Federal Trade Commission v. Andris Pukke ( 2022 )


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  • USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101          Filed: 11/01/2022    Pg: 1 of 45
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 20-2215
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    v.
    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); PETER BAKER,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    JOHN USHER, individually and as an officer or owner of Sittee River Wildlife
    Reserve (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve)
    and Eco-Futures Belize Limited (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, and The Reserve); BUY BELIZE, LLC, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary
    Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo
    Springs, a California limited liability company; BUY INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik,
    d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California Corporation; ECO
    FUTURES DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a
    The Reserve, a company organized under the laws of Belize; ECO-FUTURES
    BELIZE LIMITED, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve,
    a California Corporation; SITTEE RIVER WILDLIFE RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary
    Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, an entity organized under the laws
    of Belize; GLOBAL PROPERTY ALLIANCE INC., a California corporation, also
    doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, the Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna
    Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures
    Belize, Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International;
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101         Filed: 11/01/2022    Pg: 2 of 45
    FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT, INC., a California
    Corporation; POWER HAUS MARKETING, a California Corporation; PRODIGY
    MANAGEMENT GROUP LLC, a Wyoming limited liability company; EXOTIC
    INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Southern
    Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts and Nevis;
    NEWPORT LAND GROUP, LLC, a/k/a The Reserve, a Wyoming limited liability
    company; SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC, a limited liability company
    organized under the laws of Belize; BELIZE REAL ESTATE AFFILIATES, LLC,
    d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited
    liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; SANCTUARY
    BELIZE PROPERTY OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, d/b/a The Reserve Property
    Owners’ Association, a Texas non-profit corporation; THE ESTATE OF JOHN
    PUKKE, d/b/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate of Andris Pukke,
    Defendants – Appellants,
    and
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    2
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101          Filed: 11/01/2022    Pg: 3 of 45
    No. 21-1454
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    v.
    PETER BAKER, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize),
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); LUKE CHADWICK,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize;
    ECOLOGICAL FOX, LLC, a Maryland limited liability company; GLOBAL
    PROPERTY ALLIANCE, INC., a California corporation, also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo
    Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize, Sittee River
    Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International; SITTEE RIVER WILDLIFE
    RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, an
    entity organized under the laws of Belize; BUY BELIZE, LLC, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a
    Bamboo Springs, a California limited liability company; BUY INTERNATIONAL,
    INC., d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a
    Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California corporation;
    3
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101         Filed: 11/01/2022     Pg: 4 of 45
    FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT INC., a California
    corporation; ECO FUTURES DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a
    Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a company organized under the laws of Belize;
    POWER HAUS MARKETING, a California corporation; BRANDI GREENFIELD,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); BG
    MARKETING, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability company; PRODIGY
    MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC, a Wyoming limited liability company; JOHN
    USHER, individually and as an officer or owner of Sittee River Wildlife Reserve
    (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve) and Eco-
    Futures Belize Limited (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and
    The Reserve); ROD KAZAZI, individually and as an officer or owner of Global
    Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The
    Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures
    Development, Eco Futures Belize); FOUNDATION PARTNERS, f/k/a Red Crane
    Advisors, Inc., a California corporation; FRANK COSTANZO, a/k/a Frank Green,
    a/k/a Frank Peerless Green, a/k/a Frank Connelly, a/k/a Frank Connelly-Costanzo,
    individually and as officer or owner of Ecological Fox, LLC, Buy International, Inc.
    (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik,
    Laguna Palms, and Bamboo Springs), and Foundation Development Management,
    Inc.); BELIZE REAL ESTATE AFFILIATES, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize,
    d/b/a Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under
    the laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; EXOTIC INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker
    Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company
    organized under the laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; SANCTUARY BELIZE
    PROPERTY OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, d/b/a The Reserve Property Owners’
    Association, a Texas non-profit corporation; ANGELA CHITTENDEN; BEACH
    BUNNY HOLDINGS, LLC, a California limited liability company; THE ESTATE
    OF JOHN PUKKE, a/k/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate of John Andris
    Pukke; JOHN VIPULIS; DEBORAH CONNELLY; NEWPORT LAND GROUP,
    LLC, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a The
    Reserve, a Wyoming limited liability company; MICHAEL SANTOS, a/k/a
    Sanctuary Bay, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a The Reserve, a/k/a Kanantik, a/k/a
    Laguna Palms, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a Eco Futures, a/k/a Eco Futures
    Development, a/k/a Eco Future Belize, a/k/a Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, a/k/a Buy
    Belize, a/k/a Buy International, a/k/a Buy Belize, LLC, (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and
    Bamboo Springs), a/k/a Buy International, Inc., (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Lagunal Palms, and Bamboo
    Springs), Individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc;
    AMERIDEBT, INCORPORATED; DEBTWORKS, INCORPORATED; PAMELA
    PUKKE, a/k/a Pamela Shuster; ATLANTIC INTERNATIONAL BANK, LTD, a
    4
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215    Doc: 101          Filed: 11/01/2022   Pg: 5 of 45
    company organized under the laws of Belize; ECO-FUTURES BELIZE LIMITED,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a California
    Corporation; SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC, a limited liability company
    organized under the laws of Belize,
    Defendants,
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    No. 21-1520
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    5
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101         Filed: 11/01/2022     Pg: 6 of 45
    v.
    JOHN USHER, individually and as an officer or owner of Sittee River Wildlife
    Reserve (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve)
    and Eco-Futures Belize Limited (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, and The Reserve),
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); PETER BAKER,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    LUKE CHADWICK, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize; ECOLOGICAL FOX, LLC, a Maryland limited liability
    company; GLOBAL PROPERTY ALLIANCE, INC., a California corporation, also
    doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna
    Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures
    Belize, Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International; SITTEE
    RIVER WILDLIFE RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a
    The Reserve, an entity organized under the laws of Belize; BUY BELIZE, LLC,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik,
    d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California limited liability company;
    BUY INTERNATIONAL, INC., d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a
    The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a
    California corporation; FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT INC.,
    a California corporation; ECO FUTURES DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a company organized under the laws of
    Belize; POWER HAUS MARKETING, a California corporation; BRANDI
    GREENFIELD, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance,
    Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize); BG MARKETING, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability
    company; PRODIGY MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC, a Wyoming limited liability
    company; ROD KAZAZI, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    6
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101         Filed: 11/01/2022    Pg: 7 of 45
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize); FOUNDATION PARTNERS, f/k/a Red Crane Advisors, Inc.,
    a California corporation; FRANK COSTANZO, a/k/a Frank Green, a/k/a Frank
    Peerless Green, a/k/a Frank Connelly, a/k/a Frank Connelly-Costanzo, individually
    and as officer or owner of Ecological Fox, LLC, Buy International, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    and Bamboo Springs), and Foundation Development Management, Inc.); BELIZE
    REAL ESTATE AFFILIATES, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell
    Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St.
    Kitts and Nevis; EXOTIC INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a
    Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the
    laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; SANCTUARY BELIZE PROPERTY OWNERS’
    ASSOCIATION, d/b/a The Reserve Property Owners’ Association, a Texas non-
    profit corporation; ANGELA CHITTENDEN; BEACH BUNNY HOLDINGS,
    LLC, a California limited liability company; THE ESTATE OF JOHN PUKKE,
    a/k/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate of John Andris Pukke; JOHN
    VIPULIS; DEBORAH CONNELLY; NEWPORT LAND GROUP, LLC, a/k/a
    Laguna Palms, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a The Reserve, a
    Wyoming limited liability company; MICHAEL SANTOS, a/k/a Sanctuary Bay,
    a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a The Reserve, a/k/a Kanantik, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a
    Bamboo Springs, a/k/a Eco Futures, a/k/a Eco Futures Development, a/k/a Eco
    Future Belize, a/k/a Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, a/k/a Buy Belize, a/k/a Buy
    International, a/k/a Buy Belize, LLC, (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and Bamboo Springs),
    a/k/a Buy International, Inc., (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Lagunal Palms, and Bamboo Springs), Individually
    and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc; AMERIDEBT,
    INCORPORATED; DEBTWORKS, INCORPORATED; PAMELA PUKKE, a/k/a
    Pamela Shuster; ATLANTIC INTERNATIONAL BANK, LTD, a company
    organized under the laws of Belize; ECO-FUTURES BELIZE LIMITED, d/b/a
    Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a California Corporation;
    SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC, a limited liability company organized under
    the laws of Belize,
    Defendants,
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    7
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101          Filed: 11/01/2022   Pg: 8 of 45
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    No. 21-1521
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    v.
    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize),
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    8
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    PETER BAKER, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize); LUKE CHADWICK, individually and as an officer or owner
    of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco
    Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize; ECOLOGICAL FOX, LLC, a Maryland
    limited liability company; GLOBAL PROPERTY ALLIANCE, INC., a California
    corporation, also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize, Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International;
    SITTEE RIVER WILDLIFE RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary
    Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, an entity organized under the laws of Belize; BUY
    BELIZE, LLC, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve,
    d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California limited
    liability company; BUY INTERNATIONAL, INC., d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a
    Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a
    Bamboo Springs, a California corporation; FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT
    MANAGEMENT INC., a California corporation; ECO FUTURES
    DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve,
    a company organized under the laws of Belize; POWER HAUS MARKETING, a
    California corporation; BRANDI GREENFIELD, individually and as an officer or
    owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); BG MARKETING, LLC,
    an Oklahoma limited liability company; PRODIGY MANAGEMENT GROUP,
    LLC, a Wyoming limited liability company; JOHN USHER, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Sittee River Wildlife Reserve (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve) and Eco-Futures Belize Limited (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve); ROD KAZAZI,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    FOUNDATION PARTNERS, f/k/a Red Crane Advisors, Inc., a California
    corporation; FRANK COSTANZO, a/k/a Frank Green, a/k/a Frank Peerless Green,
    a/k/a Frank Connelly, a/k/a Frank Connelly-Costanzo, individually and as officer or
    owner of Ecological Fox, LLC, Buy International, Inc. (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and
    Bamboo Springs), and Foundation Development Management, Inc.); BELIZE REAL
    ESTATE AFFILIATES, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker
    Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts
    and Nevis; EXOTIC INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a
    Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the
    9
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    laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; SANCTUARY BELIZE PROPERTY OWNERS
    ASSOCIATION, d/b/a The Reserve Property Owners’ Association, a Texas non-
    profit corporation; ANGELA CHITTENDEN; BEACH BUNNY HOLDINGS,
    LLC, a California limited liability company; THE ESTATE OF JOHN PUKKE,
    a/k/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate of John Andris Pukke; JOHN
    VIPULIS; DEBORAH CONNELLY; NEWPORT LAND GROUP, LLC, a/k/a
    Laguna Palms, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a The Reserve, a
    Wyoming limited liability company; MICHAEL SANTOS, a/k/a Sanctuary Bay,
    a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a The Reserve, a/k/a Kanantik, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a
    Bamboo Springs, a/k/a Eco Futures, a/k/a Eco Futures Development, a/k/a Eco
    Future Belize, a/k/a Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, a/k/a Buy Belize, a/k/a Buy
    International, a/k/a Buy Belize, LLC, (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and Bamboo Springs),
    a/k/a Buy International, Inc., (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Lagunal Palms, and Bamboo Springs), Individually
    and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc; AMERIDEBT,
    INCORPORATED; DEBTWORKS, INCORPORATED; PAMELA PUKKE, a/k/a
    Pamela Shuster; ATLANTIC INTERNATIONAL BANK, LTD, a company
    organized under the laws of Belize; ECO-FUTURES BELIZE LIMITED, d/b/a
    Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a California Corporation;
    SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC, a limited liability company organized under
    the laws of Belize,
    Defendants,
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    10
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215      Doc: 101          Filed: 11/01/2022   Pg: 11 of 45
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    No. 21-1591
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    v.
    GLOBAL PROPERTY ALLIANCE, INC., a California corporation, also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize, Sittee
    River Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International; SITTEE RIVER WILDLIFE
    RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, an
    entity organized under the laws of Belize; BUY BELIZE, LLC, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a
    Bamboo Springs, a California limited liability company; BUY INTERNATIONAL,
    INC., d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a
    Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California corporation;
    FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT INC., a California
    corporation; ECO FUTURES DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a
    Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a company organized under the laws of Belize;
    ECO-FUTURES BELIZE LIMITED, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize,
    d/b/a The Reserve, a California Corporation; POWER HAUS MARKETING, a
    California corporation,
    Defendants – Appellants,
    and
    11
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    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); PETER BAKER,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    LUKE CHADWICK, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize; ECOLOGICAL FOX, LLC, a Maryland limited liability
    company; BRANDI GREENFIELD, individually and as an officer or owner of
    Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco
    Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); BG MARKETING, LLC, an Oklahoma
    limited liability company; PRODIGY MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC, a Wyoming
    limited liability company; JOHN USHER, individually and as an officer or owner of
    Sittee River Wildlife Reserve (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, and The Reserve) and Eco-Futures Belize Limited (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve); ROD KAZAZI, individually
    and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo
    Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    FOUNDATION PARTNERS, f/k/a Red Crane Advisors, Inc., a California
    corporation; FRANK COSTANZO, a/k/a Frank Green, a/k/a Frank Peerless Green,
    a/k/a Frank Connelly, a/k/a Frank Connelly-Costanzo, individually and as officer or
    owner of Ecological Fox, LLC, Buy International, Inc. (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and
    Bamboo Springs), and Foundation Development Management, Inc.); BELIZE REAL
    ESTATE AFFILIATES, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker
    Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts
    and Nevis; EXOTIC INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a
    Coldwell Banker Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the
    laws of St. Kitts and Nevis; SANCTUARY BELIZE PROPERTY OWNERS’
    ASSOCIATION, d/b/a The Reserve Property Owners’ Association, a Texas non-
    profit corporation; ANGELA CHITTENDEN; BEACH BUNNY HOLDINGS,
    LLC, a California limited liability company; THE ESTATE OF JOHN PUKKE,
    a/k/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate of John Andris Pukke; JOHN
    VIPULIS; DEBORAH CONNELLY; NEWPORT LAND GROUP, LLC, a/k/a
    Laguna Palms, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a The Reserve, a
    Wyoming limited liability company; MICHAEL SANTOS, a/k/a Sanctuary Bay,
    a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a The Reserve, a/k/a Kanantik, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a
    12
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    Bamboo Springs, a/k/a Eco Futures, a/k/a Eco Futures Development, a/k/a Eco
    Future Belize, a/k/a Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, a/k/a Buy Belize, a/k/a Buy
    International, a/k/a Buy Belize, LLC, (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and Bamboo Springs),
    a/k/a Buy International, Inc., (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Lagunal Palms, and Bamboo Springs), Individually
    and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc; AMERIDEBT,
    INCORPORATED; DEBTWORKS, INCORPORATED; PAMELA PUKKE, a/k/a
    Pamela Shuster; ATLANTIC INTERNATIONAL BANK, LTD, a company
    organized under the laws of Belize; SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC, a limited
    liability company organized under the laws of Belize,
    Defendants,
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    No. 21-1592
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    13
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    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    and
    MARC-PHILIP FERZAN, of Ankura Consulting Group, LLC,
    Receiver – Appellee,
    v.
    THE ESTATE OF JOHN PUKKE, a/k/a The Estate of Janis Pukke, a/k/a The Estate
    of John Andris Pukke,
    Defendant – Appellant,
    and
    ANDRIS PUKKE, a/k/a Marc Romeo, a/k/a Andy Storm, individually and as an
    officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary
    Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); PETER BAKER,
    individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize);
    LUKE CHADWICK, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize; ECOLOGICAL FOX, LLC, a Maryland limited liability
    company; GLOBAL PROPERTY ALLIANCE, INC., a California corporation, also
    doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna
    Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures
    Belize, Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, Buy Belize, Buy International; SITTEE
    RIVER WILDLIFE RESERVE, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a
    The Reserve, an entity organized under the laws of Belize; BUY BELIZE, LLC,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik,
    d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a California limited liability company;
    BUY INTERNATIONAL, INC., d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a
    The Reserve, d/b/a Kanantik, d/b/a Laguna Palms, d/b/a Bamboo Springs, a
    California corporation; FOUNDATION DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT INC.,
    a California corporation; ECO FUTURES DEVELOPMENT, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay,
    d/b/a Sanctuary Belize, d/b/a The Reserve, a company organized under the laws of
    Belize; POWER HAUS MARKETING, a California corporation; BRANDI
    14
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    GREENFIELD, individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property Alliance,
    Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve,
    Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco Futures, Eco Futures Development,
    Eco Futures Belize); BG MARKETING, LLC, an Oklahoma limited liability
    company; PRODIGY MANAGEMENT GROUP, LLC, a Wyoming limited liability
    company; JOHN USHER, individually and as an officer or owner of Sittee River
    Wildlife Reserve (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, and The
    Reserve) and Eco-Futures Belize Limited (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, and The Reserve); ROD KAZAZI, individually and as an officer
    or owner of Global Property Alliance, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay,
    Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, Bamboo Springs, Eco
    Futures, Eco Futures Development, Eco Futures Belize); FOUNDATION
    PARTNERS, f/k/a Red Crane Advisors, Inc., a California corporation; FRANK
    COSTANZO, a/k/a Frank Green, a/k/a Frank Peerless Green, a/k/a Frank Connelly,
    a/k/a Frank Connelly-Costanzo, individually and as officer or owner of Ecological
    Fox, LLC, Buy International, Inc. (also doing business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary
    Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms, and Bamboo Springs), and
    Foundation Development Management, Inc.); BELIZE REAL ESTATE
    AFFILIATES, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Southern
    Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts and Nevis;
    EXOTIC INVESTOR, LLC, d/b/a Coldwell Banker Belize, d/b/a Coldwell Banker
    Southern Belize, a limited liability company organized under the laws of St. Kitts
    and Nevis; SANCTUARY BELIZE PROPERTY OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION, d/b/a
    The Reserve Property Owners’ Association, a Texas non-profit corporation;
    ANGELA CHITTENDEN; BEACH BUNNY HOLDINGS, LLC, a California
    limited liability company; JOHN VIPULIS; DEBORAH CONNELLY; NEWPORT
    LAND GROUP, LLC, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a Bamboo
    Springs, a/k/a The Reserve, a Wyoming limited liability company; MICHAEL
    SANTOS, a/k/a Sanctuary Bay, a/k/a Sanctuary Belize, a/k/a The Reserve, a/k/a
    Kanantik, a/k/a Laguna Palms, a/k/a Bamboo Springs, a/k/a Eco Futures, a/k/a Eco
    Futures Development, a/k/a Eco Future Belize, a/k/a Sittee River Wildlife Reserve,
    a/k/a Buy Belize, a/k/a Buy International, a/k/a Buy Belize, LLC, (also doing
    business as Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Laguna Palms,
    and Bamboo Springs), a/k/a Buy International, Inc., (also doing business as
    Sanctuary Bay, Sanctuary Belize, The Reserve, Kanantik, Lagunal Palms, and
    Bamboo Springs), Individually and as an officer or owner of Global Property
    Alliance,       Inc;     AMERIDEBT,        INCORPORATED;            DEBTWORKS,
    INCORPORATED; PAMELA PUKKE, a/k/a Pamela Shuster; ATLANTIC
    INTERNATIONAL BANK, LTD, a company organized under the laws of Belize;
    ECO-FUTURES BELIZE LIMITED, d/b/a Sanctuary Bay, d/b/a Sanctuary Belize,
    d/b/a The Reserve, a California Corporation; SOUTHERN BELIZE REALTY, LLC,
    a limited liability company organized under the laws of Belize,
    15
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    Defendants,
    CROSS-FREDERICK ASSOCIATES, LLC; FOLEY & LARDNER LLP,
    Respondents,
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Creditor,
    JERRY BROWN; STEPHANIE BROWN; DELANEY CARLSON; THERESA
    EDELEN; BILL EWING; CHERYL EWING; CRAIG HIBBERT; TRISHA
    HIBBERT; LISA MULVANIA; RICHARD MULVANIA; CINDY REEVES;
    DAVID REEVES; PENNY SCRUTCHIN; THOM SCRUTCHIN; CLIFF SMITH;
    TERRI SMITH; PHILLIP WATFORD; ANGELA WATFORD; THE
    HAMPSHIRE GENERATIONAL FUND LLC; DAVID PORTMAN; HARVEY
    SCHULTZ; STEVEN M. SCHULTZ; JONATHAN B. SCHULTZ; JOHN A.
    SARACENO,
    Intervenors,
    CHAPTER 11 TRUSTEE,
    Trustee.
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Peter J. Messitte, Senior District Judge. (1:18-cv-03309-PJM)
    Argued: September 13, 2022                                  Decided: November 1, 2022
    Before WILKINSON, Circuit Judge, and MOTZ and KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed in part and vacated and remanded in part by published opinion. Judge Wilkinson
    wrote the majority opinion, in which Senior Judge Motz and Senior Judge Keenan joined.
    ARGUED: Neil Harris Koslowe, POTOMAC LAW GROUP PLLC, Washington, D.C.,
    for Appellants.   Theodore (Jack) Metzler, FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION,
    Washington, D.C.; Gary Owen Caris, BARNES & THORNBURG, LLP, Los Angeles,
    16
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    California, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: John B. Williams, WILLIAMS LOPATTO PLLC,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellants. James Reilly Dolan, Acting General Counsel, Joel
    Marcus, Deputy General Counsel, FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION, Washington,
    D.C., for Appellee Federal Trade Commission. Janet Dean Gertz, BARNES &
    THORNBURG, LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Appellee Marc-Philip Ferzan of Ankura
    Consulting Group, LLC, Receiver.
    17
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    WILKINSON, Circuit Judge:
    Andris Pukke and other appellants sought to develop thousands of acres of land in
    Belize, which they marketed as a luxury resort called “Sanctuary Belize.” In their sales-
    pitch to U.S. consumers, many promises were made but not kept. In 2018, the FTC shut
    this down, calling Sanctuary Belize a “scam,” and alleging violations of the Federal Trade
    Commission Act and the Telemarketing Sales Rule for making misrepresentations to
    consumers. The FTC also brought contempt charges against Pukke stemming from past
    judgments against him. After an extensive bench trial, the district court found ample
    evidence of violative and contumacious conduct, ultimately ruling in the FTC’s favor.
    Pukke and others now appeal, raising a host of issues. None of their arguments have legal
    merit, nor can they overcome the evidence against them. We thus affirm in large part, the
    one exception being vacating the equitable monetary judgments in accordance with the
    Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management, LLC v. Federal Trade
    Commission, 
    141 S. Ct. 1341
    , 1344 (2021) (holding that the FTC has no authority to seek
    monetary relief under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act).
    I.
    A.
    In 2003, Andris Pukke and Peter Baker began developing land in the Central
    American country of Belize. In re Sanctuary Belize Litig., 
    482 F. Supp. 3d 373
    , 389 (D.
    Md. 2020). With the help of John Usher, a Belize native, they began selling lots in 2005
    with the intent to convert this tropical area into a luxury resort for American vacationers,
    calling the project, among other names, Sanctuary Belize. Id. at 390. The individuals and
    18
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    corporate entities that developed and sold these real estate lots were collectively referred
    to as Sanctuary Belize Enterprise (SBE). Id. at 385 n.1.
    Pukke was effectively the CEO of the project and led the sales and marketing aspects
    of SBE. In 2009, Pukke began to “pursue[] an aggressive advertising campaign throughout
    the United States, using various media, including enthusiastic promotions on” television
    and websites. Id. at 390. Potential consumers were directed to a website where they could
    submit contact information. They would then be called by telemarketers, who had been
    coached to “create a sense of urgency and a fear of loss on the part of prospective
    purchasers, techniques somewhat reminiscent of those used by Jordan Belfort, aka the
    ‘Wolf of Wall Street.’” Id. at 390–91.
    Many consumers elected to tour Sanctuary Belize in person, but they had to
    purchase their own airfare and an all-inclusive five-day tour for $799 per person or $999
    per couple. Some consumers purchased a right of first refusal on particular lots for between
    $2,000 and $10,000. Others agreed to purchase lots sight unseen. Id. at 391–92.
    Salespersons encouraged consumers to purchase a second lot on the representation that
    they could “easily sell the first lot and use the proceeds of that sale to build a house on the
    second lot.” Id. at 392. All told, over 1,000 lots have been sold, some more than once. Id.
    at 390.
    Around 2011, as Sanctuary Belize continued to promote its lots, Pukke was involved
    in a criminal proceeding in which he pled guilty to obstruction of justice based on
    concealment and false statements to the FTC. The court sentenced Pukke to 18 months in
    prison. Id. at 395. Despite the injunctions and supervised release conditions imposed on
    19
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    him, Pukke continued to promote SBE from the time of his release through 2018, acting as
    the “mastermind” and “Chief Executive Office[r] in control of the entire Sanctuary Belize
    operation.” Id. at 396, 467. Nonetheless, SBE represented to consumers that Pukke had no
    meaningful involvement in the development, disguising Pukke’s identity behind aliases
    such as “Marc Romeo” and “Andy Storm.” Id. at 396.
    SBE’s development came to an end in 2018 when the Federal Trade Commission
    intervened. The FTC filed a complaint under Section 13(b) of the Federal Trade
    Commission Act (FTC Act), 
    15 U.S.C. § 53
    (b), and the Telemarketing and Consumer
    Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act, 
    15 U.S.C. §§ 6101-6108
    , against Andris Pukke, Peter
    Baker, John Usher, and other entities involved in SBE. The FTC alleged that SBE made
    false and misleading representations in the sale of lots in violation of Section 5(a) of the
    FTC Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 45
    (a), and the Telemarketing Sales Rule (TSR), 
    16 C.F.R. § 310.3
    .
    The FTC also filed three motions for civil contempt: one against Pukke, Baker, and
    Usher for their deceptive telemarketing practices in violation of an earlier final order, J.A.
    389, another against Pukke, Baker, and Usher for failing to turn over the SBE land, J.A.
    395, and one against Pukke for violating a past stipulated order for conditional release, J.A.
    421. The district court consolidated the above matters into the current case.
    B.
    The district court, with Judge Peter J. Messitte presiding, held a multiweek
    evidentiary hearing on the FTC’s request for a preliminary injunction, which it granted.
    The court then held a nearly three-week bench trial on the FTC’s claims under the FTC
    Act and TSR, and on the FTC’s three contempt motions. The court then issued a detailed
    20
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    opinion of over one-hundred pages in which it set forth its comprehensive findings. The
    court found that SBE had violated the FTC Act and TSR, and it held Pukke and others in
    contempt.
    1.
    Regarding SBE’s misrepresentation, the court found that Pukke and his team had
    committed five of the six alleged FTC Act and TSR violations. First, Sanctuary Belize lied
    to consumers by telling them the development carried “no debt,” and that meant when they
    bought land in Sanctuary Belize, “not a penny goes to paying a loan—it goes right into the
    progress of the development.” Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 404–06. Many
    consumers understood “no debt” to mean Sanctuary Belize was a safe investment. In
    reality, the development carried debt and was riskier than promised. The court found that
    the “fundamental glaring fact was and is that Pukke” and his “minions consistently put out
    this no debt/low risk representation as a marketing strategy . . . even as the development in
    fact took on . . . not insignificant amounts of debt.” Id. at 407.
    Second, despite promising consumers that “every dollar the developer collected
    from the sales of lots would go back into the development,” SBE used only 14% of sales
    revenue for development. “Quite shockingly,” the court found “incontrovertible evidence
    that Pukke diverted enormous sums of sales revenue away from the development, i.e., some
    $18 million or about 12.8% of the total sales revenue, for his own benefit and that of his
    friends and family.” Id. at 408–09.
    Third, consumers were assured “that the completed development would boast
    extraordinary amenities comparable to those of a small American city.” To the contrary,
    21
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    “most of these luxury amenities either do not exist, do not exist as promised or have never
    been seriously contemplated to exist at all outside of marketing materials and verbal
    promises.” Id. at 411–13.
    Fourth, consumers were promised that the development would be completed within
    two to five years, despite the fact that SBE never had “sufficient funds to finish the
    development, luxury amenities included, in the time promised.” Id. at 419. In fact,
    “Sanctuary Belize could never be completed as promised even assuming revenue for the
    next five years would be at a historic high.” Id. At trial, the FTC showed that a substantial
    number of consumers, many of whom were retired individuals, relied on this promise when
    deciding whether to purchase. Id. at 420–21.
    Fifth, while salespersons claimed there was a strong resale market for Sanctuary
    Belize lots, SBE employees were “actively working to undermine and impede resales” by
    preventing owners from reselling their lots before the developer sold all the lots. Id. at 423–
    24. The court found that Sanctuary Belize developers “knew that lot owners were having
    extreme difficulty reselling their lots” and yet, “without any basis for saying so, they made
    the representation that there was or would be a ‘robust’ resale market.” Id. at 424.
    Last, the court found that it was an “overarching falsehood that Pukke had no
    meaningful involvement in Sanctuary             Belize.” Id. at 401. This “crowning
    misrepresentation,” id. at 388, misled consumers because “Pukke had been found guilty of
    two felonies” that involved “deception of trusting consumers,” id. at 425. SBE knew this
    would scare away purchasers if Pukke’s involvement were discovered.
    22
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    The court found these misrepresentations violated the FTC Act and the
    Telemarketing Sales Rule. The court entered permanent injunctions against each defendant
    under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act. For Pukke, the court found a “cognizable danger of
    recurring violation” due to past “machinations.” Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 467.
    Thus, in its amended final order, the court permanently enjoined Pukke from engaging in
    any real estate ventures, from any involvement in telemarketing, and from making material
    misrepresentations in connection with the sale of any goods or services. J.A. 1075–77. The
    court permanently enjoined Baker and Usher from telemarketing and making material
    misrepresentations as well. Id.
    Also under Section 13(b), the court entered an equitable monetary judgment of
    $120.2 million against defendants. J.A. 1077 (equitable monetary judgments, as used by
    the district court, included remedies such as restitution and disgorgement of ill-gotten
    gains, see AMG Cap. Mgmt., 141 S. Ct. at 1344). The court found that SBE’s material
    misrepresentations led them to rake in $145 million in consumer payments for lots. After
    subtracting expenditures for buybacks and Belizean taxes, the court calculated the total
    harm to consumers at $120.2 million. Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 474–75. To
    effectuate its equitable relief, the court appointed a receiver. J.A. 1082–85.
    2.
    Regarding the contempt motions, the court found Pukke, Baker, and Usher in
    contempt of permanent injunctions entered in an earlier case. In 2003, Pukke helped found
    a company called AmeriDebt, which turned out to be a credit counseling scam. Sanctuary
    Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 393; see F.T.C. v. Ameridebt, Inc., 
    373 F. Supp. 2d 558
    , 561 (D.
    23
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    45 Md. 2005
    ) (detailing that AmeriDebt “operated as a common enterprise to deceive
    consumers into paying for high-cost debt management plans”). Rather than risk trial for his
    malfeasance, Pukke agreed to a stipulated final judgment. This judgment required him to
    pay $172 million in restitution to the FTC. J.A. 1131. All but $35 million was suspended
    on the condition that Pukke “cooperate fully” with the FTC. J.A. 1131–36. The judgment
    also permanently enjoined Pukke from making false representations in connection with the
    telemarketing of any good or service. J.A. 1130–31.
    Pukke and Baker, who was also involved with AmeriDebt, were ordered to turn over
    all assets to a receiver. J.A. 1140–45. Rather than cooperate, however, they conspired to
    hide their assets. As a result, in 2007, Pukke and Baker were held in contempt and
    incarcerated in order to coerce compliance with the court’s AmeriDebt orders. Sanctuary
    Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 394. After roughly six weeks in custody, Pukke and Baker were
    released on the condition that they turn over their assets. Id.; J.A. 1160–65. Around this
    time, John Vipulis offered to pay the receiver $4.5 million which would go toward the $35
    million Pukke owed the FTC. As such, the payment was considered a loan to Pukke and
    the court stipulated that Pukke must fully repay the FTC before he repaid Vipulis. J.A.
    1162–63. As all this transpired, Pukke and Baker were able to maintain their land holdings
    in Belize, ostensibly by terminating their rights in the land via a company run by John
    Usher. Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 394.
    Because Pukke and Baker were under AmeriDebt’s permanent injunction
    prohibiting them from making false representations in telemarketing, when the FTC
    brought its case against Sanctuary Belize, it also brought three contempt motions against
    24
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    Pukke and his associates. First, the FTC motioned that the court hold Pukke and others in
    contempt of the AmeriDebt judgment when they committed telemarketing violations.
    Second, the FTC asserted that Pukke and others should be held in contempt for not turning
    over their holdings in the Sanctuary Belize land. And third, the FTC asked the court to hold
    Pukke in contempt for repaying the Vipulis loan before fully satisfying his debt to the FTC.
    The court agreed with the FTC on the first and third motions. Sanctuary Belize, 482
    F. Supp. 3d at 484–85; J.A. 1050–53. The court found that Pukke violated the AmeriDebt
    permanent injunction that prohibited Pukke and his accomplices from “making, or causing
    or assisting others to make, expressly or by implication, any false or misleading
    representation.” J.A. 1130. By engaging in fraudulent telemarketing, Pukke violated the
    AmeriDebt order. And because this order extended to Pukke’s “affiliates,” Baker and Usher
    were held in contempt as well. Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 476.
    The court ordered that Pukke, Baker, and Usher pay the FTC $120.2 million, “which
    represent[ed] the total consumer loss their contumacious conduct caused,” and it
    “represent[ed] consumer loss caused by their violation of the Telemarketing Order [from
    AmeriDebt], which prohibited any false or misleading representation in connection with
    ‘telemarketing.’” J.A. 1052. In its memorandum opinion from January 12, 2021, the district
    court explained that “the harm” from the “contumacious conduct is indeed the same as the
    harm caused by the FTC Act violations, in the present case $120.2 million.” J.A. 1017–18.
    The court also held Pukke in contempt for repaying the Vipulis loan before he paid
    the FTC. The court found that Pukke did not fully cooperate and now owed the full $172
    million of the AmeriDebt judgment to the FTC rather than the suspended amount of $35
    25
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    million. J.A. 1051–52; Sanctuary Belize Litig., 482 F. Supp. 3d at 481–84. The court
    ordered that “Pukke must account for the difference between the $4.26 million that Pukke”
    diverted from Sanctuary Belize to repay Vipulis and the “$4.112 million Vipulis paid the
    FTC, approximately $148,000—the exact number to be determined after an accounting.”
    Id. at 484.
    3.
    Last, the district court entered default judgments against John Usher and several
    corporations. J.A. 1022–49. Despite being properly served, these parties never made an
    appearance in the proceedings. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 459–66. The
    default judgments contained permanent injunctions prohibiting their involvement in real
    estate ventures, telemarketing, and misrepresentations in future sales. J.A. 1028–29. The
    court also entered an equitable monetary judgment against the defaulted parties to the tune
    of $120.2 million. J.A. 1030.
    Pukke, Baker, Usher, and some of the defaulted corporations timely appealed. J.A.
    1105–12. They now level multiple challenges against the following: (1) the $120.2 million
    monetary judgment and permanent injunctions entered for their FTC Act and TSR
    violations; (2) the telemarketing contempt judgment of $120.2 million; (3) Pukke’s second
    contempt judgment arising from the Vipulis payment; and (4) the default judgments
    entered against Usher and corporations.
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    II.
    Pukke and other appellants advance a mixed bag of factual and legal challenges to
    the contempt orders, equitable monetary judgments, permanent injunctions, and default
    judgments. We consider each in turn.
    A.
    We address the contempt orders first. We review a district court’s civil contempt
    order for abuse of discretion. United v. Ali, 
    874 F.3d 825
    , 829 (4th Cir. 2017). Additionally,
    when it comes to contempt orders, “our review is even more deferential because district
    courts are in the best position to interpret their own orders.” JTH Tax, Inc. v. H & R Block
    E. Tax Servs., Inc., 
    359 F.3d 699
    , 705 (4th Cir. 2004).
    To establish civil contempt, the FTC needed to prove by clear and convincing
    evidence “(1) the existence of a valid decree of which the alleged contemnor had actual or
    constructive knowledge; (2) that the decree was in the movant’s favor; (3) that the alleged
    contemnor by its conduct violated the terms of the decree, and had knowledge (at least
    constructive knowledge) of such violations; and (4) that the movant suffered harm as a
    result.” De Simone v. VSL Pharms., Inc., 
    36 F.4th 518
    , 529 (4th Cir. 2022) (quoting
    Ashcraft v. Conoco, Inc., 
    218 F.3d 288
    , 301 (4th Cir. 2000)).
    The district court found that these four elements were met in two of the three
    contempt motions brought by the FTC. The court held Pukke in contempt for not
    cooperating with the FTC and repaying the Vipulis loan before he repaid the FTC.
    Additionally, the court held Pukke, Baker, and Usher in contempt for making
    misrepresentations in telemarketing, a direct violation of the AmeriDebt permanent
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    injunction. Both of these findings are supported by an abundance of evidence and show no
    hint of an abuse of discretion.
    1.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that all four elements were
    proven regarding the Vipulis contempt motion and Pukke’s noncooperation with the FTC.
    Pukke knew of the decrees against him because he affirmatively agreed to them twice—
    once in his stipulated final judgment and again in his conditional release. To avoid trial in
    the AmeriDebt case, Pukke agreed to a judgment against him for $172 million. He was
    made well-aware that the full amount would be suspended, and he would only pay $35
    million if he fully cooperated with the FTC. Pukke again affirmatively agreed to cooperate
    with the FTC in his stipulations for conditional release from confinement. There, he agreed
    that the payment of $4.5 million he received from John Vipulis was considered a loan and
    that, to fully cooperate, Pukke must repay the FTC before repaying Vipulis. Pukke thus
    knew of the conditions the law placed upon him. Additionally, regarding the second prong,
    these conditions were certainly in the FTC’s favor for they ensured that the Commission
    would receive Pukke’s compliance so that it could compensate his victims.
    Pukke indisputably violated the terms of the decrees for the record “conclusively
    establish[es] the fact of Pukke’s non-cooperation with the FTC and trigger[s] the $172
    million judgment.” Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 483. The district court explained
    that “Pukke’s non-cooperation with the FTC is emphatically underscored by the fact that,
    following entry of the Stipulated Final Judgment, he was charged with, and in this Court,
    pled guilty to . . . obstruction of justice for concealing assets in AmeriDebt as well as in a
    28
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    related bankruptcy case.” Id. Not only did Pukke knowingly repay Vipulis prior to repaying
    the FTC, but he also knowingly pled guilty to obstruction of justice, thereby violating the
    conditions from the AmeriDebt judgment and his conditional release.
    The FTC suffered harm as a result of these actions for it was deprived the
    cooperation and funds needed to remedy Pukke’s past wrongs in AmeriDebt. Thus, the
    district court properly found each prong of the civil contempt standard met. Indeed, with
    evidence as conclusive as this, the district court came nowhere close to abusing its
    discretion by holding Pukke in contempt.
    Pukke’s attempts to dispute this holding all fall short. Pukke asserts the recent
    Supreme Court case AMG Capital Management, LLC v. Federal Trade Commission, 
    141 S. Ct. 1341
    , 1344 (2021), which held that the FTC has no authority to seek monetary relief
    under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act, renders the $172 million AmeriDebt judgment
    unlawful. With this argument, Pukke tries to drag us into relitigating the merits of a case
    made final nearly twenty years ago.
    This flies in the face of the well-established rule that “appeal from a postjudgment
    order does not revive a lost opportunity to appeal the judgment.” 15B Wright & Miller,
    Federal Practice and Procedure § 3916 (2d ed. 1992). As such, the merits of the
    AmeriDebt decision are not before us, but enforcement of the AmeriDebt judgment is. And
    there is “no question” that courts “have inherent power to enforce compliance with their
    lawful orders through civil contempt.” Shillitani v. United States, 
    384 U.S. 364
    , 370 (1966);
    Taggart v. Lorenzen, 
    139 S. Ct. 1795
    , 1801 (2019); Rainbow Sch., Inc. v. Rainbow Early
    Educ. Holding LLC, 
    887 F.3d 610
    , 617 (4th Cir. 2018). Since the Founding, it has been
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    understood that courts possess contempt powers to guard against violations of their own
    orders. Green v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 165
    , 169–70 (1958) (explaining that under the
    Judiciary Act of 1789, federal courts were understood to be able to exercise the English
    common law tradition of holding parties in contempt for disobeying the court); see also
    Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, § 17, 
    1 Stat. 73
    , 83 (1789) (granting courts broad contempt
    power).
    The district court was thus acting well within its rights to utilize the contempt power
    to effectuate its AmeriDebt judgments. Without the ability to enforce its own orders, the
    judicial system becomes all bark and no bite. It is a principle “as ancient as the laws
    themselves” that “laws without a competent authority to secure their administration from
    disobedience and contempt would be vain and nugatory.” W. Blackstone, 4 Commentaries
    on the Laws of England 286 (1769). Holding parties in contempt is a power that “cannot
    be dispensed with in a Court, because [it is] necessary to the exercise of all others.” United
    States v. Hudson, 
    11 U.S. 32
    , 34 (1812).
    A sense of balance is important here. Contempt is an awesome and potentially
    oppressive power, a sanction not to be lightly imposed. Cooke v. United States, 
    267 U.S. 517
    , 539 (1925) (emphasizing that the exercise of the contempt power “is a delicate one,
    and care is needed to avoid arbitrary or oppressive conclusions”). But its importance is
    evident in a case like this. If parties can defy injunctions with impunity over the span of
    nearly two decades, they can deploy the very means of their misdeeds to perpetual ends.
    Here, Pukke has repeatedly harmed and deceived people despite direct injunctions
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    forbidding these very acts. Had Pukke obeyed the injunctions, he never would have
    swindled Sanctuary Belize consumers out of millions of dollars.
    Furthermore, even if by some stretch of the imagination Pukke convinced us to
    relitigate a closed case, his arguments still falter. He agreed to “waive all rights to seek
    judicial review or otherwise challenge or contest the validity of [the] Order” when he
    consented to the AmeriDebt final judgment. J.A. 1125. When a defendant willingly enters
    a stipulated judgment, he is given the benefit of certainty—over the uncertainty of trial—
    in exchange for not challenging the agreement in the future. Thus, the FTC received the
    guarantee that the judgment would be settled and final. To upset that arrangement now,
    nearly twenty years later, would wholly undermine the waiver. Pukke waived his ability to
    challenge this judgment and we will not reopen that challenge for him.
    The district court was correct to hold Pukke in contempt for not cooperating with
    the FTC as he had explicitly pledged to do. For the foregoing reasons, its holding is hereby
    affirmed.
    2.
    The district court likewise did not abuse its discretion in holding Pukke, Baker, and
    Usher in contempt for their telemarketing misrepresentations in violation of the AmeriDebt
    permanent injunction. Once again, all four elements were met here. Pukke had knowledge
    of the injunctions when he willingly entered a stipulated judgment, the injunctions were in
    the FTC’s favor, Pukke knowingly flouted these prohibitions and masterminded a
    telemarketing scam, and this harmed the FTC’s ability to compensate the victims of current
    and past fraud.
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    The district court found ample proof that Pukke misled consumers with multiple
    misrepresentations. Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 401–29. The district court
    meticulously recounted those violations of the FTC Act and TSR and found that Pukke,
    Baker, and Usher had engaged in at least six instances of unlawful telemarketing
    misrepresentations, including hiding Pukke’s involvement in SBE from consumers,
    knowing his unsavory character would warn them away. It is clear that Pukke and his
    comrades were aware of their contumacious conduct for they went to some lengths to
    conceal it.
    Pukke and Baker—as Usher has since defaulted—insist that the court cannot impose
    the $120.2 million judgment against them as part of a telemarketing contempt order
    because the district court failed to make findings as to how it calculated that amount. We
    disagree with this argument.
    Because the contempt motions were consolidated with the Sanctuary Belize case,
    the district court presided over both, giving it a precise idea of the harm to consumers
    caused by the violations of the telemarketing injunction. Upon hearing all the evidence
    presented at the bench trial, and after evaluating how the numerous falsehoods affected
    consumers, the court concluded that Pukke’s telemarketing misrepresentations had led to
    SBE obtaining $145 million in consumer payments. Id. at 474. Then when it came time to
    rule on the contempt motions, the district court explained that the $120.2 million
    represented “the total consumer loss their contumacious conduct caused,” specifically the
    loss caused by their “violation of the Telemarketing Order” from AmeriDebt. J.A. 1052.
    The district court reiterated that “the harm” from the “contumacious conduct is indeed the
    32
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    same as the harm caused by” the FTC Act violations. J.A. 1017–18 (emphasis added).
    Contrary to the argument that no findings were made to justify the $120.2 million amount,
    the judge carefully justified his holding. Thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion
    in holding Pukke, Baker, and Usher in contempt, and for the foregoing reasons we affirm.
    B.
    Next, we consider the judgments entered for violations of the Telemarketing Sales
    Rule and Federal Trade Commission Act. We review a judgment from a bench trial under
    a mixed standard of review—factual findings are examined for clear error and conclusions
    of law are reviewed de novo. Sing Fuels Pte Ltd. v. M/V Lila Shanghai, 
    39 F.4th 263
    , 270–
    71 (4th Cir. 2022). Importantly, “we will ‘not disturb the district court’s factual findings if
    they are plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety.’” Id. at 271 (quoting Heyer
    v. U.S. Bureau of Prisons, 
    984 F.3d 347
    , 355 (4th Cir. 2021)).
    Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act bars “unfair or deceptive acts or
    practices in or affecting commerce.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 45
    (a). A deceptive act or practice has
    been defined as “[1] a representation, omission, or practice that [2] is likely to mislead
    consumers acting reasonably under the circumstances, and [3], the representation,
    omission, or practice is material.” In re Cliffdale Assocs., Inc., 
    103 F.T.C. 110
    , 165 (1984).
    Most of our sister circuits have used this test for FTC Act liability. See Tomasella v. Nestle
    USA, Inc., 
    962 F.3d 60
    , 78 (1st Cir. 2020); F.T.C. v. Verity Int’l, Ltd., 
    443 F.3d 48
    , 63 (2d
    Cir. 2006); F.T.C. v. E.M.A. Nationwide, Inc., 
    767 F.3d 611
    , 630–31 (6th Cir. 2014); F.T.C.
    v. Bay Area Bus. Council, Inc., 
    423 F.3d 627
    , 635 (7th Cir. 2005); F.T.C. v. Freecom
    Commc’ns, Inc., 
    401 F.3d 1192
    , 1203 (10th Cir. 2005) F.T.C. v. On Point Cap. Partners
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    LLC, 
    17 F.4th 1066
    , 1079 (11th Cir. 2021); Novartis Corp. v. F.T.C., 
    223 F.3d 783
    , 786
    (D.C. Cir. 2000).
    Likewise, the Telemarketing Sales Rule prohibits deceptive acts or practices that
    “misrepresent[], directly or by implication . . . [a]ny material aspect of the performance,
    efficacy, nature, or central characteristics of goods or services that are the subject of a sales
    offer.” 
    16 C.F.R. § 310.3
    (a)(2)(iii). The TSR also makes it a violation to “provide
    substantial assistance or support to any seller or telemarketer when that person knows or
    consciously avoids knowing that the seller or telemarketer is engaged in” a deceptive act
    or practice. 
    16 C.F.R. § 310.3
    (b). Whereas the FTC Act prohibits unfair methods of
    competition “in or affecting commerce,” 
    15 U.S.C. § 45
    (a)(1), the TSR more narrowly
    applies to “purchases of goods or services,” 
    15 U.S.C. § 6106
    (4). Both the TSR and the
    FTC Act bear the same standards for individual liability. 
    15 U.S.C. § 6102
    (c); 15 U.S.C.
    § 57a(d)(3).
    Applying the law to these facts, it is clear that Pukke and SBE violated the FTC Act
    and TSR. The court found that SBE, under the direction of Pukke, made half a dozen
    material misrepresentations that misled consumers. These misrepresentations included the
    lie that Sanctuary Belize carried no debt, the lie that every dollar spent was reinvested in
    the property (when actually Pukke stole roughly $18 million from the project), the false
    promise that the completed project would have many luxury amenities, the false promise
    that the project would be completed within two to five years, the lie that SBE boasted a
    healthy resale market, and the “crowning deception” that Pukke was not involved in SBE.
    Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 401–29.
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    The findings made by the district court show that Pukke’s Belizean business venture
    was dishonest to the core. The district court correctly surmised that this sort of deception
    lies at the heart of what the FTC is empowered to seek out and stop.
    Though he tries unconvincingly to refute these findings, Pukke’s main contention is
    that the court was wrong to grant $120.2 million in equitable monetary relief against him
    under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act. Section 13 allows the FTC to sue in federal district
    court when “the Commission has reason to believe (1) that any person, partnership, or
    corporation is violating, or is about to violate, any provision of law enforced by the Federal
    Trade Commission.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 53
    (b). Although the FTC may seek injunctive relief under
    Section 13, the Supreme Court held in AMG Capital that it does not authorize the FTC to
    seek, or a court to award, “equitable monetary relief such as restitution or disgorgement.”
    AMG Cap. Mgmt., 141 S. Ct. at 1344.
    Pukke latches onto this last point, claiming that the judgment in the Sanctuary Belize
    case must be thrown out under AMG Capital. The Supreme Court’s holding in AMG does
    indeed render invalid the $120.2 million equitable monetary judgment, at least to the extent
    that judgment rests on Section 13(b). See AMG Cap. Mgmt., 141 S. Ct. at 1344. Vacating
    that judgment does not help Pukke, however, because he already has a $120.2 million
    judgment against him for contempt of the telemarketing injunction, and the FTC has
    conceded that it is not seeking $240.4 million against Pukke. Oral Argument at 26:20;
    Appellee’s Response Brief at 15 (“[B]ecause of the contempt sanction, AMG would not
    change the bottom line,” for “if the Court sustains the contempt sanction, it need not even
    reach the effect of AMG on the overlapping judgments.”).
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    Furthermore, the judgment entered under Section 13(b) included permanent
    injunctions and appointed a receiver. Pukke is wrong to the extent he argues that AMG
    requires us to reverse those injunctions, for AMG did not impair courts’ ability to enter
    injunctive relief under Section 13(b). See AMG Cap. Mgmt., 141 S. Ct. at 1349 (explaining
    that “the Commission may use § 13(b) to obtain injunctive relief” and this “produces a
    coherent enforcement scheme”). In short, AMG does not undercut the injunctive relief
    entered under Section 13(b), and the $120.2 million order can be upheld under the contempt
    judgment, so AMG does not in fact change the bottom line. We therefore affirm in part and
    vacate in part the court’s FTC Act and TSR rulings.
    C.
    We turn next to the default judgments. Here, the district court entered default
    judgments against Usher and several corporate defendants. The defaulted parties filed a
    Rule 60(b)(5) motion to set aside the default judgments, which the district court denied
    because of a failure to comply with local rules. We now “review the district court’s ruling
    on a 60(b) motion for abuse of discretion,” but we note that “an appeal from denial of Rule
    60(b) relief does not bring up the underlying judgment for review.” Aikens v. Ingram, 
    652 F.3d 496
    , 501 (4th Cir. 2011) (quoting Browder v. Dir., Dep’t of Corrections of Ill., 
    434 U.S. 257
    , 263 n. 7 (1978)). In addition, the “disposition of motions made under Rules 55(c)
    and 60(b) is a matter which lies largely within the discretion of the trial judge and his action
    is not lightly to be disturbed by an appellate court.” Consol. Masonry & Fireproofing, Inc.
    v. Wagman Constr. Corp., 
    383 F.2d 249
    , 251 (4th Cir. 1967).
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    Here, Usher was notified multiple times about the ongoing proceedings against him:
    the FTC mailed him the original complaint and summons, called his counsel, sent him a
    copy of the FTC’s court filing, and sent him the order directing default judgment against
    him. J.A. 967. Usher’s counsel confirmed receipt and told the FTC that Usher was aware
    of the proceedings. Yet, “Usher never appeared.” 
    Id.
    As for the corporate defendants, they similarly failed to make an appearance. The
    corporations believed that counsel for Pukke and Baker would also represent the
    corporations. Pukke and Baker, however, proceeded pro se after they ran out of funds to
    pay for legal counsel. Once Pukke and Baker were no longer represented by counsel, the
    corporations could not claim to be represented by them, for it is well-established that
    corporations must “appear in federal courts only through licensed counsel.” Rowland v.
    Cal. Men’s Colony, Unit II Men’s Advisory Council, 
    506 U.S. 194
    , 195 (1993). Despite
    knowledge of their lack of representation, the corporations failed to make an appearance
    after they were duly served.
    It is undeniable that default judgments are warranted “against defendants who failed
    to appear or participate in the proceedings.” Chafin v. Chafin, 
    568 U.S. 165
    , 175 (2013).
    This is a clear-cut case for default judgment, and the court conscientiously laid out the
    evidence supporting the same. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 459–66.
    Generally, denial of “Rule 60(b) relief ‘does not bring up the underlying judgment
    for review.’” Banister v. Davis, 
    140 S. Ct. 1698
    , 1710 (2020) (quoting Browder, 
    434 U.S. at
    263 n.7). But while the “defendant, by his default, admits the plaintiff’s well-pleaded
    allegations of fact,” a defaulting defendant “is not held . . . to admit conclusions of law.”
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    Ryan v. Homecomings Fin. Network, 
    253 F.3d 778
    , 780 (4th Cir. 2001) (quoting
    Nishimatsu Constr. Co., Ltd. v. Houston Nat’l Bank, 
    515 F.2d 1200
    , 1206 (5th Cir. 1975)).
    Usher and the corporate defendants now assert that the $120.2 million judgment
    against them must be thrown out under AMG Capital. As noted, AMG requires vacating
    the $120.2 million equitable monetary judgment, but the default judgments are upheld
    because the district court did not abuse its discretion and AMG does not affect the injunctive
    relief granted in each default judgment. See J.A. 1028–29.
    III.
    Alongside the primary issues above, Pukke and his fellow appellants raise a host of
    other challenges. All are lacking in merit.
    A.
    Pukke contends that the Telemarketing Sales Rule does not apply to selling real
    estate in Sanctuary Belize because the TSR only prohibits misrepresentations in the sale of
    “goods or services.” 
    16 C.F.R. § 310.3
    . This argument, however, ignores everything that
    SBE was promising its consumers. It is generally true that the sale of real estate, of itself,
    does not constitute a good or service. But here Sanctuary Belize’s sales pitch inextricably
    linked the lots to many promised services and amenities when salespersons marketed the
    real estate as part of a luxury resort. That is, the services and amenities to be provided were
    fundamental to the telemarketing scheme.
    The district court found that SBE had promised a range of basic amenities, such as
    “paved roads, fresh drinking water, wastewater management, electrical service, a stable
    canal system, and security.” Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 411–12. Most
    38
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    importantly, SBE advertised many luxury amenities, such as a hospital, medical center,
    “world class” marina, casino, golf course, and an airport, which all certainly count as
    promises of goods or services intertwined with the sale of real estate. Id. at 412. Thus,
    consumers were purchasing lots in Sanctuary Belize with the expectation that these parcels
    of real estate would come with various amenities. When the sale of real estate is so closely
    tied to promises of goods and services, the TSR is properly implicated, and the district
    court did not err in its analysis.
    B.
    Pukke also challenges the district court’s decision to appoint a receiver. The court
    appointed a receiver to effectuate its orders in the Sanctuary Belize case as it would need
    an entity to manage the assets turned over by defendants. The receiver was charged with
    “tak[ing] exclusive control, custody, and possession” of all assets held by defendants in
    connection with Sanctuary Belize, to “[c]onserve, hold, manage, and prevent the loss” of
    these assets, and then liquidate those assets to periodically disburse money to the FTC and
    lot purchasers to compensate them for SBE’s misrepresentations. J.A. 1082–83.
    Pukke argues that AMG requires nullification of the district court’s appointment of
    a receiver and everything the receiver has done. AMG does nothing of the sort. The
    appointment of a receiver has long been considered an ancillary power that a court can
    deploy to effectuate its injunctive relief. See Home Mortg. Co. v. Ramsey, 
    49 F.2d 738
    , 743
    (4th Cir. 1931) (explaining that a federal court can consider appointing a receiver where
    the receivership is “ancillary to other relief.”). As discussed, the Supreme Court has not
    limited a court’s power to order injunctive relief under Section 13(b) of the FTC Act. See
    39
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    AMG Cap. Mgmt., 141 S. Ct. at 1349 (the “Commission may use § 13(b) to obtain
    injunctive relief”).
    Here, the appointment of the receiver was ancillary to effectuating the permanent
    injunctions imposed under the Sanctuary Belize judgment. The receiver was the district
    court’s means of ensuring that further FTC Act and TSR violations would not occur and
    that Pukke would not continue to profit from these deceptions. And though we have
    stressed that appointing a receiver “calls for the exercise of the greatest care and judgment,”
    Ramsey, 
    49 F.2d at 742
    , it falls within the sound discretion of the district court to employ
    such a remedy. See Hutchinson v. Fid. Inv. Ass’n, 
    106 F.2d 431
    , 436 (4th Cir. 1939).
    Therefore, we will not lightly upset the district court’s decision. To do so here would
    remove one of the tools in the court’s kit used to effectuate its judgments, compensate
    victims, and stop further transgressions.
    C.
    Next Pukke and Baker argue that they were denied due process because the district
    court refused to release sufficient funds for them to pay for legal counsel. Absent these
    funds, they claim, they needed to proceed pro se to their detriment. Yet again, Pukke and
    Baker are betrayed by the record. To allow Pukke and Baker to pay for personal and legal
    expenses, the district court permitted Pukke and Baker to withdraw $3,000 per month from
    the assets that were frozen in the preliminary injunction, then twice unfroze $30,000 in
    assets for them to pay for legal counsel. Appellants admit that “district courts have
    discretion to regulate payment of attorneys’ fees from [frozen] assets,” Appellants’
    Opening Brief at 48, and we conclude that the court did not abuse it here. See U.S. ex rel.
    40
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    Rahman v. Oncology Assocs., 
    198 F.3d 489
    , 499 (4th Cir. 1999) (holding that a district
    court is “authorized by its traditional equitable power to issue” an asset freeze).
    Given Pukke’s past, it was perfectly reasonable for the court to be cautious about
    dispensing money to someone who had purloined funds from his previous business. Even
    in the face of this deception and dishonesty, the court was generous enough to twice grant
    defendants’ request for more resources. It is not our job to micromanage this case, and
    there was no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s handling of the funds needed by Pukke
    and Baker for adequate legal representation.
    D.
    Appellants, committed to leaving no stone unturned, also argue that the contempt
    judgments and the permanent injunctions against them are time-barred by the statute of
    limitations contained in 
    28 U.S.C. § 2462
    , which requires that a “proceeding for the
    enforcement of any civil fine, penalty, or forfeiture” be “commenced within five years from
    the date when the claim first accrued.” This statute of limitations does not apply for two
    reasons: first, neither a contempt judgment nor a permanent injunction is a “penalty” as
    described in Section 2462, and second, even if it were a penalty, the statute of limitations
    has not run.
    Pukke tries to portray the judgments against him as penalties so that they will fall
    under Section 2462’s five-year time bar. A penalty redresses a “wrong to the public” for
    violation of public laws. Kokesh v. S.E.C., 
    137 S. Ct. 1635
    , 1642 (2017) (quoting
    Huntington v. Attrill, 
    146 U.S. 657
    , 668 (1892)). A contempt sanction, on the other hand,
    redresses a violation not of public laws but of a court order. Likewise, a penalty punishes
    41
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    past acts whereas an injunction prohibits future conduct. See Sec. & Exch. Comm’n v.
    Graham, 
    823 F.3d 1357
    , 1361 (11th Cir. 2016). Therefore, Section 2462 covers neither the
    contempt orders nor the injunctive relief as neither are penalties.
    Even if the statute of limitations did apply, it has not run. The district court found
    that Pukke’s contumacious and violative conduct ran from the early 2000s up through 2018
    when the FTC brought suit. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 392 (finding that
    misrepresentations “occurred right up to the time the FTC filed this lawsuit in October
    2018”). Thus, the FTC’s suit was within the five-year period, and the judgments are not
    time-barred.
    E.
    We perceive no merit in the remaining assignments of error. We further note that
    throwing a bunch of claims at the wall to see what sticks is no way to approach an appeal.
    Pukke disputes the validity of the district court’s orders imposing an asset freeze
    and writs of ne exeat. An asset freeze immobilizes a party’s funds by government mandate,
    and a writ of ne exeat restrains a person from leaving the jurisdiction of the court. Freeze,
    Ne Exeat, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Here, the district court was well within
    its rights to impose both. As discussed, imposing an asset freeze is an appropriate use of
    the court’s discretion, especially given the risk of Pukke diverting funds to his personal
    accounts. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 408. Further, an asset freeze is
    appropriate when parties request equitable relief, as the FTC has here. U.S. ex rel. Rahman
    v. Oncology Assocs., 
    198 F.3d 489
    , 501 (4th Cir. 1999). Regarding the writ of ne exeat, the
    district court can exercise its discretion to grant such a writ if “satisfactory proof is
    42
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    made . . . that the defendant designs quickly to depart from the United States.” D. Ginsberg
    & Sons v. Popkin, 
    285 U.S. 204
    , 207 (1932). Here, the international scale of Pukke and
    Baker’s business ventures evinced their ability to leave the country, so the court acted
    within its discretion by issuing the writ.
    Pukke also argues that the contempt judgments are barred by the equitable doctrine
    of laches, which is the “unreasonable, prejudicial delay in commencing suit.” Petrella v.
    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., 
    572 U.S. 663
    , 667 (2014). Again, the applicability of laches
    rests in “the sound discretion of the trial court.” White v. Daniel, 
    909 F.2d 99
    , 102 (4th Cir.
    1990). Pukke claims that laches should apply because the contempt sanction was entered
    15 years after the claimed violation. Laches, however, is not “a mere matter of time[] but
    principally a question of the inequity of permitting the claim to be enforced.” Galliher v.
    Cadwell, 
    145 U.S. 368
    , 373 (1892). There is no inequity here. Pukke’s violations did not
    start and end 15 years ago; Pukke’s violations have occurred continuously for nearly two
    decades. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 392. Moreover, any alleged delay was
    caused at least in part by Pukke’s efforts to conceal his Sanctuary Belize malfeasance
    through misrepresentations and aliases. Thus, the district court did not abuse its discretion
    in holding that laches does not apply.
    Next, appellants contend that the permanent injunctions entered against them are
    overly broad. They believe this is grounds for reversal, but this argument can be summarily
    rejected. The FTC may seek injunctions framed “broadly enough to prevent respondents
    from engaging in similarly illegal practices in future advertisements.” F.T.C. v. Colgate-
    Palmolive Co., 
    380 U.S. 374
    , 395 (1965). Here, the district court found extensive
    43
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    misrepresentations regarding telemarketing and the sale of real estate intertwined with the
    promotion of goods and services. See Sanctuary Belize, 482 F. Supp. 3d at 396–459. Thus,
    the various permanent injunctions—including the prohibition of SBE individuals and
    entities from engaging in further misrepresentations—are appropriately tailored to prevent
    similar scams in the future. Appellants “must remember that those caught violating the
    [FTC] Act must expect some fencing in.” F.T.C. v. Nat’l Lead Co., 
    352 U.S. 419
    , 431
    (1957).
    Last, Pukke challenges the district court’s denial of the motion to transfer venue
    from the District of Maryland to the Central District of California. A district court may
    transfer venue for “the convenience of parties and witnesses” and “in the interest of
    justice.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1404
    (a). Section 13(b) of the FTC Act allows “[a]ny suit” to “be
    brought where [a defendant] resides or transacts business.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 53
    (a). The court
    may then add other defendants “without regard to whether venue is otherwise proper in the
    district in which the suit is brought.” 
    Id.
     Here, appellants admit that at least one defendant
    transacts business in Maryland, Appellants’ Opening Brief at 75, so venue was proper
    under the FTC Act. Once a suitable venue is found, the decision whether to transfer is left
    to the discretion of the trial court. Trustees of the Plumbers & Pipefitters Nat. Pension
    Fund v. Plumbing Servs., Inc., 
    791 F.3d 436
    , 443 (4th Cir. 2015). The district court in
    Maryland was within its discretion to keep the case because the FTC’s allegations in the
    Sanctuary Belize case rested on the same facts as the telemarketing contempt charges
    stemming from AmeriDebt, which was litigated in Maryland and which no party had asked
    to transfer. Once the district court consolidated these matters, it would make little sense to
    44
    USCA4 Appeal: 20-2215       Doc: 101           Filed: 11/01/2022    Pg: 45 of 45
    transfer the Sanctuary Belize case and have the same parties litigating identical allegations
    in two different and distant courts.
    We appreciate the district court’s exemplary work on this complex and long-running
    litigation. The judgment is affirmed in part and vacated and remanded in part for such
    further proceedings as are consistent with this decision.
    AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART
    45
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20-2215

Filed Date: 11/1/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/2/2022

Authorities (26)

Federal Trade Commission v. Freecom Communications, Inc. , 401 F.3d 1192 ( 2005 )

Ryan v. Homecomings Financial Network , 253 F.3d 778 ( 2001 )

United States ex rel. Rahman v. Oncology Associates, P.C. , 198 F.3d 489 ( 1999 )

Consolidated Masonry & Fireproofing, Inc. v. Wagman ... , 383 F.2d 249 ( 1967 )

Home Mortg. Co. v. Ramsey , 49 F.2d 738 ( 1931 )

Hutchinson v. Fidelity Inv. Ass'n , 106 F.2d 431 ( 1939 )

Kokesh v. Sec. & Exch. Comm'n , 198 L. Ed. 2d 86 ( 2017 )

Novartis Corp. v. Federal Trade Commission , 223 F.3d 783 ( 2000 )

federal-trade-commission-v-bay-area-business-council-inc-a-florida , 423 F.3d 627 ( 2005 )

Aikens v. Ingram , 652 F.3d 496 ( 2011 )

Galliher v. Cadwell , 12 S. Ct. 873 ( 1892 )

hurshel-l-ashcraft-v-conoco-incorporated-wilmington-star-news , 218 F.3d 288 ( 2000 )

charles-white-george-r-smith-and-james-a-smith-jr-v-raymond-s-daniel , 909 F.2d 99 ( 1990 )

Federal Trade Commission v. AmeriDebt, Inc. , 373 F. Supp. 2d 558 ( 2005 )

Huntington v. Attrill , 13 S. Ct. 224 ( 1892 )

Cooke v. United States , 45 S. Ct. 390 ( 1925 )

The United States v. Hudson and Goodwin , 3 L. Ed. 259 ( 1812 )

D. Ginsberg & Sons, Inc. v. Popkin , 52 S. Ct. 322 ( 1932 )

Rowland v. California Men's Colony, Unit II Men's Advisory ... , 113 S. Ct. 716 ( 1993 )

Chafin v. Chafin , 133 S. Ct. 1017 ( 2013 )

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