sit. See Wright & Miller,
    4 Federal Practice & Procedure § 1068.1 (4th ed.); see, e.g.,
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(k)(1)(A). For example,
    unless a federal statute otherwise provides, by virtue of Rule
    4(k)(1)(A) the jurisdictional reach of a federal court in a civil
    action is keyed to that of a court of general jurisdiction in the
    state in which it sits. So in reviewing the constitutionality of
    their assertions of jurisdiction, federal courts oflen perform
    state-specific contacts analyses. Although the constitutional
    restraint in those situations necessarily flows from the Fifth
    Amendment, the scope of the minimum-contacts inquiry is the
    same as it would be under the Fourteenth Amendment for a
    claim in state court: confined to contacts with the forum state.
    According to Bank Three, a state-specific contacts
    analysis is appropriate for the Patriot Act subpoenas at issue
    here. And, the Bank argues, since its agent was served in New
    York and the Bank lacks any meaningful contact with the
    District of Columbia, the district court here lacked jurisdiction.
    For its part, the government maintains that the Patriot Act
    authorizes nationwide service of process. Under those
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    circumstances, the Fifth Amendment requires only “minimum
    contacts with the United States” as a whole—rather than with
    the forum state. SEC v. Bilzerian, 
    378 F.3d 1100
    , 1106 n.8
    (D.C. Cir. 2004); accord Livnat, 851 F.3d at 55 (“Under the
    Fifth Amendment, which defines the reach of federal courts,
    contacts with the United States as a whole are relevant.”).
    Therefore, the government argues, the district court properly
    considered Bank Three’s contacts with the United States as a
    whole, including its maintenance and use of correspondent
    accounts in New York.
    We begin by observing that the usual process of looking to
    where federal law authorizes service of process as a proxy for
    whether Congress sought to trigger a federal court’s nationwide
    territorial reach is, perhaps, not a perfect fit for this provision
    of the Patriot Act. Because the statute confers authority to issue
    a subpoena directly on the Attorney General and the Treasury
    Secretary, rather than on a federal district court, Congress may
    have given little consideration to the territorial reach of a
    district court considering a motion to compel enforcement of
    such a subpoena. But given that Bank Three assumes that
    authorizing nationwide service in this context would trigger a
    nationwide contacts analysis, we shall too. See Sickle v. Torres
    Advanced Enterprise Solutions, LLC, 
    884 F.3d 338
    , 344 (D.C.
    Cir. 2018) (accepting a party’s decision “not to brief or argue
    the question of personal jurisdiction” because that “defense   .
    can be waived or forfeited”).
    Here, that service-of-process provision, codified in 
    31 U.S.C. § 5318
    (k), authorizes the kind of subpoena served on
    Bank Three to “be served on the foreign bank in the United
    States if the foreign bank has a representative in the United
    States.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 5318
    (k)(3)(A)(ii). We know of no other
    service-of-process provision in the U.S. Code phrased exactly
    15
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    this way. Still, we are not entirely without guideposts as we
    evaluate this question.
    We know, for instance, that Congress has many different
    ways of authorizing nationwide service of process. Sometimes
    it makes its intention abundantly clear by authorizing service
    “anywhere in the United States.” See, e.g., 7 U.S.C. § 499g(b)
    (service for enforcing in federal district courts certain orders of
    the Secretary of Agriculture); 2$ U.S.C. § 232 1(c) (same for
    enforcing orders of the Surface Transportation Board); 
    33 U.S.C. § 921
    (c) (service for review proceedings in the courts
    of appeals of decisions of the Benefits Review Board for
    longshore and harbor workers). On other occasions, Congress
    employs some riff on the phrase “wherever the defendant may
    be found,” language generally understood to refer to
    nationwide service. See, e.g., 
    7 U.S.C. § 25
    (c) (service in
    private lawsuits under the Commodity Exchange Act); see also
    Omni Capital International, Ltd. v. Rudolf Wolff & Co., 
    484 U.S. 97
    , 105—06 (1987) (recognizing that such language
    “explicitly authorize[sJ nationwide service of process”);
    Appellee’s Br. 25 n.20 (collecting additional examples). We
    also know that Congress can very clearly limit service to a
    particular judicial district when it wants to. See, e.g., 
    45 U.S.C. § 3
     62(b) (authorizing process issued by most courts in Railroad
    Retirement Board proceedings to be served “in the judicial
    district of the district court issuing such. process”).
    .   .
    At first glance, the language in section 5318(k) looks more
    like the provisions that authorize nationwide service. So long
    as a foreign bank has designated a representative, the statute
    allows for service “in the United States,” without specifying
    any state or judicial district. True, the provision lacks the
    unmistakable clarity of the statutes that expressly authorize
    service “anywhere” in the country; nonetheless, the text
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    contains no limitation other than the territorial boundaries of
    the entire United States. Bank Three, however, seizes on the
    requirement to designate a representative to argue that, in fact,
    Congress only meant to authorize service in the judicial district
    where that representative is located.
    Bank Three’s position makes some intuitive sense. After
    all, as a matter of physics, the designated representative will
    have a single location. On further reflection, however, this
    logic fails to resolve things in the Bank’s favor. After all, both
    Bank Three and the government agree that language
    authorizing service “wherever a defendant may be found”
    authorizes nationwide service, see Bank Three Br. 51,
    Appellee’s Br. 25 n.20, even though in many instances that
    defendant, too, will only be located in one place at a time.
    Even more instructive, in other service-of-process regimes
    involving designated representatives, when Congress wants to
    specify a particular location or district for service, it says so
    directly. For example, in certain trademark actions, Congress
    has instructed foreign mark holders to designate a U.S. agent
    and authorized service of process “by leaving with that person
    or mailing to that person a copy [of the process] at the address
    specfied in the last designation so filed.” 15 U.S.C. § 1141k(f)
    (emphasis added). Congress has even provided a backup
    option, explaining that “[i]f the person so designated cannot be
    found at the last designated address” then “process may be
    served on the Director” of the United States Patent and
    Trademark Office. Id.; see also 
    7 U.S.C. § 2569
     (containing a
    similar backup provision for when a designee “cannot be found
    at the address given”). The provision at issue in this case is
    noticeably devoid of any similar language, leading to the
    inference that Congress sought to impose no similar
    geographical limitation here.
    17
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    Reading section 5318(k) to authorize nationwide service
    also aligns with the Patriot Act’s structure and purpose. Cf
    United States International Trade Commission v. ASAT, Inc.,
    411 f.3d 245, 251 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (examining, when
    considering whether a statute authorizes nationwide service,
    whether “Congress would have desired nationwide service of
    process to effectuate the underlying statute’s purpose”). Rather
    than requiring the Attorney General or Treasury Secretary to
    go to court to obtain a subpoena, Congress authorized those
    officers to issue process themselves. Unlike federal district
    courts, which customarily serve a particular geographical area,
    Cabinet officers serve the entire country. Structurally speaking,
    then, Congress’s choice to give two such officers the subpoena
    power evokes an intent to rely on their nationwide reach. As
    for purpose, having found that correspondent accounts were a
    source of special concern for money laundering, Congress
    sought “to provide a clear national mandate for subjecting to
    special scrutiny those.      .   financial institutions operating
    .
    outside of the United States. that pose particular, identifiable
    .   .
    opportunities for criminal abuse.” USA PATRIOT Act of 2001,
    Pub. L. No. 107-56, § 302(a)(6), (b)(4), 
    115 Stat. 272
    , 296—97.
    It would be odd if, in establishing this “clear national mandate,”
    Congress had geographically subdivided the government’s
    investigative powers.
    Apparently recognizing that its preferred interpretation of
    section 5318(k) may not represent “the most natural reading of
    the provision,” Bank Three Br. 4$, Bank Three falls back on
    the presumption against extraterritoriality, which teaches that
    without a “clearly expressed congressional intent to the
    contrary, federal laws will be construed to have only domestic
    application.” RJR Nabisco, Inc. v. European Community, 
    136 S. Ct. 2090
    , 2100 (2016). According to the Bank, reading the
    18
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    Patriot Act to authorize nationwide service “would vastly
    expand the extraterritorial scope of federal regulatory power.”
    Bank Three Br. 49. But that does not follow. This service-of-
    process provision has no impact on the substantive
    extraterritorial reach of federal law; it merely helps sort out
    which federal court has authority to enforce the subpoena. After
    all, even under Bank Three’s preferred interpretation, at least
    one federal court could assert jurisdiction over Bank Three (the
    one in the district where the Bank’s agent resides). The
    presumption against extraterritoriality therefore offers no basis
    to upset the most straightforward reading of the text: that once
    a foreign bank has designated a representative in the United
    States, service may be accomplished throughout “the United
    States.”
    Having defined the forum as the entire United States, we
    would usually go on to assess whether the Bank’s contacts with
    that forum are sufficient. In this case, however, Bank Three
    placed all its eggs in the forum-identification basket; it claims
    only that it lacks the necessary contacts with the District of
    Columbia, offering no argument that its contacts with the
    United States as a whole are insufficient. See Bank Three
    Br. 46—47 (“The only way the government can prevail is by
    showing that the relevant forum is the United States as a
    whole.”). We therefore have no occasion to question the district
    court’s conclusion that Bank Three’s maintenance of
    correspondent accounts in the United States supplies the
    necessary nexus. March op. 2 1—24. With no further
    jurisdictional hurdles in our path, we proceed to the merits.
    III.
    Bank Three, the only bank to receive a Patriot Act
    subpoena, argues that its subpoena exceeds the Attorney
    19
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    General’s statutory authority. Although “[w]e generally review
    district court decisions enforcing document subpoenas only for
    arbitrariness or abuse of discretion,” we afford no deference to
    a decision that applies “the wrong legal standard.” In re Sealed
    Case, 
    146 F.3d 881
    , $83 (D.C. Cir. 199$). We therefore review
    “de novo” the district court’s “legal conclusions,” including its
    statutory interpretation, even as we review “its factual findings
    for clear error.” United States v. Ahn, 
    231 F.3d 26
    , 38 (D.C.
    Cir. 2000).
    Congress enacted section 531 8(k)(3) “to increase the
    strength of United States measures to prevent, detect, and
    prosecute international money laundering and the financing of
    terrorism.” Pub. L. No. 107-56, § 302(b)(1), 115 Stat. at 297.
    In particular, Congress found that correspondent accounts held
    by foreign banks were “one of the banking mechanisms
    susceptible in some circumstances to manipulation by foreign
    banks to permit the laundering of funds.” § 302(a)(6), 115 Stat.
    at 296. Thus, it authorized both the Attorney General and the
    Treasury Secretary to issue a “subpoena to any foreign bank
    that maintains a correspondent account in the United States and
    request records related to such correspondent account,
    including records maintained outside of the United States
    relating to the deposit of funds into the foreign bank.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 5318
    (k)(3)(A)(i).
    Bank Three claims the subpoena it received strays outside
    the statutory lines because it is “not expressly confine[d]” to
    documents related to the Bank’s correspondent accounts in the
    United States. Bank Three Br. 23. To be sure, the subpoena is
    comprehensive: it seeks “[a]1l documents relating to [the
    Company’s] correspondent banking transactions”—including,
    it would seem, documents related to transactions using
    correspondent accounts in countries other than the United
    20
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    States. Bank Three Subpoena, J.A. 771; see also 
    id.
     (requesting
    “signature cards,” “account ledger cards,” “periodic account
    statements,” and “records. of all items deposited,
    .   .
    withdrawn, or transferred”). And we know Bank Three does,
    in fact, have correspondent accounts outside the United States.
    If we knew nothing else about the Company, Bank Three’s
    argument might therefore have some force: where, as here, a
    bank maintains correspondent accounts in multiple countries,
    it is by no means a given that all of an account holder’s
    correspondent banking transactions “relate to” the bank’s US.
    correspondent accounts, as the statute requires.
    With respect to this particular case, however, the
    government has a compelling response. It argues, as it did
    before the district court, that evidence already collected during
    the investigation shows that the Company’s “exclusive raison
    d’etre” was to serve as “a progenitor of U.S. dollars for” the
    NKE. Appellee’s Br. 62; see also 
    Id. at 64
     (describing the
    Company as “a front company created for the sole purpose of
    executing U.S.-dollar transactions”); March 5, 2019 Hearing
    Tr. 95:17—25, l.A. 1650—5 1 (“[The Company] existed only for
    one reason. [T]he [NKE] has to set up entities like this,
    .   .
    because [it] want[s] access to the U.S. financial system.”). In
    the government’s view, such a showing means that all of the
    Company’s records are “related to” the Bank’s U.S.
    correspondent accounts because those accounts were part of the
    Company’s means of obtaining U.S. dollars.
    The parties’ dispute turns on the meaning of the term
    “related to” as used in section 531 8(k)(3). Arguing for a narrow
    interpretation, Bank Three reads the statute to authorize
    collecting only those records of transactions that themselves
    passed through Bank Three’s U.S. correspondent accounts. For
    its part, the government advocates a more expansive reading—
    21
    PUBLIC COPY   -       SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    one that would cover all records that have a “connection with”
    the Company’s use of Bank Three’s U.S. correspondent
    accounts, even if some individual transactions made no use of
    a U.S. correspondent account. Appellee’s Br. 60 (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    To assess how broadly the phrase “related to” sweeps, we
    look to the “traditional tools of statutory interpretation—text,
    structure, purpose, and legislative history.” Tax Analysts v. IRS,
    
    350 F.3d 100
    , 103 (D.C. Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The “first step in interpreting a statute is to determine
    whether the language at issue has a plain and unambiguous
    meaning”; “[o]ur inquiry must cease if the statutory language
    is unambiguous and the statutory scheme is coherent and
    consistent.” Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 
    519 U.S. 337
    , 340
    (1997) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “[W]hen asked to interpret statutory language including the
    phrase ‘relating to,’ .   .th[e] [Supreme] Court has typically
    .
    read the relevant text expansively.” Lamar, Archer & Cofrmn,
    LLP v. Appling, 13$ S. Ct. 1752, 1760 (201$). We see no
    reason to deviate from that approach here. The ordinary
    meaning of that phrase encompasses the broad relationships
    described by the government. See, e.g., Merriam-Webster’s
    Collegiate Dictionary 987 (10th ed. 1997) (defining “relate” as
    “to have [a] relationship or connection”); Black’s Law
    Dictionary 1288 (6th ed. 1990) (defining “relate” as “[tb stand
    in some relation; to have bearing or concern; to pertain; refer;
    to bring into association with or connection with”); see also BF
    America Production Co. v. Burton, 
    549 U.S. 84
    , 91(2006)
    (“Unless otherwise defined, statutory terms are generally
    interpreted in accordance with their ordinary meaning.”).
    22
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    The government’s interpretation finds further support in the
    one example that Congress offered of a record “related to” a
    U.S. correspondent account: “records maintained outside of the
    United States relating to the deposit of funds into the foreign
    bank.” 
    31 U.S.C. § 5318
    (k)(3)(A)(i). The final phrase is
    important. Merely depositing funds “into the foreign bank”
    would not necessarily entail passing those funds through the
    foreign bank’s U.S. correspondent account; rather, it may be a
    preparatory step for using the correspondent account. For
    instance, an aspiring money launderer might deposit illicitly-
    obtained foreign currency into the foreign bank before using
    the U.S. correspondent account to facilitate a payment in U.S.
    dollars, helping the guilty party conceal the origin of the funds.
    By specifying that its view of records “related to” a U.S.
    correspondent account includes such a predicate transaction,
    Congress embraced an expansive view of the term in line with
    the government’s. And, of course, that view accords with
    Congress’s stated purpose in enacting the provision: “to
    increase the strength of United States measures to prevent,
    detect, and prosecute international money laundering and the
    financing of terrorism.” Pub. L. No. 107-56, § 302(b)(1), 115
    Stat. at 297.
    Resisting this expansive text, Bank Three offers two
    reasons to prefer a more circumscribed understanding of the
    statute. First, it again looks to the presumption against
    extraterritoriality. But here, the statute contains no ambiguity
    requiring us to resort to that presumption. See Validus
    Reinsurance, Ltd. v. United States, 
    786 F.3d 1039
    , 1046 (D.C.
    Cir. 2015) (explaining that “ambiguity is resolved by
    [applyingj the presumption against extraterritoriality”
    (emphasis added)). To be sure, the statutory text is capacious,
    but as the Supreme Court has observed, “[b]road. language
    .   .
    is not necessarily ambiguous when congressional objectives
    23
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    require broad terms.” Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 
    447 U.S. 303
    ,
    315 (1980).
    Second, Bank Three points to the Justice Department’s
    attempt to persuade Congress to amend the statute to allow the
    government to obtain not just “records relating to” a foreign
    bank’s U.S. correspondent account, but also “any records”
    pertaining to “any related account at the foreign bank,
    including records maintained outside of the United States, that
    are the subject of any investigation of a criminal violation of
    United States law.” Department of Justice, Title III, Anti-
    Corruption Legislative Proposals, 114th Cong., at 4 (May 5,
    2016),      https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/849986/download
    (emphases added). The Bank would have us infer from
    Congress’s failure to adopt the amendment that section
    53 18(k)(3) as currently written can never reach “[a]l1
    documents” relating to “all” of a company’s “correspondent
    banking transactions,” as this subpoena does. Bank Three
    Subpoena, J.A. 771. But the Supreme Court has long cautioned
    against reading too much into congressional inaction given that
    “[l]ogically, several equally tenable inferences could be drawn
    from the failure of the Congress to adopt an amendment.
    including the inference that the existing legislation already
    incorporated the offered change.” United States v. Wise, 
    370 U.S. 405
    , 411 (1962). In any event, the unenacted amendment
    Bank Three cites does not expand the definition of what records
    count as “related to” a U.S. correspondent account; rather, it
    would allow the government to reach other accounts,
    regardless of their relationship to a U.S. correspondent account.
    Such a proposal tells us little about what Congress currently
    considers to be “related to” a correspondent account.
    We therefore conclude that records “related to” a U.S.
    correspondent account include records of transactions that do
    24
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    not themselves pass through a correspondent account when
    those transactions are in service of an enterprise entirely
    dedicated to obtaining access to U.S. currency and markets
    using a U.S. correspondent account. All that remains is to
    determine whether the government has adequately shown that
    the Company was such an enterprise.
    The district court found that the government had made the
    necessary showing. Specifically, it found that “[n]o part” of the
    Company could “be separated from the ploy to put money
    through the United States financial market.” March Op. 29. On
    the record before us, that finding was not clearly erroneous. See
    Boca Investerings Partnership v. United States, 
    314 F.3d 625
    ,
    629—30 (D.C. Cir. 2003), as amended (Mar. 26, 2003) (a
    conclusion is clearly erroneous when “the reviewing court on
    the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been committed”) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The investigation has turned up considerable
    evidence supporting the court’s conclusion. The Company
    engaged in an enormous volume of U.S. dollar transactions:
    “[B]etween October 2012 and November 2015 alone, [the
    Company] made over $100 million U.S.-dollar payments.” FBI
    Declaration ¶ 13, J.A. 866. And the Company “was a
    counterparty to over 680 U.S.-dollar international transfers
    (which transited through the United States financial system via
    correspondent U.S. banks).” 
    Id.,
     J.A. 867. The government has
    uncovered no “evidence that” any of these transactions were
    part of “a legitimate business”; rather, all were part of the
    NKE’s scheme to launder money. 
    Id. ¶ 10
    , J.A. 864—65.
    Nor does any record evidence suggest that the NKE used
    the Company to launder money through currencies other than
    U.S. dollars. Indeed, the NKE had a special need for dollars
    because “commodity companies, such as those operating in
    25
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    China, Thailand, and Singapore, frequently prefer to take
    payments in U.S. dollars because of the dollar’s global demand
    and stability.” 
    Id. ¶ 26
    , l.A. 871; see also Correspondent
    Banking: A Gateway for Money Laundering, S. Hrg. 107-84
    app. 287 n.12 (“U.S. dollars are one of a handful of major
    currencies accepted throughout the world. They are also
    viewed as a stable currency, less likely to lose value over time
    and, thus, a preferred vehicle for savings, trade and
    investment.”). Further, the government explains, and Bank
    Three nowhere contests, that before 2017—and consequently
    during the vast majority of the period covered by this
    subpoena—the NKE “could legally conduct transactions in
    other currencies” besides the U.S. dollar (such as the euro),
    Appellee’ s Br. 61, signaling that the NKE would have had no
    need of a front company to conduct transactions in those
    currencies.
    Taken together, these facts support the district court’s
    finding that “[nb part” of the Company—and thus, none of its
    banking records—”can be separated from the ploy” to launder
    money through U.S. financial markets, March op. 29, because
    the Company’s sole purpose was to give the NKE access to
    U.S. dollars through U.S. correspondent accounts. We
    therefore conclude that on the facts of this case, the records
    requested by the Patriot Act subpoena all “relate to” Bank
    Three’s U.S correspondent account. To be clear, nothing in this
    opinion authorizes, as the Bank fears, the government “for any
    reason, [to] obtain essentially any document or record from any
    foreign bank with a U.S. correspondent account,” Bank Three
    Br. 22, regardless of whether those records are “related to” that
    U.S. correspondent account. The government’s power to
    subpoena the records in this case derives from the evidence that
    this particular company operated exclusively as a U.S. dollar
    clearinghouse for the NKE. Under such circumstances, all
    26
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    records pertaining to the Company’s Bank Three account and
    its correspondent banking transactions, no matter where they
    occurred, are “related to” the Bank’s U.S. correspondent
    accounts.
    Iv.
    “Comity refers to the spirit of cooperation in which a
    domestic tribunal approaches the resolution of cases touching
    the laws and interests of other sovereign states.” Société
    Nationale Industrielle Aérospatiale v. U.S. District Court for
    the Southern District of Iowa (“Société Nationale”), 
    482 U.S. 522
    , 543 n.27 (1987). Invoking this “spirit of cooperation,” 
    Id.,
    all three Banks argue that “ordering a foreign-sovereign-owned
    bank to violate foreign law on foreign soil violates basic
    ‘comity’ principles” and, as such, demands reversal, Bank One
    Br. 11; see also Bank Two Br. 25 (making this argument);
    Bank Three Br. 32—33 (same). We begin by providing some
    additional background before explaining why the Banks’
    argument fails.
    A.
    A comity analysis typically starts by determining whether
    a “true conflict” exists between the implicated legal systems.
    Hartford Fire Insurance Co. v. Calfornia, 
    509 U.S. 764
    , 798
    (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted). Absent a clash of
    foreign and domestic law, American courts may press forward
    free from worry that their rulings will threaten the
    “international legal ties that advance the rule of law within and
    among nations.” Laker Airways Ltd. v. Sabena, Belgian World
    Airlines, 
    731 F.2d 909
    , 937 (D.C. Cir. 1984), as amended
    (Mar. 6 and 9, 1984). As the district court recognized, however,
    in this case that determination “is the easy part,” given that
    “[tJhe [U.S.] government concedes that complying with the
    27
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    respective subpoenas exposes each bank to legal penalties in
    China.” March op. 32.
    After this initial inquiry, the question is whether “the
    factual circumstances” of the case at hand counsel against
    applying American law. Laker Airways, 731 f.2d at 937. A
    collection of factors helps us to delineate the “inherently
    uncertain” borders set by the principles of comity in the context
    of subpoena enforcement. 
    Id.
     Factors include “the importance
    to the litigation of the documents  .   requested,” “the degree
    .   .
    of specificity of the request,” “whether the information
    originated in the United States,” “the extent to which
    noncompliance with the request would undermine important
    interests of the United States, or compliance with the request
    would undermine important interests of the state where the
    information is located,” and whether “alternative means of
    securing the information” exist. Société Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at
    544 n.28 (alteration omitted) (quoting Restatement of foreign
    Relations Law of the United States (Revised) § 437(1)(c)).
    Courts also look to whether compliance would impose hardship
    on the party targeted by the subpoena and whether that party
    has acted in good faith. See In re Sealed Case (“Sealed
    CaseT’), 
    825 F.2d 494
    , 498—99 (D.C. Cir. 1987)
    (distinguishing cases based on “good faith” considerations);
    Linde v. Arab Bank, PLC, 706 f.3d 92, 110 (2d Cir. 2013)
    (“[A] district court should also examine the hardship of the
    party facing conflicting legal obligations... .“).
    The district court diligently applied this “constellation of
    factors” to the facts at issue here. March Op. 33. In so doing, it
    observed that two factors indisputably weigh against enforcing
    the subpoenas: the documents originated outside the United
    States, see id. at 42, and the Banks have acted in good faith
    throughout this litigation, see id. at 57 (“[T]he government
    2$
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    agrees that none of the banks has acted in bad faith.”).
    According to the district court, another pair of factors just as
    clearly weighs in favor of enforcement: the documents contain
    unique information vital to the investigation—indeed, “the
    government avows the subpoenaed documents are the
    foundation of the United States’ investigation,” Id. at 39
    (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted), and the
    subpoenas target an appropriately specific collection of
    records—that is, “the subpoenas are tailored to specific
    financial records, for a defined date range, at banks [the
    Company] is known to have used to launder funds,” id. at 41.
    Parsing the more complex remaining factors, the district
    court emphasized the government’s goal of learning how North
    Korea has thwarted American sanctions in pursuing weapons
    of mass destruction. “[NJon-enforcement” of the subpoenas,
    the district court stressed, “would undermine a critical national
    interest.” Id. at 4$. Although acknowledging that China has a
    “legitimate” “interest in the development of a sound banking
    system,” the district court concluded that the United States’
    national security interest easily outweighs China’s interest in
    safeguarding its banking secrecy laws. Id. at 50; see also Id.
    (observing that because “even Chinese authorities recognize
    that bank secrecy can co-exist with limited disclosure to
    government agencies,” “China’s interest would not be
    undermined by enforcement of the subpoenas”).
    The district court recognized that the U.S. government had
    declined to take advantage of an alternative channel through
    which the United States might obtain the documents at issue:
    the Mutual Legal Assistance Agreement, which creates a
    process to exchange “documents” and “records” relevant to
    criminal investigations. MLAA art. l(2)(c); see March Op. 42—
    47 (discussing the MLAA). But based on the U.S.
    29
    PUBLIC COPY    -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    government’s declarations that China has failed to
    satisfactorily engage in the MLAA process in many other cases
    over the past decade, the district court accepted the Executive
    Branch’s representation that requiring the government to first
    exhaust the MLAA process would just “[aJllow[J China to gum
    up [the] United States’ investigations” and, therefore, that
    “[tJhe Department of Justice no longer needs to take overtures
    of China’s willingness to assist the United $tates[] with
    investigations into North Korea seriously.” March op. 47.
    finally, with respect to the hardship facing the Banks, the
    district court acknowledged that compliance with the
    subpoenas would violate Chinese law. Though the government
    doubts the Banks’ claim that any criminal laws would be
    broken, it concedes that compliance would at least violate those
    laws prohibiting Chinese companies from handing over records
    that have not been approved for release through the MLAA
    process. See Law of the People’s Republic of China on
    International Criminal Judicial Assistance (promulgated by the
    Standing Committee of the Thirteenth National People’s
    Congress, Oct. 26, 201$, effective Oct. 26, 201$), ch. I, art. 4,
    J.A. 355 (forbidding any “institution [or] organization
    within the territory of [China]” from “provid[ing] evidentiary
    materials and assistance prescribed by this Law to foreign
    countries”); Id. ch. II, § 2, art. 13, J.A. 35$ (requiring a “foreign
    country” to request “criminal judicial assistance” “in
    accordance with the provisions of the criminal judicial
    assistance treaty”). The district court also recognized that the
    Ministry of Justice has advised that these violations would have
    consequences in the form of administrative penalties against
    the Banks and civil or criminal penalties against individual
    officers. See March Op. 51—53. The district court, however,
    found the hardships accompanying compliance both
    speculative and minimal. See id. at 53—57. It based this
    30
    PUBLIC COPY       -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    conclusion in part on historical Chinese enforcement trends:
    penalties are rare and relatively modest when they do occur.
    The court found, for example, no instances of “a state-owned
    Chinese enterprise     .  fac{ing] severe repercussions for
    .   .
    responding to the order of a foreign court,” Id. at 53, and that
    bank officers had apparently faced penalties only for stealing
    and selling “client information for profit,” id. at 55. The district
    court also relied on the logical supposition that the Chinese
    government is unlikely to severely sanction banks that it
    largely owns, id., and concluded that the Ministry’s warnings
    failed to “suggest[] the administrative penalties will amount to
    more than nominal fines” or provide any “concrete indication
    criminal penalties are likely,” Id. at 56—57.
    Affording the most weight to the United States’
    unassailable interest in successfully investigating and, with any
    luck, frustrating North Korea’s arms programs, see id. at 58
    (calling “the interests of the relevant countries” the “most
    important factor”), the district court concluded that “[ojn
    balance, international comity is not a reason to refrain from
    compelling compliance with the subpoenas,” Id. On appeal, the
    Banks argue that the district court applied the incorrect legal
    standard, that enforcing the subpoenas runs afoul of our case
    law, that “[c]omity dictates that the Chinese government at
    least be given an opportunity to comply with an MLAA request
    before forcing a Chinese bank to violate Chinese law on
    Chinese soil,” Bank Two Br. 19, and, finally, that the district
    court incorrectly balanced the relevant factors.
    B.
    Before considering these arguments, we must first
    ascertain the appropriate standard of review. Although we
    “ordinarily review{] a district court’s grant of a motion to
    31
    PUBLIC COPY                  -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    compel.. for abuse of discretion,” Recording Industry Ass ‘n
    .
    of America, Inc. v. Verizon Internet Services, Inc., 
    351 F.3d 1229
    , 1233 (D.C. Cir. 2003), we have yet to expressly
    determine the standard of review applied to a comity analysis
    in this context, cf Sealed Case I, $25 f.2d at 497—99 (not
    identifying the standard of review); de Csepel v. Republic of
    Hungary, 
    714 F.3d 591
    , 606 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (“This court has
    never expressly addressed the standard by which we review a
    district court’s decision to grant comity to a foreign
    judgment.”). The Supreme Court, however, has observed that
    “[t]he      exact     line    between      reasonableness     and
    unreasonableness” when weighing comity principles “must be
    drawn by the trial court, based on its knowledge of the case,”
    Sociétë Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at 546
    , and we generally review
    for abuse of discretion when the district court finds itself
    responsible for making such a fact-bound reasonableness call,
    see, e.g., Ideal Electronic Security Co. v. International Fidelity
    Insurance Co., 
    129 F.3d 143
    , 150 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (“[TJhe
    reasonableness of an attorney’s fees award is within the sound
    discretion of the trial court and is reviewed only for abuse of
    discretion.”); United States v. Law, $
    06 F.3d 1103
    , 1105 (D.C.
    Cir. 2015) (“We. consider the substantive reasonableness of
    .       .
    the sentence imposed under an abuse-of-discretion standard.”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). This approach comports
    with our sister circuits, which review similar questions for
    abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Allstate Life Insurance Co. v.
    Linter Group Ltd., 
    994 F.2d 996
    , 999 (2d Cir. 1993) (“[S]ince
    the extension or denial of comity is within the court’s
    discretion, we will reverse the court’s decision only when we
    find an abuse of discretion.”); Reinsurance Co. ofAmerica v.
    Administratia Asigurarilor de Stat, 
    902 F.2d 1275
    , 1283 (7th
    Cir. 1990) (“The denial of [the company’s] motion to compel
    responses was   .   . not an abuse of discretion.”). The Banks
    .
    offer no argument for departing from that approach here. See
    32
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    Bank Two Br. 5 (suggesting “an abuse of discretion standard”);
    Oral Arg. Rec. 13:33—13:40 (Bank One counsel agreeing that
    if “the district court did apply the correct legal standard, then
    it’s an abuse of discretion standard”). Accordingly, we shall
    review the district court’s comity analysis for abuse of
    discretion.
    Employing that standard, we ask whether the district court
    “based its ruling on an error of law, a clearly erroneous
    assessment of the evidence, or an improper weighing of the
    factors limiting its discretion.” fraenkel v. Islamic Republic of
    Iran, $
    92 F.3d 348
    , 356 (D.C. Cir. 201$) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). We of course review any embedded
    “legal conclusions de novo.” Guedes v. Bureau of Alcohol,
    Tobacco, firearms & Explosives, 
    920 F.3d 1
    , 10 (D.C. Cir.
    2019).
    Bank One first argues that “the District Court used the
    wrong legal standard to review the Government’s request to
    enforce the Subpoenas”—that is, the court should not have
    adopted “the multifactorial approach of        .   Restatement
    .   .
    (Third) of Foreign Relations.” Bank One Reply Br. 1. This
    argument gets the Banks nowhere. In Sociëtë Nationale, the
    Supreme Court explained that the Restatement’s “factors are
    relevant to any comity analysis.” 
    482 U.S. 522
    , 544 n.2$; see
    Overby v. National Ass ‘n of Letter Carriers, 
    595 F.3d 1290
    ,
    1295 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (“[C]arefully considered language of the
    Supreme Court, even if technically dictum, generally must be
    treated as authoritative.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The Bank points out that our decision in Sealed Case I, issued
    a few months after Société Nationale, never expressly
    references the Restatement’s factors. In that case we reversed
    an order holding a bank owned by (unidentified) Country X in
    contempt for failure to comply with a subpoena that would
    33
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    have required the bank to produce documents in contravention
    of the banking privacy laws of Country Y, where the branch at
    issue was located. Sealed Case I, 
    825 F.2d at
    497—98. But
    Sealed Case I neither refutes Société Nationale’ s ratification of
    the Restatement factors nor offers a different test to apply—
    nor, of course, could it. See We the People foundation, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    485 F.3d 140
    , 144 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (circuit
    courts must follow Supreme Court precedent). As the district
    court recognized, Sealed Case I “comports with the Supreme
    Court’s treatment of international comity as a principle that
    depends on ‘prior scrutiny in each case of the particular facts,
    sovereign interests, and likelihood that resort to [alternative]
    procedures will prove effective.” March Op. 34 (alteration in
    original) (quoting Société Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at 544
    ).
    This brings us to the Banks’ related assertion that “[t]he
    present case is controlled by” Sealed Case I. Bank One Br. 14.
    But that case by its own terms constricts its holding to its facts:
    “If any of the facts we rest on here were different,” we
    cautioned, “our holding could well be different.” Sealed Case I,
    
    825 F.2d at 499
    . We therefore agree with the district court that
    this case merits its own factual inquiry; Sealed Case I does not,
    as a legal matter, control the outcome here.
    The Banks’ more powerful argument is that, due to the
    factual parallels between Sealed Case I and this case, “it was
    an abuse of discretion to enforce the Subpoena[sJ.” Bank Two
    Br. 25. The Sealed Case I court identified several facts central
    to its decision not to enforce the contempt order at issue, and
    they might sound familiar, first, and “[m]ost important,” the
    “sanctions represent[ed] an attempt by an American court to
    compel a foreign person to violate the laws of a different
    foreign sovereign on that sovereign’s own territory.” 
    825 F.2d at 498
    ; see also 
    Id.
     (observing that the bank had no way to
    34
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    “comply with the contempt order without violating the laws of
    Country Y on Country Y’s soil”). We also recognized that the
    bank “had acted in good faith,” was “a third party   .  not...
    .   .
    accused of any wrongdoing,” and constituted “not merely a
    private foreign entity,” but also “an entity owned by the
    government of Country X.” 
    Id.
     finally, because the bank’s
    manager would “be available and able to testify as to many of
    the facts that the grand jury may [have] wish[edj to ascertain,”
    the government was not “left empty-handed” by the decision
    not to enforce the subpoena. 
    Id. at 499
    . But see Ed.
    (acknowledging “that the grand jury’s investigation may
    nonetheless be hampered, perhaps significantly” by the
    decision not to enforce).
    As the Banks point out, each of those facts maps neatly
    onto this case, in which the government asks us to compel
    Chinese banks owned in significant part by the Chinese
    government to violate Chinese law on Chinese territory. The
    Banks have acted in good faith, they are currently third parties
    to the criminal investigation, and the MLAA, at least on its
    face, provides an alternative path that would allow the
    government to obtain the records at issue.
    What’s more, to the extent there are differences, there is
    some reason to believe that this case is an even better candidate
    for comity than Sealed Case I. For one thing, where the
    subpoena recipient in Sealed Case I was being asked to violate
    the laws of a “different foreign sovereign,” 
    Id. at 498
    , here the
    government demands that the Banks violate their home
    country’s laws. Although the Country X-based bank in Sealed
    Case I might have closed its branch in Country Y to avoid
    sanctions, the Banks here have no such workaround. As the
    district court recognized, “[a] Country X bank can shutter the
    Country Y portion of its business; a Chinese bank cannot leave
    35
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    China.” March Op. 36 n.13; see also 
    Id.
     (“[C]ompelling a bank
    to violate its own nation’s law is more prejudicial to
    international comity.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Moreover, the Chinese government in this case “has warned
    the Bank[s] that [they] will be sanctioned if [they] ignore[J” its
    “express instructions not to produce these documents outside
    the MLAA process,” and “[t]here is no indication that the
    foreign government in Sealed Case I did anything similar.”
    Bank Three Br. 39.
    The district court ignored none of these considerations.
    Quite to the contrary, it grappled with each and instead found
    persuasive two other “critical” differences between the cases.
    March Op. 34.
    The district court first pointed out that Sealed Case I
    concerned a “domestic law enforcement matter,” which
    “hardly compares to the national security interests and
    associated potential harm caused by non-compliance with a
    subpoena related to an investigation into funding a state-
    sponsor of terrorism’s nuclear weapons program.” Id. at 35.
    This is an important distinction. The government justifiably
    believes that the subpoenas will unearth information
    concerning North Korea’s use of third-party front companies
    to evade economic sanctions, and nothing in Sealed Case I
    suggests any “sovereign interest[],” Société Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at 544
    , remotely comparable to impeding North Korea’s
    stockpiling of nuclear weapons.
    We acknowledge, as the Banks point out, that the
    government here has failed to proceed as though North Korea
    were about to push the nuclear launch button. Indeed, the
    government took nearly a year to enforce the subpoenas in
    court and never sought to expedite this case until the district
    36
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    court instructed it to do so. It did not, however, sit on its hands
    during that time, as the Banks repeatedly assert, but “engaged
    in intra- and inter-agency deliberations” and “twice sent a
    delegation to China” during that period. March op. 40. More
    to the point, we are reluctant to second-guess the Executive
    Branch’s assessments of national security interests and how to
    best serve them. See frugone v. Central Intelligence Agency,
    169 f.3d 772, 775 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (cautioning “that courts
    have little expertise in either international diplomacy or
    counterintelligence operations”). We of course agree with
    Bank One that “the judiciary has an independent obligation to
    evaluate” the diplomatic ripple effects of its decisions. Bank
    One Br. 25; see also Sealed Case I, 225 f.2d at 499 (“[WJe see
    good reason for courts not to act on their own, even at the
    urging ofthe executive branch, when their actions ‘may hinder
    rather than further this country’s pursuit of goals both for itself
    and for the community of nations as a whole in the international
    sphere.” (emphasis added) (quoting Banco Nacional de Cuba
    v. Sabbatino, 
    376 U.S. 398
    , 423 (1964))). But we are confident
    that the district court respected that obligation and that it acted
    within its discretion by recognizing that the heightened national
    interest here, as articulated by the Executive Branch,
    distinguishes this case from Sealed Case I.
    The Banks next observe that “if the Government receives
    the documents via the MLAA, its national security interests
    will be fully vindicated.” Bank Two Br. 26. The district court,
    however, concluded that the futility of the MLAA process sets
    this case apart from Sealed Case I, in which testimony from the
    bank’s manager appeared to offer a sure-fire way of securing
    at least some of the desired information. “[un this
    investigation,” by contrast, the district court observed, “the
    government insists that without compelling compliance, the
    requested information is out of reach.” March Op. 35.
    37
    PUBLIC COPY        -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    forcefully disagreeing with this conclusion, the Banks insist
    that the MLAA process provides a channel specifically
    designed to allow the U.S. government to obtain exactly the
    types of records it seeks. Allowing it to eschew that process
    without so much as making an initial MLAA request, they
    argue, neglects comity’ s “spirit of cooperation.” $ociété
    Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at
    543 n.27. For its part, the government
    argues in support of the district court that “the historical record
    demonstrates   .   an MLAA request of China for such bank
    .   .
    records is not a viable alternative.” Appellee’s Br. 37 (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    Recall that the MLAA establishes a procedure for the U.S.
    and Chinese governments to obtain documents from each other
    in criminal investigations. Specifically, the process provides
    that “insofar as national law permits,” if, say, the United States
    makes a request, China’s “Central Authority” must search for
    and     then     send    the    requested     records.    MLAA
    arts. 2(1), 14(1), (3). Nothing in the MLAA, however,
    designates it as the exclusive means of obtaining evidence in a
    criminal investigation.
    In this case, China’s Central Authority, the Ministry of
    Justice, 
    Id.
     art. 2(2), expressed a “willingness to cooperate with
    a DOJ MLAA request” as early as March 2018, Letter from
    Hank B. Walther & Samidh Guha to Zia Faruqui & An
    Redboard 3 (Mar. 23, 2018), J.A. 830. Bank Three
    communicated China’s overture to the U.S. Department of
    Justice, observing that the MLAA process “would allow DOJ
    to obtain the documents it seeks, while avoiding the time, cost,
    and risk of litigating the Patriot Act subpoena.” 
    Id.
     As we now
    know, the United States declined that invitation—even as it
    filed at least ten other MLAA requests in 2017 and 2012—and
    instead sought to enforce the subpoenas in court.
    38
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    The Ministry then directly communicated with the district
    court multiple times, assuring that court that the Ministry
    “would timely review and handle the requests for assistance
    sought by the DOJ in accordance with the [MLAA] and
    applicable domestic laws.” Letter from Du Yaling, Director
    General of International Cooperation Department of the
    Ministry of Justice to Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell 4 (Jan. 6,
    2019), J.A. 76. If the government submits a “request in line
    with the [MLAAJ,” the Ministry pledged, “China will provide
    the assistance to the United States accordingly.” 
    Id.
     Confident
    that the MLAA “mechanism works effectively,” the Ministry
    reminded the district court that China has “provided effective
    assistance to the US in many cases” and that “[tJhe avenue of
    the {MLAA] is the only legal means to obtain criminal
    evidence in China by foreign judicial agencies under Chinese
    laws.” Letter from Du Yaling, Director General of International
    Cooperation Department of the Ministry of Justice to Chief
    Judge Beryl A. Howell 2—4 (Feb. 26, 2019), J.A. 965—67. The
    district judge observed that this marked “the first time” she had
    seen “correspondence directly from a foreign government
    related to an ongoing matter.” March 5, 2019 Hearing Tr. 18:2—
    4, J.A. 1573. The government points to no other case where the
    Ministry has made such a representation and reneged on it and
    admits that in some cases, “China has produced bank records
    to the general satisfaction of the U.S. prosecutors and agents.”
    Declaration of Associate Director of the Office of International
    Affairs Jeffrey M. Olson (“OIA Declaration”) ¶ 14(e),
    J.A. 951.
    The district court considered all these facts but ultimately
    concluded that pursuing the MLAA process would result in an
    inadequate production of documents. According to the
    Associate Director of the Office of International Affairs—
    39
    PUBLIC COPY    -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    which serves as the United States’ Central Authority under the
    MLAA—the United States has submitted fifty MLAA requests
    for bank records over the past decade and has received no
    responsive records to thirty-five; the government found most
    of China’s responses in the remaining fifteen cases inadequate
    or untimely. And of the ten requests submitted within the last
    two years, the United States has received at most one response.
    Cf OIA Declaration ¶ 13(b), J.A. 950 (describing that, for
    example, China failed to produce documents in one of those
    cases even though the United States informed the Ministry that
    the request was time-sensitive due to an upcoming trial).
    Moreover, the district court recognized that the
    government is especially pessimistic about the chances of
    success in this case given that the investigation involves a
    perfect storm of disagreements between the United States and
    China: “Chinese authorities have a demonstrated failure in
    supporting foreign and U.S. sanctions and U.S. law
    enforcement actions involving North Korea,” and “the Chinese
    government has specifically objected to the imposition of
    sanctions on [the Company] and other Chinese front
    companies.” FBI Declaration ¶ 80, J.A. $88. Drawing the
    district court’s attention to a case “nearly identical” to this one,
    Id. at 37, J.A. 884, an FBI special agent submitted a declaration
    pointing out that although in that case, China had “nominally
    agreed to work jointly with the U.S. authorities” on MLAA
    requests for bank records involving North Korea, id. ¶ 72,
    J.A. $85, nothing ever came of that initial agreement; offering
    various excuses, China never handed over any records. “Based
    on these facts,” the agent “concluded that the MLAA process
    is not an effective way to obtain bank records from Chinese
    authorities with respect to investigations involving North
    Korea.” Id. ¶ 75, J.A. 886; see Id. (“[OJne reason that Chinese
    authorities do not want to assist with North Korean
    40
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    investigations is that producing such records could reflect
    badly on the Chinese government and the Chinese financial
    industry.”).
    Given this record, we see no abuse of discretion in the
    district court’s decision to enforce the subpoenas despite the
    fact that the United States chose not to pursue the MLAA
    process. The Supreme Court has made clear that evidence-
    sharing arrangements set up by international agreements,
    although often valuable, can also prove “unduly time
    consuming and expensive, as well as less certain” than court-
    enforced subpoenas “to produce needed evidence.” $ociété
    Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at 542
    . As such, whether comity “requires
    resort” to an agreement’s procedures calls for an inquiry into
    the “likelihood that resort to those procedures will prove
    effective.” 
    Id. at 544
    . The district court addressed just that
    question: it reviewed declarations from U.S. and Chinese
    officials, identified facts that undermined the Chinese
    government’s assurances about the MLAA system, and
    concluded that the U.S. government had no obligation to
    submit a voluntary MLAA request because it would likely
    prove ineffective.
    We need not tarry over the Banks’ remaining arguments
    that the district court abused its considerable discretion in
    balancing the comity factors. Cf Morley v. Central Intelligence
    Agency, 
    894 F.3d 389
    , 391 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (recognizing that
    when “factors point in different directions,” “it will be the rare
    case when we can reverse a district court’s balancing ofthe.
    factors”). Specifically, Bank Three reiterates its claim that “the
    Patriot Act subpoena is facially overbroad,” Bank Three Reply
    Br. 20, and, as such, the “degree of specificity of the request,”
    Sociétë Nationale, 
    482 U.S. at
    544 n.28 (internal quotation
    marks omitted), also weighs in favor of the Bank. But we agree
    41
    PUBLIC COPY        -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    with the district court that given that the Company “solely
    existed as a front company,” “all [the Company’s] records
    relate to the conduct under investigation,” March Op. 41
    (internal quotation marks omitted). With respect to the
    hardship factor, Bank One takes issue with the district court’s
    conclusion that the Banks would likely face minimal penalties
    for complying with the subpoenas. In a civil law country such
    as China, the Bank contends, “[t]he District Court cannot know
    how the Chinese government will exercise its prosecutorial
    discretion.” Bank One Br. 2$. But the district court never
    presumed to declare itself a soothsayer; it assessed a cluster of
    datapoints presented and substantiated by the Executive
    Branch and ultimately determined that the risk of harsh
    punishment was slim. In any event, it recognized that “this
    factor tips ever so slightly toward the banks.” March Op. 57.
    The district court exercised its ‘judgment” in drawing these
    conclusions and was “guided by sound legal principles.”
    United States v. Taylor, 
    487 U.S. 326
    , 336 (198$) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Our analysis ends there.
    We proceed with extreme caution when enforcing
    subpoenas that would require recipients to violate a foreign
    sovereign’s domestic laws. As we said in Sealed Case I, “[w]e
    have little doubt. that our government and our people would
    .   .
    be affronted if a foreign court tried to compel someone to
    violate our laws within our borders,” 
    825 F.2d at
    498—99, all
    the more so if our government assured that court that it was
    ready and willing to engage in a mutually agreed-upon bilateral
    process to provide the precise information requested. But we
    take heart that at every stage of this process decisionmakers
    have recognized that whether to enforce a subpoena “in cases
    like this one raises grave difficulties for courts.” 
    Id. at 498
    . The
    government decided to pursue the records at issue through the
    courts rather than the MLAA process only after twice sending
    42
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    delegates to China and engaging in extensive “internal
    discussions with subject matter experts      within the FBI, as
    .   .   .
    well as consultations involving senior FBI management and
    Department of Justice and Department of Treasury officials.”
    FBI Declaration ¶ 80, J.A. $88. That decision was then put to
    “the wise discretion of our judicial colleague[] on the District
    Court,” fraenkel, 892 F.3d at 362, and that court consented to
    the government’s course of action only after undertaking a
    thorough, considered analysis that frankly acknowledged the
    Banks’ comity concerns. Whether to enforce the subpoenas
    was a hard call, the district court made that call, and we have
    no reason to reverse its fact-bound conclusion.
    V.
    Finally, Banks One and Three challenge the district court’s
    April 2019 contempt order, arguing that it was unjustified
    given the government’s concession that the Banks acted in
    good faith to obtain the Chinese government’s permission to
    produce the records covered by the subpoenas. “[W]e
    review. the contempt finding. for abuse of discretion.” In
    .   .                       .   .
    re Fannie Mae Securities Litigation, 
    552 F.3d 814
    , 818 (D.C.
    Cir. 2009).
    A civil contempt citation is appropriate “only if the putative
    contemnor has violated an order that is clear and unambiguous,
    and the violation must be proved by clear and convincing
    evidence.” Broderickv. Donaldson, 
    437 F.3d 1226
    , 1234 (D.C.
    Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). Banks One and
    Three nowhere dispute that by refusing to produce the
    documents covered by the subpoenas, they have violated a
    clear and unambiguous order. Instead, they rest their challenge
    to the contempt order on the Restatement (Third) of Foreign
    Relations Law, which suggests that a court “should not
    43
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    ordinarily impose sanctions of contempt, dismissal, or default
    on a party that has failed to comply with [an] order for
    production” that would violate another state’s laws or
    regulations, “except in cases of deliberate concealment or
    removal of information or of failure to make a good faith
    effort” “to secure permission from the foreign authorities to
    make the information available.” Restatement (Third) of
    Foreign Relations Law § 442(2)(a)—(b) (1927) (emphasis
    added).
    The banks insist that the district court should not have held
    them in contempt because they acted in good faith (albeit
    unsuccessfully) to secure the Chinese government’s
    permission to produce the records at issue. This is a rather thin
    reed to begin with, rendered more slender still by the fact that
    the more recent Restatement (fourth) of foreign Relations Law
    significantly diminishes the importance of a putative
    contemnor’s “good faith”: the Restatement (Fourth) simply
    states that courts “have discretion to excuse violations of law,
    or moderate the sanctions imposed for such violations, on the
    ground that the violations are compelled by another state’s
    law” if “the person in question appears likely to suffer severe
    sanctions for failing to comply with foreign law” and “has
    acted in good faith to avoid the conflict.” Restatement (Fourth)
    of foreign Relations Law § 442 (2018) (emphasis added)). In
    any event, this court has long held that “[t]he intent of the
    recalcitrant party is irrelevant in a civil contempt proceeding
    because, unlike a criminal contempt proceeding, a civil
    contempt action is a remedial sanction used to obtain
    compliance with a court order or to compensate for damage
    sustained as a result of noncompliance.” Food Lion, Inc. v.
    United Food & Commercial Workers International Union,
    AFL-CIO-CLC, 
    103 F.3d 1007
    , 1016 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    44
    PUBLIC COPY   -   SEALED INFORMATION DELETED
    Confronted with clear non-compliance in the face of a
    perfectly pellucid order, the district court reasonably found that
    “the banks have not demonstrated good faith in a way relevant
    to contempt” and that, because “the requested records are
    essential to an investigation into a matter of national
    security[,]..  continued contumacy threatens tremendous
    .
    harm.” April op. 9 (internal quotation marks omitted). Under
    these circumstances, the banks have given us no basis for
    concluding that the district court abused its discretion.
    VI.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s
    contempt orders against all three Banks.
    So ordered
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-5068

Filed Date: 8/6/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2019

Authorities (31)

In the Matter of a Grand Jury Subpoena Directed to Marc ... , 707 F.2d 663 ( 1983 )

Allstate Life Insurance Co. v. Linter Group Limited , 994 F.2d 996 ( 1993 )

We People Fdn Inc v. United States , 485 F.3d 140 ( 2007 )

Overby v. NATIONAL ASS'N OF LETTER CARRIERS , 595 F.3d 1290 ( 2010 )

United States v. Ahn, Yong Ho , 231 F.3d 26 ( 2000 )

reinsurance-company-of-america-inc-plaintiff-appelleecross-appellant-v , 902 F.2d 1275 ( 1990 )

Ideal Electronic Security Co. v. International Fidelity ... , 129 F.3d 143 ( 1997 )

Broderick, Catherine v. Donaldson, William , 437 F.3d 1226 ( 2006 )

Tax Analysts v. Internal Revenue Service , 350 F.3d 100 ( 2003 )

In Re Sealed Case , 825 F.2d 494 ( 1987 )

Securities & Exchange Commission v. Bilzerian , 378 F.3d 1100 ( 2004 )

Recording Industry Association of America, Inc. v. Verizon ... , 351 F.3d 1229 ( 2003 )

laker-airways-limited-a-foreign-corporation-v-sabena-belgian-world , 731 F.2d 909 ( 1984 )

In Re: Sealed Case , 146 F.3d 881 ( 1998 )

Food Lion, Incorporated v. United Food and Commercial ... , 103 F.3d 1007 ( 1997 )

In Re Fannie Mae Securities Litigation , 552 F.3d 814 ( 2009 )

US Ex Rel. Miller v. BILL HARBERT INTERN. CONST. , 608 F.3d 871 ( 2010 )

American Well Works Company v. Layne and Bowler Company , 36 S. Ct. 585 ( 1916 )

International Shoe Co. v. Washington , 66 S. Ct. 154 ( 1945 )

United States v. Taylor , 108 S. Ct. 2413 ( 1988 )

View All Authorities »