National Organization for Women, Inc. v. Scheidler , 267 F.3d 687 ( 2001 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Nos. 99-3076, 99-3336, 99-3891, 99-3892,
    and 01-2050
    National Organization for Women, Inc., on
    behalf of itself and its women members
    and all other women who use or may use
    the services of women’s health centers
    that provide abortions, and Delaware
    Women’s Health Organization, Inc., and Summit
    Women’s Health Organization, Inc., on
    behalf of themselves and the
    class of all women’s health centers in
    the United States at which abortions are
    performed,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.
    Joseph M. Scheidler, Pro-Life Action League,
    Inc., Andrew D. Scholberg, Timothy Murphy, and
    Operation Rescue,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 86 C 7888--David H. Coar, Judge.
    Argued September 14, 2000--Decided October 2, 2001
    Before Rovner, Diane P. Wood, and Evans,
    Circuit Judges.
    Diane P. Wood, Circuit Judge. This case
    is in its fifteenth year of contentious
    litigation. The defendants are anti-
    abortion activists who employ a protest
    tactic they call "rescues," in which they
    and other activists physically block
    access to abortion clinics so that the
    patients and staff cannot get in or out
    of the buildings. Plaintiffs use words
    less benign than "rescue" to describe the
    defendants’ activities. We will refer to
    them as "protest missions," in the hopes
    that this will be understood as a neutral
    term. The defendants’ goal is frankly to
    prevent abortions from taking place.
    Participants in the protest missions
    engage in a substantial amount of
    protected speech, including efforts to
    persuade clinic patients not to have
    abortions and to persuade clinic doctors
    and staff to quit performing abortions.
    Unfortunately, the protest missions also
    involve illegal conduct: protesters do
    everything from sitting or lying in
    clinic doorways and waiting to be
    arrested to engaging in more egregious
    conduct such as entering the clinics and
    destroying medical equipment and chaining
    their bodies to operating tables to
    prevent the tables from being used. In a
    few instances, protesters apparently have
    physically assaulted clinic staff and
    patients. In addition to staging these
    protests, the defendants have issued
    letters and statements to other clinics
    threatening to stage missions at those
    clinics unless they voluntarily shut
    down.
    The plaintiffs, the National
    Organization for Women (NOW) and two
    clinics that were the targets of protest
    missions, brought this class action
    alleging, among other things, that the
    defendants’ conduct amounted to a pattern
    of extortion which violated the Racketeer
    Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act,
    18 U.S.C. sec.sec. 1961-68 (RICO). The
    trial judge certified two classes: one,
    represented by NOW, of all NOW members
    and non-members who have used or would
    use the services of an abortion clinic in
    the United States, and a second of all
    such clinics. After a trip through this
    court to the Supreme Court of the United
    States during which many of the legal
    issues in the case were clarified or
    resolved, the case was remanded to the
    district court for trial of the
    plaintiffs’ RICO claims. A jury found for
    the plaintiffs and awarded damages to the
    two named clinics, and the district court
    issued a permanent nationwide injunction
    prohibiting the defendants from
    conducting blockades, trespassing,
    damaging property, or committing acts of
    violence at the class clinics. The defen
    dants have appealed a wide range of
    issues relating to the conduct of the
    trial and the issuance of the injunction.
    We find that the district court navigated
    its way through this complex and
    difficult case with care and sensitivity
    and affirm its judgment in all respects.
    I
    Many of the facts pertinent to this
    opinion are set out in the Supreme
    Court’s decision remanding the case,
    National Organization for Women, Inc. v.
    Scheidler, 
    510 U.S. 249
    (1994) (NOW I),
    and in our earlier decision in the case,
    National Organization for Women, Inc. v.
    Scheidler, 
    968 F.2d 612
    (7th Cir. 1992),
    and we will not recount them in detail
    here. Nonetheless, in order to put the
    defendants’ appeal in context, a brief
    overview of the facts presented at trial
    and of the procedural history of the case
    may be helpful.
    The individual defendants, Joseph
    Scheidler, Andrew Scholberg, and Timothy
    Murphy are on the Board of Directors of
    one of the corporate defendants, the Pro-
    Life Action League (PLAL). The other
    corporate defendant is Operation Rescue.
    (Randall Terry, the director of Operation
    Rescue, was also originally a defendant
    in the case, but he has since settled
    with the plaintiffs). All of the
    defendants were among the organizers of
    the Pro-Life Action Network (PLAN), which
    is a loose national organization of
    groups that engage in protest missions
    and other aggressive anti-abortion
    tactics. Beginning in the mid-1980’s,
    PLAN held annual conventions, organized
    in part by the defendants here, which
    included seminars on protest strategies.
    Those conventions concluded with protest
    missions being staged in the convention
    city. PLAN also sent a newsletter to its
    members and coordinated a hotline that
    potential protesters could call to get
    information about upcoming missions. The
    plaintiffs alleged, and at trial the jury
    found, that PLAN was an "organization or
    enterprise" for purposes of RICO
    liability.
    Initially, the plaintiffs alleged that
    the defendants’ tactics violated both
    RICO and federal antitrust law. In 1992,
    however, this court issued an opinion
    dismissing both theories of liability,
    reasoning that the antitrust laws were
    not applicable because the plaintiffs had
    not alleged that the defendants exercised
    any form of market control over the
    supply of abortion services and that RICO
    did not reach the defendants’ conduct
    because the plaintiffs had not shown that
    the alleged racketeering acts were
    "economically 
    motivated." 968 F.2d at 617-30
    . The Supreme Court granted
    certiorari on the limited question
    whether RICO requires proof that either
    the racketeering enterprise or the
    alleged predicate acts were motivated by
    an economic purpose. (The antitrust
    holding of our 1992 decision was thus
    left undisturbed.) The Court concluded
    that RICO contains no such economic
    motive requirement and therefore reversed
    our decision on that 
    point. 510 U.S. at 256-62
    . Thereafter, we remanded the case
    to the district court for trial of the
    plaintiffs’ RICO claims.
    During the course of the seven-week
    trial, the plaintiffs introduced evidence
    of hundreds of acts committed by the
    defendants or others acting in concert
    with PLAN which, the plaintiffs
    contended, constituted predicate acts
    under RICO. The alleged predicate acts
    included violations of federal extortion
    law (the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. sec. 1951),
    state extortion law, the federal Travel
    Act, 18 U.S.C. sec. 1952, and conspiracy
    to violate these laws. A few of the more
    egregious acts the plaintiffs alleged
    included:
    At a protest mission in Chico,
    California, protesters pressed four
    clinic staff members up against a glass
    entranceway to the clinic for several
    hours and refused to let them go even
    when they complained they were being
    crushed. The glass wall eventually either
    loosened or shattered, injuring a clinic
    staffer.
    At a similar mission in Los Angeles,
    protesters grabbed at a patient’s arms
    and legs and tried to restrain her
    physically from entering the clinic. The
    patient was actually at the clinic for a
    follow-up to ovarian surgery, and the
    attack by the protesters reopened her
    incisions. As a result of the attack, the
    patient had to be rushed to the hospital.
    In several instances, protesters entered
    clinics and destroyed medical equipment.
    In several cases, protesters not only
    blocked doorways with their bodies, but
    chained themselves to the doorways of
    clinics, or, in some cases, to operating
    tables inside clinics.
    In December 1985, defendant Scheidler
    sent letters to every abortion provider
    in the Chicago area calling for a
    "Christmas Truce." In these letters, he
    requested that the clinics shut down for
    a specific day in December, stated that
    he would "call to confirm" the clinic’s
    decision, and warned that non-complying
    clinics would be subjected to "non-
    violent direct action," a catch-phrase
    PLAN and PLAL frequently used for their
    activities.
    Based on this and other evidence in the
    voluminous record that was created at the
    trial, the jury found in response to
    special interrogatories that the
    defendants or others associated with PLAN
    committed 21 violations of the Hobbs Act,
    25 violations of state extortion law, 25
    acts of conspiracy to violate federal or
    state extortion law, four acts or threats
    of physical violence, 23 violations of
    the Travel Act, and 23 attempts to commit
    one of these crimes. The jury awarded
    damages to both clinics; once the damages
    were trebled, as RICO requires, the
    awards totaled over $163,000 to Summit
    Women’s Health Organization and over
    $94,000 to Delaware Women’s Health
    Organization.
    After the jury returned its verdict, the
    district court held three days of
    additional hearings and then entered a
    permanent, nationwide injunction
    prohibiting the defendants or those
    acting in concert with them from
    interfering with the rights of the class
    clinics to provide abortion services, or
    with rights of the class women to receive
    those services, by obstructing access to
    the clinics, trespassing on clinic
    property, damaging or destroying clinic
    property, or using violence or threats of
    violence against the clinics, their
    employees and volunteers, or their
    patients.
    II
    Initially, we must consider the
    defendants’ contention that RICO does not
    permit private plaintiffs to seek injunc
    tive relief. The only court of appeals to
    have addressed this issue directly, the
    Ninth Circuit, concluded in 1986 that
    private plaintiffs cannot seek
    injunctions under RICO, relying largely
    on the court’s reading of the statute’s
    legislative history. See Religious Tech.
    Ctr. v. Wollersheim, 
    796 F.2d 1076
    (9th
    Cir. 1986). The other courts of appeals
    that have addressed the point in dicta
    are split. Compare Johnson v. Collins
    Ent’mt. Co., 
    199 F.3d 710
    , 726 (4th Cir.
    1999), In re Fredeman Litig., 
    843 F.2d 821
    , 828-30 (5th Cir. 1988), and Trane
    Co. v. O’Connor Sec., 
    718 F.2d 26
    , 28-29
    (2d Cir. 1983) (expressing doubt about
    availability of injunctive relief for
    private plaintiffs), with Bennett v.
    Berg, 
    710 F.2d 1361
    , 1366 (8th Cir. 1983)
    (McMillan, J., concurring) (suggesting
    injunctive relief is available); see also
    Lincoln House, Inc. v. Dupre, 
    903 F.2d 845
    , 848 (1st Cir. 1990), Northeast
    Women’s Ctr. v. McMonagle, 
    868 F.2d 1342
    ,
    1355 (3d Cir. 1989) (noting controversy
    but expressing no opinion on resolution).
    Our study of Supreme Court decisions
    since the 1986 Wollersheim opinion
    convinces us that the approach of the
    Ninth Circuit (which relied almost
    exclusively on the legislative history of
    RICO to reach its result, as opposed to
    the actual language of the statute) no
    longer conforms to the Court’s present
    jurisprudence, assuming for the sake of
    argument that it was a permissible one at
    the time. We are persuaded instead that
    the text of the RICO statute, understood
    in the proper light, itself authorizes
    private parties to seek injunctive
    relief.
    In interpreting the remedial provisions
    of the RICO statute, our inquiry begins
    with the statute’s text, and, if the text
    is unambiguous, it ends there as well.
    See Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    121 S. Ct. 1511
    , 1520-21 & n.7 (2001); NOW 
    I, 510 U.S. at 261
    . RICO’s civil remedies
    section provides, in pertinent part:
    (a) The district courts of the United
    States shall have jurisdiction to prevent
    and restrain violations of section 1962
    of this chapter by issuing appropriate
    orders, including, but not limited to . .
    . imposing reasonable restrictions on the
    future activities . . . of any person,
    including, but not limited to,
    prohibiting any person from engaging in
    the same type of endeavor as the
    enterprise engaged in, . . . or ordering
    dissolution or reorganization of any
    enterprise, making due provision for the
    rights of innocent persons.
    (b) The Attorney General may institute
    proceedings under this section. Pending
    final determination thereof, the court
    may at any time enter such restraining
    orders or prohibitions, or take such
    other actions, including the acceptance
    of satisfactory performance bonds, as it
    shall deem proper.
    (c) Any person injured in his business or
    property by reason of a violation of
    section 1962 of this chapter may sue
    therefor in any appropriate United States
    district court and shall recover
    threefold the damages he sustains and the
    cost of the suit, including a reasonable
    attorney’s fee. . . .
    18 U.S.C. sec. 1964.
    Both parties have offered
    interpretations of this text that support
    their positions. The plaintiffs read the
    statute in a straightforward manner.
    Section 1964(a), they contend, grants the
    district courts jurisdiction to hear RICO
    claims and also sets out general
    remedies, including injunctive relief,
    that all plaintiffs authorized to bring
    suit may seek. Section 1964(b) makes it
    clear that the statute is to be publicly
    enforced by the Attorney General and it
    specifies additional remedies, all in the
    nature of interim relief, that the
    government may seek. Section 1964(c)
    similarly adds to the scope of sec.
    1964(a), but this time for private
    plaintiffs. Those private plaintiffs who
    have been injured in their business or
    property by reason of a RICO violation
    are given a right to sue for treble
    damages. As the plaintiffs note, this
    reading of the statute gives the words
    their natural meaning and gives effect to
    every provision in the statute.
    The defendants argue for a less
    intuitive interpretation. Relying on
    Wollersheim, they argue that sec. 1964(a)
    is purely a jurisdictional provision
    authorizing the district court to hear
    RICO claims and to grant injunctions to
    parties authorized by other provisions of
    the law to seek that form of relief.
    Section 1964(b), in the defendants’ view,
    allows the Attorney General to institute
    RICO proceedings and authorizes the
    government to seek not only the relief
    described in that subsection, but also
    the relief described in sec. 1964(a).
    Section 1964(c) then provides a limited
    right of action for private parties. They
    read the two clauses of sec. 1964(c),
    however, as tightly linked provisions,
    under which private plaintiffs may sue
    only for monetary damages. The mention of
    this type of relief in the second clause
    must mean, the defendants argue, that by
    implication no other remedies,
    particularly injunctive remedies, are
    available. We cannot agree that this is a
    reasonable reading of the statute.
    As an initial matter, we note that the
    Wollersheim decision apparently misreads
    sec. 1964(b) when it states that sec.
    1964(b) explicitly "permits the
    government to bring actions for equitable
    relief." 
    Wollersheim, 796 F.2d at 1082
    .
    Section 1964(b) does allow the government
    to seek equitable relief, but it
    specifically mentions only interim
    remedies. Although no one doubts that
    permanent injunctions are also available
    to the government, the government’s
    ability to seek permanent, as opposed to
    interim, equitable remedies comes from
    the general grant of authority for
    district courts to enter injunctions
    found in sec. 1964(a), not from anything
    in sec. 1964(b). (The sentence "[t]he
    Attorney General may institute
    proceedings under this section" is in
    that respect the equivalent of the first
    clause in sec. 1964(c), which says "[a]ny
    person injured in his business or
    property by reason of a violation of
    section 1962 of this chapter may sue
    therefor in any appropriate United States
    district court . . . ." Neither one
    addresses what remedy the plaintiff may
    seek.) Given that the government’s
    authority to seek injunctions comes from
    the combination of the grant of a right
    of action to the Attorney General in sec.
    1964(b) and the grant of district court
    authority to enter injunctions in sec.
    1964(a), we see no reason not to
    conclude, by parity of reasoning, that
    private parties can also seek injunctions
    under the combination of grants in
    sec.sec. 1964(a) and (c).
    In addition, we cannot agree with the
    defendants’ contention that sec. 1964(a)
    is a purely "jurisdictional" statute,
    despite the Ninth Circuit’s
    characterization of it in that way in
    Imagineering, Inc. v. Kiewit Pac. Co.,
    
    976 F.2d 1303
    , 1307 (9th Cir. 1992)
    (construing Wollersheim holding as
    jurisdictional). What sec. 1964(a) does
    is to grant district courts authority to
    hear RICO claims and then to spell out a
    non-exclusive list of the remedies
    district courts are empowered to provide
    in such cases. In that sense, sec.
    1964(a) is strikingly similar to the
    statute the Supreme Court construed in
    Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better
    Environment, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 90 (1998). The
    statute at issue in Steel Co. provided
    that "[t]he district court shall have
    jurisdiction in actions brought under
    subsection (a) of this section against an
    owner or operator of a facility to
    enforce the requirement concerned and to
    impose any civil penalty provided for
    violation of that requirement." 
    Id., quoting 42
    U.S.C. sec. 11046(c). Noting
    that "’[j]urisdiction’ . . . is a word of
    many, too many, meanings," the Court held
    that it would be "unreasonable to read
    [the statute] as making all the elements
    of the cause of action under subsection
    (a) jurisdictional, rather than as merely
    specifying the remedial powers of the
    court, viz., to enforce the violated
    requirement and to impose civil
    penalties." 
    Id. This part
    of the Steel
    Co. holding supersedes any rationale to
    the contrary that the courts of appeals
    may have followed in earlier years. We
    find that it is applicable to RICO and
    that sec. 1964(a) both confers
    jurisdiction on the district courts and
    specifies certain remedial powers that
    the courts will have in cases brought
    before them.
    Once we accept that sec. 1964(a) is not
    purely jurisdictional, but also describes
    remedies available under RICO, the
    defendants’ position becomes untenable.
    In the defendants’ view, despite the
    general provisions for equitable relief
    in sec. 1964(a), injunctive relief is not
    available to any particular plaintiff
    unless it is also provided by some other
    section of the statute. This reading
    renders sec. 1964(a)’s provision for
    injunctive relief a nullity. Because an
    alternative reading exists which gives
    meaning to every section of the statute,
    see Connecticut Nat’l Bank v. Germain,
    
    503 U.S. 249
    , 253 (1992) ("courts should
    disfavor interpretations of statutes that
    render language superfluous"), we reject
    the defendants’ approach.
    The defendants’ final textual argument
    springs from the maxim that "where a
    statute expressly provides a particular
    remedy or remedies, a court must be chary
    of reading others into it." Transamerica
    Mortgage Advisors, Inc. v. Lewis, 
    444 U.S. 11
    , 19 (1979). While we have no
    doubt that this is good advice as a
    general matter, we do not find it
    particularly helpful in this case. This
    is not a situation in which Congress has
    provided for a private damages remedy and
    has remained silent as to the
    availability of injunctive relief.
    Instead, Congress explicitly provided for
    injunctive relief in sec. 1964(a),
    although it did not specify in that
    section which plaintiffs can seek such
    relief. Given that the next two sections
    describe two types of plaintiffs, the
    government and private plaintiffs, and
    spell out additional remedies specific to
    each type, we find that the only logical
    conclusion is that Congress intended the
    general remedies explicitly granted in
    sec. 1964(a) to be available to all
    plaintiffs.
    Although we would be confident resting
    our holding purely on the plain text of
    sec. 1964, we note that our
    interpretation is consistent with
    Congress’s admonition that the RICO
    statute is to be "liberally construed to
    effectuate its remedial purposes." Pub.
    L. No. 91-452, sec. 904(a), 84 Stat. 947
    (1970). Adhering to this admonition,
    which "obviously seeks to ensure that
    Congress’ intent is not frustrated by an
    overly narrow reading of the statute,"
    Reves v. Ernst & Young, 
    507 U.S. 170
    , 183
    (1993), the Supreme Court has
    consistently rejected interpretations by
    the courts of appeals that would limit
    the scope of RICO actions in ways not
    contemplated by the text of the statute.
    See, e.g., Cedric Kushner Promotions,
    Ltd. v. King, 
    121 S. Ct. 2087
    (2001)
    (rejecting argument that employee of
    corporation acting within scope of
    employment cannot be a "person" distinct
    from the corporation); Salinas v. United
    States, 
    522 U.S. 52
    , 61-66 (1997)
    (rejecting requirement that conspiracy
    defendant himself has committed predicate
    acts); NOW 
    I, 510 U.S. at 256-62
    (rejecting requirement that enterprise
    have an economic motive); Sedima,
    S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co., 
    473 U.S. 479
    (1985) (rejecting requirements that
    defendant has been convicted of predicate
    act and that plaintiff suffer a
    "racketeering injury," as opposed to
    injury from mere predicate acts); United
    States v. Turkette, 
    452 U.S. 576
    (1981)
    (rejecting argument that RICO enterprise
    must have legitimate as well as
    illegitimate aspects). RICO’s liberal-
    construction clause has particular force,
    as the Supreme Court has stated, when we
    are construing sec. 1964, the civil
    remedy provision, because it is in this
    section that "RICO’s remedial purposes
    are most evident." 
    Sedima, 473 U.S. at 491
    n.10. In keeping with the spirit of
    these cases, we decline to restrict the
    remedies available under RICO, when
    Congress has provided for broad equitable
    relief under sec. 1964(a).
    Our interpretation of sec. 1964 is also
    in keeping with the underlying purposes
    of the RICO statute. As the Supreme Court
    recently noted, Congress in enacting RICO
    intended to "encourag[e] civil litigation
    to supplement Government efforts to deter
    and penalize the . . . prohibited
    practices. The object of civil RICO is
    thus not merely to compensate victims but
    to turn them into prosecutors, ’private
    attorneys general,’ dedicated to
    eliminating racketeering activity."
    Rotella v. Wood, 
    528 U.S. 549
    , 557
    (2000). Recognizing that the statute
    gives private citizens the ability to
    seek injunctive relief as well as damages
    is fully consistent with this role for
    civil RICO litigation.
    Perhaps realizing that the plain text of
    the statute strongly suggests that
    private plaintiffs can seek injunctions,
    the Wollersheim court relied heavily in
    its decision on two pieces of legislative
    history. First, the court noted
    that,during the floor debate on the bill
    in the House, Representative Steiger, the
    House sponsor of the bill, introduced an
    amendment that would have, among other
    things, made private plaintiffs’ right to
    seek injunctive relief explicit. The
    amendment was withdrawn after another
    representative described it on the House
    floor as creating "an additional civil
    remedy." See 
    Wollersheim, 796 F.2d at 1085-86
    . Second, the court noted that one
    year after the bill’s passage, Congress
    failed to pass a bill introduced in the
    Senate with the same language as the
    Steiger amendment. See 
    id. at 1086.
    From
    these two occurrences, the Ninth Circuit
    concluded that "in considering civil
    RICO, Congress was repeatedly presented
    with the opportunity expressly to include
    a provision permitting private plaintiffs
    to secure injunctive relief. On each
    occasion, Congress rejected the addition
    of any such provision." 
    Id. Again, with
    respect, we cannot agree
    with the Ninth Circuit that these
    snippets of legislative history amount to
    the kind of "’clearly expressed
    legislative intent to the contrary’" that
    we would require to cast doubt on
    unambiguous statutory language. NOW 
    I, 510 U.S. at 261
    . Even these excerpts do
    not unequivocally indicate that Congress
    intended private plaintiffs to be limited
    to damages remedies. As the Wollersheim
    decision itself notes, there are
    indications in the legislative history to
    the contrary. 
    Id. at 1085.
    More
    importantly, however, although the
    Wollersheim court may well have made a
    reasonable decision in 1986 to rely on
    Congress’s refusal to enact amendments to
    the statute, recent Supreme Court
    precedent teaches that this type of
    legislative history is a particularly
    thin reed on which to rest the
    interpretation of a statute. See, e.g.,
    Solid Waste Agency of N. Cook County v.
    United States Army Corps of Eng’rs, 
    531 U.S. 159
    , 169-70 (2001) ("Failed
    legislative proposals are a particularly
    dangerous ground on which to rest an
    interpretation of a prior statute. A bill
    can be proposed for any number of
    reasons, and it can be rejected for just
    as many others."); Central Bank of
    Denver, N.A. v. First Interstate Bank of
    Denver, N.A., 
    511 U.S. 164
    , 187 (1994)
    ("Congressional inaction lacks persuasive
    significance because several equally
    tenable inferences may be drawn from such
    inaction, including the inference that
    the existing legislation already
    incorporated the offered change."). Given
    the Court’s reluctance in recent years to
    rely on the type of legislative history
    that underpins Wollersheim, we cannot
    agree with the Ninth Circuit’s earlier
    view that this legislative history trumps
    the otherwise plain language of sec.
    1964.
    In a last effort to save their reading
    of the statute, the defendants urge us
    that certain differences between
    thelanguage of RICO and the language of
    section 4 of the Clayton Act (on which
    RICO was based) demand the inference that
    no private right to injunctive relief
    exists under RICO. The Clayton Act, they
    note, provides private rights of action
    in two separate sections: one for damages
    in sec. 4, 15 U.S.C. sec. 15(a), and one
    for injunctive relief in sec. 16, 15
    U.S.C. sec. 26. RICO, in contrast, has
    only one statutory section addressing
    civil remedies, and the only subsection
    that specifically talks about private
    actions mentions only damages. Defendants
    argue that Congress’s failure to include
    in sec. 1964(c) language analogous to
    that in Clayton Act sec. 16 must mean
    that it did not intend to allow private
    parties to seek injunctions.
    We reject this line of analysis for a
    number of reasons. First, the mere fact
    that the Clayton Act spreads its remedial
    provisions over a number of different
    sections of the U.S. Code,/1 and RICO
    does not, adds little to our
    understanding of either statute. More
    importantly, the Supreme Court regularly
    treats the remedial sections of RICO and
    the Clayton Act identically, regardless
    of superficial differences in language.
    See, e.g., Klehr v. A.O. Smith Corp., 
    521 U.S. 179
    , 188-89 (1997) (applying Clayton
    Act rule for accrual of cause of action
    to RICO); Holmes v. SIPC, 
    503 U.S. 258
    ,
    267 (1992) (applying proximate cause rule
    to RICO). Since the Court has already
    determined that litigants other than the
    Attorney General may obtain broad
    injunctive relief under the Clayton Act,
    see California v. American Stores Co.,
    
    495 U.S. 271
    (1990), cases like Klehr and
    Holmes indicate that we ought to adopt
    the same interpretation with respect to
    RICO. Indeed, American Stores (which came
    to the Court from the Ninth Circuit)
    pointedly rejected the way in which the
    Ninth Circuit had relied on legislative
    history to limit the Clayton Act’s
    textual grant of private injunctive
    relief. Id at 285. This in turn undercut
    Wollersheim, which had used the same
    methodology as the discredited American
    Stores opinion. For all these reasons, we
    find that sec. 1964 authorizes injunctive
    relief at the behest of both the Attorney
    General and private plaintiffs,
    authorizes interim measures when the
    Attorney General sues, and authorizes
    private treble damages only for private
    plaintiffs (and not the United States).
    The district court thus correctly
    concluded that RICO authorized the
    private plaintiffs here to seek
    injunctive relief.
    III
    With this much established, we may turn
    to the defendants’ First Amendment
    arguments. All parties acknowledge that
    the defendants engaged in a substantial
    amount of protected speech during the
    protest missions and other anti-abortion
    activities, including picketing on public
    sidewalks in front of clinics and
    verbally urging patients not to have
    abortions. We entirely agree with the
    defendants that liability cannot
    constitutionally be imposed on them for
    this portion of their conduct. But the
    record is replete with evidence of
    instances in which their conduct crossed
    the line from protected speech into
    illegal acts, including acts of violence,
    and it is equally clear that the First
    Amendment does not protect such acts. As
    is true in many political protest cases,
    the defendants’ protected speech was
    often closely intertwined with their
    unprotected illegal conduct.
    Nevertheless, we believe the district
    court adequately ensured that the jury’s
    verdict was not based on activities
    protected by the First Amendment, and
    that the remedies it ordered also
    respected the line between protected
    expression and unprotected conduct.
    The defendants’ First Amendment
    arguments fall into two categories.
    First, they argue broadly that imposing
    liability on them on the basis of their
    protest activities violates the First
    Amendment. Second, they argue that, even
    assuming they could constitutionally be
    held liable for their alleged conduct,
    the jury instructions and verdict form in
    this case did not contain necessary First
    Amendment safeguards. Before we reach
    either of these arguments, we pause to
    consider the standard of review we should
    apply in analyzing the defendants’ First
    Amendment claims.
    The Supreme Court has repeatedly held
    that, in cases in which First Amendment
    concerns are implicated, reviewing courts
    have an obligation to conduct an
    "’independent examination of the whole
    record’ in order to make sure that ’the
    judgment does not constitute a forbidden
    intrusion on the field of free expression.’"
    Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United
    States, Inc., 
    466 U.S. 485
    , 499 (1984),
    quoting New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
    
    376 U.S. 254
    , 284-86 (1964). Although
    this maxim has been applied most often in
    cases reviewing the factual findings of
    lower courts, the Court in Bose noted
    that the rule is equally applicable
    "whether the factfinding function be
    performed in the particular case by a
    jury or by a trial 
    judge." 466 U.S. at 501
    . Citing this rule, the defendants
    urge that our review of their First
    Amendment challenges must be plenary.
    As we have noted before, however, even
    though Bose calls for an "independent
    examination of the whole record," it is
    not entirely clear what this "plenary"
    review is supposed to entail. See Brown &
    Williamson Tobacco Corp. v. Jacobson, 
    827 F.2d 1119
    , 1128-29 (7th Cir. 1987). In
    particular, it is not clear whether Bose
    requires an independent review only of
    the ultimate factual conclusion that the
    defendants’ conduct fell outside the
    protection of the First Amendment, or
    whether this court is required to conduct
    a more searching review of "findings of
    underlying facts, evaluations of
    credibility, and the drawing of
    inferences." Brown & 
    Williamson, 827 F.2d at 1128
    . In cases in which we are
    reviewing a jury verdict rather than the
    findings of a lower court, the question
    is even more complex, because we must
    somehow reconcile the defendants’ First
    Amendment rights against the command of
    the Seventh Amendment that "no fact tried
    by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined
    in any Court of the United States, than
    according to the rules of the common
    law." U.S. Const. amend. VII. Bose itself
    involved review of facts found by the
    district court under Fed. R. Civ. P.
    52(a), and thus the Court had no occasion
    to consider this problem. For a different
    reason, we conclude that it is not
    necessary here to decide whether or not a
    broader version of the re-examination of
    jury findings is permissible when First
    Amendment rights are at issue. Even
    assuming that the Bose dicta requires us
    to conduct a plenary review of all of the
    factual findings relevant to the First
    Amendment issues before us (which is the
    most favorable position we can take for
    the defendants), we find that the jury’s
    determinations are fully supported by the
    record.
    A.
    Protection of politically controversial
    speech is at the core of the First
    Amendment, and no one disputes that the
    defendants’ speech labeling abortion as
    murder, urging the clinics to get out of
    the abortion business, and urging clinic
    patients not to seek abortions is fully
    protected by the First Amendment. See,
    e.g., Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health
    Clinic, 
    506 U.S. 263
    (1993). It is
    equally clear, however, that the First
    Amendment does not protect violent
    conduct, Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 
    508 U.S. 476
    , 484 (1993), nor does it protect
    threats, Madsen v. Women’s Health Ctr.,
    
    512 U.S. 753
    , 773 (1994), or language
    used to carry out illegal conduct,
    Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., 
    336 U.S. 490
    , 502 (1949). Even when a
    defendant’s conduct involves expressive
    elements, the government is free to
    regulate the non-expressive aspects of
    the conduct if such regulation is
    necessary to serve important government
    interests. United States v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 377 (1968). The protection of
    the plaintiffs’ rights to seek and
    provide medical care free from violence,
    intimidation, and harassment is such an
    important government interest. See, e.g.,
    Hill v. Colorado, 
    530 U.S. 703
    , 715
    (2000); Schenck v. Pro-Choice Network of
    W. New York, 
    519 U.S. 357
    , 376 (1997);
    
    Madsen, supra
    , 512 U.S. at 768. As the
    Supreme Court has explained, "violence or
    other types of potentially expressive
    activities that produce special harms
    distinct from their communicative impact
    . . . are entitled to no constitutional
    protection." Roberts v. United States
    Jaycees, 
    468 U.S. 609
    , 628 (1984).
    In this case, the plaintiffs presented
    ample evidence that the individual
    defendants and others associated with
    PLAN engaged in illegal conduct that
    directly threatened an important
    governmental interest. The evidence
    presented at trial showed that, at PLAN-
    sponsored events, protesters trespassed
    on clinic property and blocked access to
    clinics with their bodies, including at
    times chaining themselves in the doorways
    of clinics or to operating tables. At
    other times, protesters destroyed clinic
    property, including putting glue in
    clinic door locks and destroying medical
    equipment used to perform abortions. On
    still other occasions, protesters
    physically assaulted clinic staff and
    patients. In addition, defendant
    Scheidler, on behalf of defendants PLAL
    and PLAN, sent letters to class clinics
    threatening that they would be subjected
    to similar attacks if they did not cease
    performing abortions. In light of the
    protesters’ conduct at other PLAN events,
    the district court correctly concluded
    that these letters were not protected
    political speech but constituted true
    threats outside the protection of the
    First Amendment.
    Assuming that the defendants can be held
    liable for these incidents, all of which
    occurred under PLAN sponsorship, then the
    plaintiffs produced ample evidence of
    illegal conduct that may legitimately be
    regulated given the importance of the
    governmental interest in protecting the
    right to seek and provide medical care.
    In a case where a similarly important
    governmental interest is not present and
    the conduct in question has an expressive
    element, we do not disagree with the
    defendants that the First Amendment might
    well shield that particular conduct from
    being used as the basis for RICO
    liability. (We express this thought
    cautiously only because the balance
    between the strength of the government’s
    interest and the degree to which conduct
    has an expressive element will vary from
    case to case.) In any event, this case
    presents no such problems. We are
    satisfied that the record here easily
    supports the jury’s finding of liability.
    At this point, the defendants shift
    their argument to a more personal one:
    maybe someone associated with PLAN was
    engaged in unprotected conduct, but the
    evidence did not establish that the
    defendants themselves were involved, as
    opposed to being involved exclusively in
    PLAN’s protected speech activities. In
    NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 
    458 U.S. 886
    (1982), the Supreme Court noted that,
    where an organization engages in both
    protected speech and unprotected, illegal
    conduct, the First Amendment does not
    permit individuals to be held liable for
    the organization’s illegal acts merely
    based on their association with the
    organization. 
    Id. at 908-09.
    Rather, in
    order to impose liability on an
    individual based on that individual’s
    association with an organization, a
    plaintiff must show both that the
    organization itself, rather than just
    isolated members, possessed unlawful
    goals and that the individual defendant
    held a specific intent to further those
    illegal aims. 
    Id. at 920.
    We agree that Claiborne Hardware is
    directly applicable to our case. Although
    the plaintiffs established that the
    individual defendants themselves
    participated in many of the incidents
    described during the trial, the
    plaintiffs also introduced evidence of
    many other incidents coordinated or
    orchestrated by PLAN for which they did
    not specifically show that the individual
    defendants themselves committed the
    illegal acts described. In order for the
    defendants to be held responsible for
    acts committed by other members of PLAN
    during PLAN-organized events, Claiborne
    Hardware required the plaintiffs to show
    that PLAN itself, and not merely isolated
    members, intended that the illegal acts
    occur, that the defendants were aware of
    PLAN’s illegal aims, and that the
    defendants held a specific intent to fur
    ther those aims through their association
    with PLAN.
    Even though this is an exacting test,
    once again the record shows that the
    plaintiffs satisfied it in this case. All
    of the individual defendants who remain
    in the case were on the board of
    directors of PLAL. PLAL and Operation
    Rescue, the two remaining organizational
    defendants, were in turn the primary
    organizers of PLAN. The plaintiffs put
    into evidence numerous letters,
    newsletters, and other publications
    authored by defendant Joseph Scheidler,
    executive director of PLAL, and by
    Randall Terry, executive director of
    Operation Rescue, detailing the
    activities planned for upcoming PLAN
    events. The activities detailed in these
    letters included blocking access to
    clinics and entering clinics to block
    passageways. As noted above, these types
    of protest activities are illegal conduct
    unprotected by the First Amendment.
    Similarly, the threatening letters to
    plaintiff clinics were sent on PLAL
    letterhead, signed by Scheidler, and
    specifically described the threat as
    coming from PLAN. The jury was entitled
    to conclude from this evidence that PLAN
    itself, not merely isolated members, held
    illegal aims.
    It is also significant that all of the
    individual defendants were high-level
    leaders within PLAN, and as such they
    knew of PLAN’s illegal aims and intended
    to further those aims. The record showed
    that defendant Scheidler personally
    organized and coordinated many of PLAN’s
    activities. Defendants Scholberg and
    Murphy also participated in planning
    meetings for PLAN events at which illegal
    blockades were to take place and spoke at
    PLAN conventions designed to train
    protesters in the use of these tactics.
    The plaintiffs presented more than enough
    evidence to convince us that the
    individual defendants actively intended
    to further PLAN’s illegal goals.
    B.
    Turning to the defendants’ narrower
    First Amendment argument, the defendants
    contend that, regardless of whether there
    was sufficient evidence from which the
    jury could have found that they engaged
    in unprotected activities, the jury
    instructions and verdict form used by the
    trial court allowed the jury to find the
    defendants liable based solely on the
    defendants’ protected speech. The verdict
    form that the district court used asked
    the following relevant questions:
    1. Is the Pro-Life Action Network (PLAN) a
    group of people or organizations
    associated together for a common purpose?
    2. Were the . . . defendants associated
    with PLAN? (See Jury Instruction No. 20
    for the definition of "associated with.")
    . . .
    4. Did any Defendant, or any other person
    associated with PLAN, commit any of the
    [alleged predicate acts]?
    The jury instruction to which the verdict
    form referred stated, in relevant part:
    Jury Instruction No. 20: Plaintiffs must
    show that the defendant was "associated
    with" PLAN. That is, the defendant must
    have had some minimal association with
    PLAN and have known something about
    PLAN’s activities as they relate to the
    illegal acts under RICO. It is not
    necessary that the particular defendant
    committed acts unlawful under RICO or was
    aware of all of the unlawful acts
    committed by the other people who were
    associated with PLAN. . . . .
    In the district court, the defendants
    objected to these instructions, arguing
    that they did not require the jury to
    find that the defendants harbored a
    specific intent to further PLAN’s illegal
    aims, as required by Claiborne Hardware.
    The district court apparently agreed,
    because it added an additional jury
    instruction which stated:
    Jury Instruction No. 30--Defendants’
    Liability for Acts of Others
    Liability may not be imposed upon any
    defendant merely because that defendant
    belonged to a group, some members of
    which committed acts of violence. In
    order to find the defendants liable, you
    must conclude that the enterprise, or
    those acting on behalf of the enterprise,
    directly or indirectly authorized or
    ratified unlawful activities and that the
    defendants held a specific intent to
    further those illegal objectives.
    The defendants did not renew their
    objection to the jury instructions after
    the district court made this change.
    Nevertheless, in this court, the
    defendants have argued that, even with
    the additional instruction, the jury
    instructions did not adequately protect
    their First Amendment rights, because the
    Claiborne Hardware standard was
    incorporated only into the jury
    instructions, not into the verdict form.
    Initially, we note that by not renewing
    their objection to the jury instructions
    and verdict form after the district court
    added Instruction 30, the defendants at
    least implied that they were satisfied
    with the court’s resolution of their
    objection. Accordingly, we are inclined
    to find that the defendants have waived
    any objection to those instructions on
    appeal. See United States v. Jones, 
    224 F.3d 621
    , 626 (7th Cir. 2000) (objection
    to jury instruction waived where defense
    counsel agreed to instruction at trial).
    Because this is a civil trial, not a
    criminal trial, there is no equivalent of
    "plain error" review for a challenge that
    is forfeited rather than waived. In the
    interest of absolute fairness, however,
    we will consider this point based on the
    earlier objections.
    Our review of jury instructions is
    deferential, and we consider only whether
    the instructions, taken as a whole,
    adequately informed the jury of the
    applicable law. Molnar v. Booth, 
    229 F.3d 593
    , 602 (7th Cir. 2000). We are
    confident that these instructions did so.
    This jury could not have found the
    defendants liable without finding that
    the defendants themselves specifically
    intended to further PLAN’s illegal aims.
    Jury Instruction 30 made this requirement
    explicit, and absent any indication to
    the contrary, we presume that jurors
    follow the instructions they are given.
    Miksis v. Howard, 
    106 F.3d 754
    , 763 (7th
    Cir. 1997). There is no requirement for a
    district judge to replicate every
    instruction on the verdict form itself.
    We are confident that the jurors followed
    their instructions, heeded Instruction 30
    when they considered the questions on the
    special verdict form, and that nothing on
    the form misled or confused them or
    caused them to ignore their instructions.
    IV
    The last serious contention we must
    address is the defendants’ argument that
    the injunction in this case is vague and
    overbroad. The operative portion of the
    injunction reads as follows:
    Defendants . . . and any other on their
    behalf or in concert with them, are
    hereby enjoined from directly or
    indirectly:
    a. interfering with the right of any
    member of the Certified Class of
    Plaintiff Clinics to conduct its business
    (including but not limited to the right
    to provide abortion services) or the
    right of any NOW member or any member of
    the Certified Class of women to avail
    herself of the Plaintiff Clinics’
    services (including but not limited to
    abortion services), by:
    (1) blocking, impeding, inhibiting, or in
    any other manner obstructing or
    interfering with access to, ingress into
    and egress from any building or parking
    lot of any Plaintiff Clinic;
    (2) trespassing on the premises or the
    private property of any Plaintiff Clinic;
    (3) destroying, damaging or stealing
    property of any Plaintiff Clinic, its
    employees, volunteers, or any woman who
    seeks to use the services of such a
    Clinic;
    (4) using violence or threat of violence
    against any Plaintiff Clinic or any of
    its employees, volunteers, or any woman
    who seeks to use the services of such a
    Clinic;
    b. aiding, abetting, inducing, directing,
    or inciting any of the acts enumerated in
    subsection a. of this paragraph (the
    "Acts") through any of the Defendants or
    through others; or
    c. Operating an enterprise through any of
    the Acts described above.
    This injunction does not prohibit or
    preclude activities that are
    constitutionally protected, including but
    not limited to the following conduct:
    a. Peacefully carrying picket signs on the
    public property in front of any Plaintiff
    Clinic;
    b. Making speeches on public property;
    c.Speaking to individuals approaching the
    clinic;
    d. Handing out literature on public
    property; and
    e. Praying on public property.
    This injunction shall bind Defendants .
    . . and all other persons in active
    concert with them, and who have actual or
    constructive notice of this Order, and
    any other person acting in concert with
    PLAN.
    The defendants raise two principal
    objections to the scope of the
    injunction. First, they complain that it
    contains a number of terms that are vague
    or indefinite, and that as such, it is
    likely to chill a substantial amount of
    protected speech. Second, the defendants
    charge that the injunction makes them
    liable for the conduct of persons they do
    not control and for actions they do not
    authorize or approve. We consider each of
    these contentions in turn.
    First, we recognize that it is a
    delicate task to craft an injunction that
    prohibits illegal conduct when that
    conduct is closely tied to political
    protests and other protected activity.
    The court must tread carefully to avoid
    hampering protected speech. Here, we do
    not disagree with the proposition that
    some language in this injunction, taken
    in the abstract, is rather general. But
    the key question is: Compared to what?
    Any effort to deal with a case of this
    complexity will inevitably involve some
    imprecision. Many criminal statutes
    contain key terms such as the word
    "material" which are somewhat imprecise
    but have never been considered void for
    vagueness. The defendants in this case
    never proposed any alternative language
    for an injunction, despite several
    invitations from the district court to do
    just that, so the real question is
    whether the injunction the court entered
    is as precise as possible while still
    insuring that the defendants’ illegal
    activities are enjoined.
    We are satisfied that the injunction
    drafted by the district court here has
    struck the proper balance and has avoided
    any risk of curtailing protected
    activities. By its terms, the injunction
    prohibits only illegal conduct--
    trespassing, obstructing access to
    clinics, damaging property, using
    violence or threats of violence, or
    aiding, abetting, inducing, directing, or
    inciting any of these acts. We do not
    find any ambiguity in the terms the
    district court used to describe the
    prohibited conduct, and as discussed
    above, none of this conduct is protected
    by the First Amendment.
    Although we do not believe that the
    terms of the injunction would reach
    protected speech in any case, the injunc
    tion itself includes an additional
    safeguard. A specific provision
    underscores that it does not prohibit
    peaceful picketing, speeches, or praying
    on public property, attempts to speak
    with patients and staff, handing out
    literature, or any other activity
    protected by the First Amendment. Given
    this explicit language, there can be no
    doubt that this injunction reaches only
    unprotected, illegal conduct, not
    protected speech. The defendants’
    alarmist prediction that, under the terms
    of the injunction, a protester who
    engages in "months of peaceful picketing"
    and then takes "two accidental footsteps
    onto private property" could be subject
    to contempt proceedings not only for
    trespass but also for the picketing is
    pure fancy and bears no relation to the
    actual wording of the injunction.
    Nor do we find that the injunction
    impermissibly holds the defendants
    responsible for the actions of persons
    beyond their control. The injunction
    applies only to the defendants and to
    persons working in "active concert" with
    the defendants or in concert with PLAN.
    For that reason alone, the injunction’s
    sweep is not so broad as the defendants
    suggest. Activists and protesters not
    closely associated with the defendants or
    with PLAN, an organization the defendants
    control, are not affected by the
    injunction. (This takes care of the
    specter of renegades who, the defendants
    assert, are utterly beyond their
    control.) Moreover, to the extent the
    injunction reaches the conduct of
    individuals not named in this lawsuit,
    the order enjoins those individuals from
    violating its mandates. If individuals
    acting in concert with the defendants or
    PLAN violate the injunction, without
    inducement or direction by the
    defendants, the violators, not the
    defendants, would be in contempt of the
    court’s order. Nothing in the order
    purports to hold the defendants liable
    for actions they do not direct, incite,
    or control.
    The injunction as it is written is
    narrowly tailored to prohibit the
    specific types of illegal conduct that
    the defendants have engaged in on past
    protest missions. As such, it does not
    threaten the defendants’ First Amendment
    rights. We are confident that the
    district court will take as much care in
    enforcing the injunction as it plainly
    took in crafting it. Indeed, with its
    explicit protection of peaceful
    picketing, speech, literature, and
    prayer, perhaps in the end the injunction
    may further rational discourse on one of
    the most volatile political controversies
    facing the nation today. Violence in any
    form is the antithesis of reasoned
    discussion. By directing those with
    passionate views about the abortion
    controversy--on either side--away from
    the use of threats and violence and back
    to "all the peaceful means for gaining
    access to the mind," the injunction the
    district court issued is in harmony with
    the fundamental First Amendment
    protection of free speech.
    V
    The defendants have raised a hodgepodge
    of other challenges to the judgment, none
    of which need detain us long. First, the
    defendants point out that in the
    plaintiffs’ First and Second Amended
    Complaints (which were filed before the
    first set of appeals in the case) only
    the clinic plaintiffs alleged RICO
    claims; NOW joined only the counts
    alleging antitrust violations. As noted
    above, when the Supreme Court granted
    certiorari to review our earlier decision
    in this case, that grant was limited to
    questions concerning the RICO counts. The
    antitrust claims fell out of the case
    after the Court declined to review our
    decision with respect to them. According
    to the defendants, once all the counts to
    which NOW was a party fell out of the
    case, the effect was the same as a final
    judgment against NOW, and res judicata
    barred the plaintiffs from amending their
    complaint to include NOW as a plaintiff
    in the RICO counts. The district court,
    however, permitted the plaintiffs to file
    a Third Amended Complaint, after remand
    from this court, which included NOW as a
    plaintiff in the RICO counts.
    Whether to allow amendments to a
    complaint is a question committed to the
    discretion of the trial court. Bethany
    Pharmacal Co. v. QVC, Inc., 
    241 F.3d 854
    ,
    861 (7th Cir. 2001). Contrary to the
    defendants’ assertion, there was no final
    judgment in this case after the Supreme
    Court’s decision to which res judicata
    principles could apply. The case was
    still pending, first in this court and
    then in the district court. As a general
    rule, amendments to complaints are
    liberally allowed up to and even after
    trial, judgment, and appeal. See United
    States v. Security Pac. Bus. Credit,
    Inc., 
    956 F.2d 703
    , 707-08 (7th Cir.
    1992); see also Guse v. J.C. Penney Co.,
    
    570 F.2d 679
    , 680 (7th Cir. 1978) (even
    after plaintiff lost on appeal, there was
    no final judgment against plaintiff, and
    district court was free to allow
    plaintiff to file amended complaint
    putting forth new legal theory). The
    Supreme Court made it clear in its
    opinion that it was evaluating the
    complaint only on the pleadings, 
    see 510 U.S. at 256
    , 262, which is the most
    preliminary stage of proceedings one can
    imagine. The district court was thus well
    within its discretion in allowing NOW to
    continue as a plaintiff for the RICO
    claims in the Third Amended Complaint.
    The defendants also argue that the
    clinics’ claims are barred by res
    judicata. While this case was pending,
    one of the plaintiff clinics, Summit
    Women’s Health Organization, filed suit
    in state court in Wisconsin seeking an
    injunction against Scheidler and several
    other defendants to prevent PLAN from
    engaging in illegal blockades during a
    PLAN convention in Milwaukee. The
    Wisconsin courts ultimately dismissed
    that lawsuit without prejudice as to most
    of the defendants. However, before the
    case was dismissed, Scheidler and the
    Summit Women’s Health Organization
    entered into a settlement agreement that
    specified that "all claims against
    [Scheidler] relating to conduct which oc
    curred prior to the signing of this
    stipulation are hereby dismissed as to
    [Summit] with prejudice." The defendants
    argue that, because the claims that
    Summit raises in this case had already
    accrued at the time Summit entered into
    this stipulation, Summit is barred from
    bringing these claims in this lawsuit.
    We need not consider what preclusive
    effect the Wisconsin settlement might
    have, because the defendants waived this
    issue in the district court. Res judicata
    is an affirmative defense that is waived
    if a party does not plead it. Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 8(c). Under the local rules of
    the Northern District of Illinois, the
    defendants were required to list all
    their defenses in their trial brief, and
    any defenses not listed were waived. The
    defendants admit that they did not list
    res judicata based on the Wisconsin
    litigation as an affirmative defense in
    their trial brief, and accordingly they
    have lost the opportunity to argue that
    issue here. Although we find that this
    claim is waived, we also note that, even
    if it were not waived and if the
    Wisconsin settlement had a preclusive
    effect in this case, the preclusion could
    run only between Summit and Scheidler and
    would not affect any of the other
    plaintiffs, including the class members,
    or any of the other defendants. The
    injunction would not be affected, all of
    the defendants would remain jointly
    liable for the damages to Delaware
    Women’s Health Organization, and all of
    the defendants except Scheidler would
    remain liable to Summit. The practical
    effect of any preclusion would therefore
    be negligible.
    The defendants have also urged this
    court to decertify the two classes,
    arguing that NOW and the named clinics
    are inadequate class representatives. The
    defendants particularly object to the
    district court’s decision to include in
    the NOW class women who are not members
    of NOW, arguing that because NOW is a
    partisan advocacy group and the issues
    involved in this case concern a matter of
    great social controversy, NOW is likely
    to have interests antagonistic to the
    views of some members of the class. Class
    certification decisions are committed to
    the discretion of the district court,
    however, see Chavez v. Illinois State
    Police, 
    251 F.3d 612
    , 629 (7th Cir.
    2001), and we find that the district
    court’s decision to certify the two
    classes here was well within the court’s
    discretion. It is inaccurate in any event
    to imply that the district court
    certified a class of "all women." The
    court did no such thing. Instead, it
    certified a class that included only
    those women, whether or not members of
    NOW, whose right to seek abortion
    services has been or will be interfered
    with by the defendants. In order for
    these women’s interests to be
    antagonistic to the claims NOW is
    bringing, the defendants would have to
    argue that at least some women in the
    class want to seek abortion services, but
    do not want to be free from harassment
    and intimidation while doing so. This
    scenario strikes us as exceedingly
    unlikely; at the very least, we agree
    with the district court that it "is
    clearly speculative and projects
    personally held views onto the plaintiff
    class." National Organization for Women,
    Inc. v. Scheidler, 
    172 F.R.D. 351
    , 362
    (N.D. Ill. 1997).
    As to the defendants’ more general
    arguments that the named plaintiffs have
    not performed adequately as class
    representatives, we note that the named
    plaintiffs have pursued this litigation
    diligently for fifteen years, through a
    trip to the Supreme Court of the United
    States and a seven-week trial, and
    ultimately were successful in securing a
    nationwide injunction against the
    defendants prohibiting the conduct they
    set out to challenge. Given this record
    of performance, we cannot say that the
    district court in any way abused its
    discretion in certifying these classes.
    The defendants have also argued that the
    conduct in which they engaged is not
    prohibited by RICO for a number of
    reasons. First, the plaintiffs alleged as
    predicate acts numerous violations of the
    federal extortion statute, the Hobbs Act,
    18 U.S.C. sec. 1951, and the defendants
    argue that the Hobbs Act does not apply
    to their conduct. The defendants’ primary
    contention on this point is that the
    Hobbs Act defines extortion as "the
    obtaining of property from another, with
    his consent, induced by wrongful use of
    actual or threatened force, violence, or
    fear," and that the things the plaintiffs
    claim were taken here--the class women’s
    rights to seek medical services from the
    clinics, the clinic doctors’ rights to
    perform their jobs, and the clinics’
    rights to provide medical services and
    otherwise conduct their businesses--
    cannot be considered "property" for
    purposes of the Hobbs Act. However, this
    circuit has repeatedly held that
    intangible property such as the right to
    conduct a business can be considered
    "property" under the Hobbs Act, see,
    e.g., United States v. Anderson, 
    716 F.2d 446
    , 450 (7th Cir. 1983), and we will not
    revisit that holding here.
    In a similar vein, the defendants assert
    that, even if "property" was involved,
    the defendants did not "obtain" that
    property; they merely forced the
    plaintiffs to part with it. Again, this
    argument is contrary to a long line of
    precedent in this circuit holding that
    "as a legal matter, an extortionist can
    violate the Hobbs Act without
    eitherseeking or receiving money or
    anything else. A loss to, or interference
    with the rights of, the victim is all
    that is required." United States v.
    Stillo, 
    57 F.3d 553
    , 559 (7th Cir. 1995).
    In addition to their challenges to the
    application of the Hobbs Act, the
    defendants argue that the district court
    erred in giving the jury a generic
    instruction describing the elements of
    the state law extortion offenses the
    plaintiffs alleged as additional
    predicate acts. According to the
    defendants, there are substantial
    differences in the extortion laws of the
    states in which these alleged predicate
    acts occurred, and the district court’s
    attempt to cover all the relevant state
    laws with a single, generic instruction
    impermissibly discounted these
    differences. Without expressing an
    opinion on whether this approach was
    permissible, we simply note that, if any
    error occurred, it was harmless. The jury
    found that the defendants committed 21
    predicate acts under the Hobbs Act alone,
    which is far in excess of the two
    predicate acts that RICO requires. In the
    face of this finding, any error in the
    state extortion law instructions, which
    could at most have affected the jury’s
    decision on the additional state-law
    predicate acts it found, could not have
    had any effect on the outcome of this
    case.
    Finally, while this appeal was pending,
    the defendants filed motions in the
    district court seeking relief from the
    judgment under Rules 60(b)(2) and (3).
    The district court denied the motions,
    and the defendants appealed. We
    consolidated that appeal with this case
    and suspended briefing on the 60(b)
    issues. We have reviewed the defendants’
    motions in the trial court and the trial
    court’s resolution of those issues, and
    we conclude that no further briefing on
    the issues is necessary.
    "Rule 60(b) relief is an extraordinary
    remedy granted only in exceptional
    circumstances." Rutledge v. United
    States, 
    230 F.3d 1041
    , 1052 (7th Cir.
    2000). Our review of the district court’s
    decision denying relief is deferential,
    and we will reverse only if the district
    court has abused its discretion. J&W
    Fence Supply Co. v. United States, 
    230 F.3d 896
    , 898 (7th Cir. 2000). We find no
    abuse of discretion in this case. In
    their 60(b) motions, the defendants
    argued that they had newly discovered
    evidence relating to two specific
    incidents described by witnesses during
    the trial. In addition, the defendants
    posited that newly discovered evidence
    called into doubt whether an anonymous
    witness who testified at the trial in
    fact needed to remain anonymous. The
    district court denied the motions on the
    grounds that the defendants had documents
    in their possession from which they could
    have discovered most of the "new"
    evidence for well over a decade, and that
    relief at this late date accordingly was
    not warranted. In addition, the court
    noted that it was very unlikely that any
    of the "new" evidence, if admitted at
    trial, would have had any impact on the
    jury’s verdict. Given that Rule 60
    motions cannot be used to present
    evidence that with due diligence could
    have been introduced before judgment,
    
    Rutledge, 230 F.3d at 1052
    , or to put
    forth evidence that is not material or
    that would likely not change the result
    at trial, Jones v. Lincoln Elec. Co., 
    188 F.3d 709
    , 732 (7th Cir. 1999), we find no
    error in the district court’s denial of
    relief.
    We have considered all of the
    defendants’ remaining contentions, but
    find none that requires comment. For the
    foregoing reasons, the judgment of the
    district court is Affirmed in all
    respects.
    FOOTNOTE
    /1 The remedial provisions of the Clayton Act are
    actually spread over far more than the two sec-
    tions the defendants mention. In addition to
    sec.sec. 4 and 16, the Clayton Act also includes
    (as codified) 15 U.S.C. sec. 15(b) (suits for
    actual damages brought by foreign governments),
    15 U.S.C. sec. 15a (suits for treble damages
    brought by the United States for its own injuries
    to business or property), 15 U.S.C. sec. 15c
    (parens patriae suits brought by state attorneys
    general for treble damages on behalf of natural
    persons in the state), and 15 U.S.C. sec. 25
    (actions for injunctive relief brought by the
    Attorney General).
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 99-3076, 99-3336, 99-3891, 99-3892 and 01-2050

Citation Numbers: 267 F.3d 687

Judges: Rovner, Wood, Evans

Filed Date: 10/2/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (40)

Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co. , 69 S. Ct. 684 ( 1949 )

National Ass'n for the Advancement of Colored People v. ... , 102 S. Ct. 3409 ( 1982 )

Wisconsin v. Mitchell , 113 S. Ct. 2194 ( 1993 )

Klehr v. A. O. Smith Corp. , 117 S. Ct. 1984 ( 1997 )

Rotella v. Wood , 120 S. Ct. 1075 ( 2000 )

Hill v. Colorado , 120 S. Ct. 2480 ( 2000 )

Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States ... , 121 S. Ct. 675 ( 2001 )

National Organization for Women, Inc. v. Scheidler , 114 S. Ct. 798 ( 1994 )

Lisetta Molnar v. Lloyd Booth and East Chicago Community ... , 229 F.3d 593 ( 2000 )

religious-technology-center-and-church-of-scientology-international-inc , 796 F.2d 1076 ( 1986 )

imagineering-inc-a-washington-corporation-knighten-bros-construction , 976 F.2d 1303 ( 1992 )

national-organization-for-women-inc-on-behalf-of-itself-and-its-women , 968 F.2d 612 ( 1992 )

New York Times Co. v. Sullivan , 84 S. Ct. 710 ( 1964 )

United States v. Virgil E. Jones , 224 F.3d 621 ( 2000 )

United States v. Turkette , 101 S. Ct. 2524 ( 1981 )

Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment , 118 S. Ct. 1003 ( 1998 )

Cedric Kushner Promotions, Ltd. v. King , 121 S. Ct. 2087 ( 2001 )

John P. Miksis v. Henry L. Howard and Schneider National ... , 106 F.3d 754 ( 1997 )

Bethany Pharmacal Company, Incorporated v. Qvc, Incorporated , 241 F.3d 854 ( 2001 )

United States v. Security Pacific Business Credit, Inc. , 956 F.2d 703 ( 1992 )

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