Hartman v. Albright ( 2020 )


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  •                                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    _________________________________________
    )
    CAROLEE BRADY HARTMAN, et al.,            )
    )
    Plaintiffs,                         )
    )
    v.                           )                             Case No. 77-cv-2019 (APM)
    )
    MICHAEL R. POMPEO, et al., 1              )
    )
    Defendants.                         )
    _________________________________________ )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    I.       INTRODUCTION
    This case is in all respects extraordinary. Originating over forty years ago, it represents
    the largest Title VII sex discrimination class action settlement in United States history. Its over
    1,000 class members each received an average of $460,000—the largest per-capita recovery in a
    case of its kind. Class members are women who sought employment or promotions with the
    United States Information Agency, a former agency of the United States government, the relevant
    components of which were incorporated into the State Department. Remarkably, the lead counsel
    for the class, Bruce Fredrickson, took on the case as a 26-year-old just one year out of law school
    and, now well into his sixties, has stayed on for its duration. Over the last four decades,
    Mr. Fredrickson has led a team of over 120 individuals across seven law firms. In 2018, the last
    of the $508 million settlement fund was distributed to class members, leaving resolution of
    attorneys’ fees as the sole remaining issue.
    1
    Michael R. Pompeo, in his official capacity as Secretary of the United States Department of State, is substituted as
    Defendant Madeleine K. Albright under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d).
    Since 1995, there have been 28 interim payments to class counsel for fees, expenses, and
    interest accrued during the pendency of the case, totaling $26,570,701.19. Plaintiffs now seek an
    additional $34,114,143.52, for a final total fee recovery of $75,000,000. 2 To justify this demand,
    Plaintiffs primarily argue that they are entitled to a percentage of the total settlement under a
    “constructive common fund” theory. Alternatively, Plaintiffs argue that an enhancement to the
    lodestar is proper because the lodestar calculated for the interim fee petitions does not reflect class
    counsel’s true market value and it does not adequately compensate them for delay in receiving
    payment.
    For the reasons that follow, the court denies Plaintiffs’ motion without prejudice. This is
    a fee-shifting case—not a common-fund case—and the parties agreed to use the lodestar method—
    not the percentage-of-the-fund method—to calculate the final fee award. Although the court
    agrees with Plaintiffs that the interim lodestar is likely not an adequate measure of class counsel’s
    true market value, the court is not in a position to award an enhancement because the lodestar, as
    calculated, is itself inexact. The court is hopeful that this decision will provide a path forward for
    the parties to reach an agreement on what the proper lodestar should be, as well as any
    compensation for delay.
    II.      BACKGROUND
    A.       Factual Background
    The underlying facts of this case have been summarized at length in numerous prior
    opinions by other judges in this District and the D.C. Circuit. 3 See De Medina v. Reinhardt,
    2
    This amount updates all prior payments to their 2019 dollar value.
    3
    Multiple judges have presided over the case during its 43-year lifespan. “United States District Judge Charles R.
    Richey presided over the case until his death in 1997, after which the case was assigned to United States District Judge
    James Robertson, who presided over the case until his retirement from the bench in 2010. There was no permanently-
    assigned presiding judge from 2010 until October 16, 2019, when [this court] was assigned [ ] the case shortly after
    Plaintiffs filed their pending motion for an additional fee award.” Defs.’ Corrected Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. for Final
    Determination of Attys.’ Fees, ECF No. 1085-1, at 2.
    2
    
    686 F.2d 997
    , 1000–01 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (detailing the background of this protracted litigation and
    reversing the District Court’s adverse decision on liability); Hartman v. Wick, 
    600 F. Supp. 361
    ,
    375 (D.D.C. 1984) (finding the United States Information Agency had “discriminat[ed] against
    women as a class with regard to hiring”); Hartman v. Wick, 
    678 F. Supp. 312
    , 341 (D.D.C. 1988)
    (as amended) (setting “forth a concrete plan for remedying victims” of the agency’s
    discrimination); Hartman v. Duffey, 
    19 F.3d 1459
    , 1474 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (remanding the class
    certification for additional findings); Hartman v. Duffey, 
    88 F.3d 1232
    (D.C. Cir. 1996) (affirming
    class certification and liability determinations); Hartman v. Duffey, 
    973 F. Supp. 199
    (D.D.C.
    1997) (resolving disputes over first and second interim fee petitions, and awarding enhancement
    of fees for lead attorneys Bruce Fredrickson and Susan Brackshaw). Accordingly, the court will
    focus its discussion on the facts most relevant to Plaintiffs’ motion for a final fee determination.
    1.      Pre–Consent Decree (1977–2000)
    Exhibiting extraordinary dedication to their clients’ cause, Plaintiffs’ counsel worked
    without any fees for the first eighteen years of this litigation. It wasn’t until July 30, 1993, that
    Plaintiffs submitted their first fee petition, “seeking fees in the amount of $2,989,150.28 and
    expenses of $194,610.93 incurred from the beginning of the litigation in 1977 through August 31,
    1992.” Pls.’ Mem. in Supp. of Pls.’ Mot. for a Final Determination of Attys.’ Fees, ECF No. 1081
    [hereinafter Pls.’ Mot.], Decl. of Lindsey B. Lang, ECF No. 1081-6 [hereinafter Lang Decl.], ¶ 15;
    see also Notice of Filing of Defs.’ Corrected Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. for Final Determination of Attys.’
    Fees, ECF No. 1085, Defs.’ Corrected Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. for Final Determination of Attys.’ Fees,
    ECF No. 1085-1 [hereinafter Defs.’ Opp’n], at 10. The court at the time admonished Plaintiffs
    “for having waited all th[o]se years to file an interim application for attorneys’ fees and costs after
    being encouraged to do so in open Court on several occasions.” Order, Jan. 24, 1995, ECF No.
    3
    179, at 2 (on file at Defs.’ Exhibit 10-6, ECF No. 1083-16 [hereinafter DEX 10-6]). 4 Plaintiffs
    now explain why they did not seek an interim fee award sooner. According to Plaintiffs’ lead
    counsel and declarant Bruce A. Fredrickson, the delay was due to his “reluctan[ce] to seek fees
    before [Plaintiffs’] position as a prevailing party was firmly established.” See Pls.’ Reply Mem.
    in Supp. of Pls.’ Mot. for a Final Determination of Attorneys’ Fees, ECF No. 1087 [hereinafter
    Pls.’ Reply], Suppl. Decl. of Bruce A. Fredrickson, ECF No. 1087-3 [hereinafter Suppl.
    Fredrickson Decl.], ¶ 5. If “defendant[s] [had] succeeded in [their] appeal [of the liability decision]
    to the D.C. Circuit or the Supreme Court,” Fredrickson elaborates, “[his] firm might [have been]
    forced to repay the government hundreds of thousands of dollars in interim attorneys’ fees upon
    conclusion of [the] case.” Suppl. Frederickson Decl. ¶ 8. Although Defendants were initially
    found liable in 1984, see 
    Hartman, 600 F. Supp. at 361
    , it was not until 1992 that Defendants first
    had an opportunity to appeal that decision, see Defs.’ Opp’n at 4. On initial appeal of the liability
    determination, “[t]he Court of Appeals held that it could not determine whether the class
    certification decision was correct, and remanded the case for the District Court to make the
    necessary findings on, and to consider possible revisions to, class certification.”
    Id. at 5
    (citing
    
    Hartman, 19 F.3d at 1459
    ). Then, on remand, “[o]n November 23, 1994, the District Court
    confirmed the Court’s previous class certification decision and class-wide liability findings.”
    Id. (citing Hartman v.
    Duffey, 
    158 F.R.D. 525
    (D.D.C. 1994)). “The Court of Appeals subsequently
    affirmed those rulings in all significant respects, and the Supreme Court denied further review.”
    Id. (citing Hartman, 88
    F.3d at 1232, cert. denied, 
    520 U.S. 1240
    (1997)). Once these decisions
    became final, Plaintiffs’ counsel sought their first interim fee award.
    4
    Because many of the filings in this case pre-date the electronic docket, Defendants have obtained the paper copies
    and included them as exhibits to their opposition to Plaintiffs’ motion. Labeled hereinafter as “DEX,” these exhibits
    may be found at ECF No. 1083.
    4
    Plaintiffs’ early fee petitions were the subject of litigation before a Special Master and the
    District Court. Plaintiffs’ declarant Lindsey B. Lang explains that “procedure dictated that the
    [fee] petition be filed with the Special Master, followed by the government’s objections and
    plaintiffs’ reply.” Lang Decl. ¶ 13; Order of Reference to Special Master, Oct. 1, 1991 (on file at
    DEX 10-1) (ordering counsel for plaintiffs to file “with the Special Master a petition for attorneys’
    fees and costs every six” months). Included with each petition were affidavits attesting that the
    hourly rates Plaintiffs requested corresponded to “non-contingent rates that were actually charged
    for the work of each timekeeper during the year the work was performed.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 24–
    25.   After reviewing Plaintiffs’ submission, “[t]he Special Master [would] then issue[] a
    preliminary report that either party could object to, and once the final report was issued, either
    party could appeal to the district court.” Lang Decl. ¶ 13. Ms. Lang explains, “[f]ollowing this
    procedure meant that the petition took a long time to reach a conclusion and often several petitions
    would be pending at the same time at different stages of the process.”
    Id. This often resulted
    in
    the district court deciding more than one petition at a time, and some were “decided piecemeal
    with several court orders required to fully decide the full fee award.”
    Id. For each of
    the first through fifth fee petitions, the Special Master issued reports
    recommending an award of at least 90 percent of the fees sought by Plaintiffs’ counsel, and in each
    instance, the court affirmed virtually all of the Special Master’s findings. See, e.g., Lang Decl.
    ¶¶ 15, 17, 26; see also Defs.’ Opp’n at 10–12. With the first fee petition, for example, the Special
    Master recommended an award of approximately 90 percent of the fees sought and approved
    Plaintiffs’ request for a quality enhancement. See Lang Decl. ¶ 15. The “[c]ourt [subsequently]
    approved the Special Master’s recommendations,” and awarded a “25 [percent] quality
    enhancement, or $188,968.70, for the hours devoted by Bruce Fredrickson and Susan Brackshaw
    5
    for the years 1980–1990.”
    Id. ¶ 19.
    But this process took time. Although the court had ordered
    an interim payment of $500,000 in January 1995, see Order, Jan. 24, 1995, ECF No. 179 (on file
    at DEX 10-6), as of December 1996, final resolution of Plaintiffs’ first and second fee petitions
    was still pending. It wasn’t until August 4, 1997, that the court issued a final opinion on the
    balance of the fees sought in those petitions. See Lang Decl. ¶ 19 (citing Hartman, 
    973 F. Supp. 199
    ).
    In an attempt to streamline the interim-fee-petition process, in December 1996, the parties
    “met with the Special Master and were encouraged to attempt to resolve some of the recurring
    issues that were litigated in each fee petition.” Lang Decl. ¶ 21. Mr. Fredrickson explains that
    because there was significant litigation over the appropriate hourly rate up until this point, and
    because his firm “d[id] not have regular billing rates,” the parties agreed that Plaintiffs’ counsel’s
    fees should “be computed using a market rate for similar services in the District of Columbia.”
    Pls.’ Mot., Ex. 2, Decl. of Bruce A. Fredrickson, ECF No. 1081-2 [hereinafter Fredrickson Decl.],
    ¶ 63. “At that time, the rates in the [U.S. Attorneys’ Office’s (“USAO”)] Laffey matrix were
    roughly comparable to the prevailing market rates in the District of Columbia.”
    Id. Accordingly, “[o]n December
    20, 1996[,] the parties agreed that, for the purposes of [the third, and all
    subsequent] interim petitions, the parties would use actual rates for counsel with established billing
    rates to the extent those rates did not exceed the applicable rate for the timekeeper under the Laffey
    matrix, and that Laffey rates would be used for counsel without established billing rates.” Lang
    Decl. ¶ 21; Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 63. 5 Mr. Fredrickson explains that although he later became aware
    5
    The Laffey rates are discussed in greater detail infra, Section IV.B.1.b. “The initial Laffey rates were representative
    of the rates for complex federal litigation in the District of Columbia [“D.C.”] in 1982.” Lang Decl. ¶ 62. The D.C.
    USAO “undertook an update of those rates for subsequent years using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
    Consumers (CPI-U) for the Washington-Baltimore, DC-MD-VA-WVA [area], as announced by the Bureau of Labor
    Statistics for May of each year.”
    Id. ¶ 63.
    The Laffey matrices are available at https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/civil-
    division (last accessed Nov. 2, 2020).
    6
    that the “Laffey rates . . . were lagging behind prevailing market rates,” because “each petition
    reserved the right to seek an enhancement to the lodestar awarded, [he] was satisfied to honor the
    agreement [to use the Laffey rates] rather than introduce more litigation over rates into the interim
    petitions.” Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 63.
    The Laffey rates, however, remained generally consistent with market rates through the
    sixth and seventh fee petitions, submitted on September 30, 1998, and May 25, 1999, respectively.
    As with the previous fee petitions, Plaintiffs provided affidavits in support of the petitions,
    including that of Crowell & Moring attorney Laurel Pyke Malson. Crowell & Morning had joined
    as class counsel in 1992.
    Id. ¶ 38.
    Ms. Malson attested to the “non-contingent rates that were
    actually charged during th[e] [relevant] period for each of the timekeepers whose time [was] sought
    in Plaintiffs’ seventh fee petition,” and explained that “th[o]se rates [we]re somewhat different
    from [the Laffey rates] used to calculate [the] Crowell & Moring lodestar.” Decl. of Laurel Pyke
    Malson, May 20, 1999 (on file at DEX 7 [hereinafter Malson Decl.]), ¶ 42 (emphasis added). And,
    more to the point, in their memorandum in support of the seventh fee petition, Plaintiffs argued
    that the hourly rates in the USAO’s Laffey Matrix for the time period covered by the seventh fee
    petition (January 1 – June 30, 1998) were “market rates . . . supported by the rates awarded in
    recent cases in this Circuit as well as rate information provided in exhibits to previous Hartman
    fee petitions.” Mem. in Supp. of Pls.’ Seventh Mot. for Interim Attys.’ Fees & Expenses (on file
    at DEX 10-15), at 10–11. 6 For both petitions, the Special Master recommended Plaintiffs receive
    virtually all of the $2,106,252.65 in fees sought. See Lang Decl. ¶ 28; Defs.’ Opp’n at 13.
    6
    Defendants note that “[t]he Seventh Fee Petition was the last formal interim fee petition submitted by Plaintiffs. All
    subsequent fee requests were resolved informally. Thus, the record of this case does not include contemporaneous
    data about historic market rates for periods after June 30, 1998.” Def’s Opp’n at 30.
    7
    2.      Post–Consent Decree (2000–2018)
    With Defendants’ objections to Plaintiffs’ sixth and seventh fee petitions still pending, the
    parties entered settlement negotiations on March 22, 2000, and reached agreement two days later.
    See Lang Decl. ¶ 29. On March 24, 2000, the parties entered a Consent Decree that provided for
    a staggering $508,000,000 settlement fund for the class.
    Id. It also provided
    that “Plaintiffs shall
    be entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses, and costs from the initiation of this case through
    the final distribution of amounts in the settlement fund or the final resolution of any issues that
    may arise under this Decree, whichever is later.” Consent Decree, Mar. 24, 2000, ECF No. 866
    (on file at DEX 10-13 [hereinafter DEX 10-13]), at ¶ 8.
    In his declaration, Mr. Fredrickson explains his motivation for deferring resolution of
    attorneys’ fees until the end of litigation, and not seeking a percentage of class recovery for
    attorneys’ fees during settlement negotiations, as he knew had been done in other cases at the time.
    Seeking a percentage of the class recovery, which would have come out of the settlement fund, he
    believed, “would have violated [counsel’s] prior commitments to the class members.” Suppl.
    Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 9. “[T]o avoid any suggestion of a conflict of interest,” Fredrickson Decl.
    ¶ 65, Mr. Fredrickson says, he decided to “negotiate[] a consent decree [that] contemplated [an
    award of] reasonable attorneys’ [fees] upon the conclusion of the case,” Suppl. Fredrickson Decl.
    ¶ 9. Putting “the question of attorneys’ fees to the side” until final resolution of the case, he
    explains, was critical to reaching agreement.
    Id. Following approval of
    the Consent Decree, the court “ordered the withdrawal of all
    pending motions, including motions for review of the Special Master’s findings regarding the Sixth
    and Seventh Petitions.” Lang Decl. ¶ 29. The parties subsequently settled on the fees owed for
    those petitions, totaling $2,099,131.78.
    Id. ¶ 30;
    see also Defs.’ Opp’n at 13.
    8
    Thereafter, the parties “settled twenty-one interim attorney fee requests that collectively
    covered a period of approximately 20 years . . . without litigation or intervention by the Court,
    aside from routine approvals of the stipulated payments.” Defs.’ Opp’n, Decl. of Daniel F. Van
    Horn, ECF No. 1083-8, ¶ 15. By the terms of each petition, payment of interim fees was
    without prejudice to either party’s position with respect to issues
    which have been reserved pending entry of final judgment and
    exhaustion of any appeals in this action and the final resolution of
    the various interim fee petitions, including but not limited to issues
    regarding reimbursable expenses, the appropriate interest rate, and
    enhancement of the lodestar.
    Pls.’ Mot. at 4–5 (quoting Joint Stipulation & Order Regarding Pls.’ Ninth Request for Interim
    Attys.’ Fees & Expenses, Apr. 5, 2001, ECF No. 984 [hereinafter Ninth Fee Petition Stip.], at 1–
    2); see also Suppl. Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 9. According to Ms. Lang, “[t]he pace of work was such
    that for several petitions covering the late 1990’s[,] fees were sought for a six-month period at a
    time.” Lang Decl. ¶ 31. And, “[b]y the Eleventh Petition (2001), each year a petition was filed
    for fees incurred in the preceding calendar year.”
    Id. All told, class
    counsel received $7,788,724.19 in fees under the eighth through twenty-
    eighth fee petitions, see Lang Decl. ¶¶ 32–52, for a sum of $20,987,515.51 in fees since the first
    award in 1995, see Lang Decl., Ex. B., at PDF p. 28.
    3.      Interest and Compensation for Delay
    Defendants have paid interest on interim fees earned since 1991. Initially, Plaintiffs
    “sought current market rates to compensate for delay.” Lang Decl. ¶ 14. But the court at first
    rejected any payment for delay, ruling “that Congress had not waived sovereign immunity to
    permit prejudgment interest on fees and expenses in this case.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 12 (citing
    
    Hartman, 973 F. Supp. at 201
    ). Plaintiffs sought reconsideration of that decision on the basis that
    interest was authorized and should be applied retroactively, under the 1991 Civil Rights Act. See
    9
    Lang Decl. ¶ 14. The court ultimately agreed, “and, on February 5, 1998, ruled that prejudgment
    interest would be permitted, and would begin to accrue on November 21, 1991, the effective date
    of [the Act].” Defs.’ Opp’n at 12 (citing Mem. Order re Prejudgment Interest, Feb. 5, 1998, ECF
    No. 506 (on file at DEX 10-9 [hereinafter DEX 10-9]); see also Lang Decl. ¶ 25. The court also
    decided that “interest in this case would be calculated using the 1-year Treasury bill rate rather
    than the prime rate Plaintiffs requested.” DEX 10-9, at 4–5; see also Hartman v. Duffey, 
    8 F. Supp. 2d
    1 (D.D.C. 1998). In total, class counsel have received $1,891,040.16 in interest on the interim
    fee payments. See Lang Decl., Ex. B., at PDF p. 28.
    B.       Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Final Fee Determination
    The last payment from the $508 million settlement fund issued on June 22, 2018. See Pls.’
    Mot. at 3. Then, on October 19, 2019, Plaintiffs filed their Motion for a Final Determination of
    Attorneys’ Fees, as permitted under the Consent Decree. See generally
    id. Plaintiffs seek an
    additional fee award of $34,114,143.52, for a total award of $75 million.
    Id. at 1.
    Plaintiffs justify
    that sum based on a percentage of the total class recovery, see
    id. at
    26, 
    and assert that the roughly
    eight percent fee they seek 7 is “consistent with, if not lower than, fees awarded in similar cases,”
    id. at
    28. 
    Alternatively, Plaintiffs argue, if the court uses a lodestar analysis, then an enhancement
    is warranted. They offer an enhancement calculation that would result in an adjusted lodestar
    roughly equivalent to the $75 million sought.
    Id. at 43.
    Defendants oppose the award of additional fees beyond what has already been paid to date.
    See Defs.’ Opp’n at 1. In short, Defendants contend that the lodestar method is the proper way of
    calculating fees in this case and, under that approach, Plaintiffs have received a reasonable fee and
    7
    Plaintiffs calculate the percentage by updating the total class member recovery (lump sum settlement + costs and
    fees) to its 2019 value, and then dividing the $75 million fee sought by that amount ($880,136,968.23). See Lang
    Decl., Ex.A, at PDF p. 18.
    10
    are not entitled to an enhancement on any ground. See generally
    id. Briefing on Plaintiffs’
    motion
    concluded on February 28, 2020. See Pls.’ Reply. On September 23, 2020, the court heard oral
    argument on Plaintiffs’ motion.
    III.   LEGAL STANDARD
    “In a certified class action, the court may award reasonable attorney’s fees and nontaxable
    costs that are authorized by law or by the parties’ agreement.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(h). One such
    law that authorizes the award of attorneys’ fees is Title VII. It provides that the court “in its
    discretion, may allow the prevailing party . . . a reasonable attorney’s fee (including expert fees)
    as part of the costs.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k). “In general, a trial court enjoys substantial discretion
    in making reasonable fee determinations.” Swedish Hosp. Corp. v. Shalala, 
    1 F.3d 1261
    , 1271
    (D.C. Cir. 1993). “[A] reasonable fee is one that is ‘adequate to attract competent counsel, but that
    does not produce windfalls to attorneys.’” West v. Potter, 
    717 F.3d 1030
    , 1033–34 (D.C. Cir.
    2013) (quoting Blum v. Stenson, 
    465 U.S. 886
    , 897 (1984)). The Supreme Court has cautioned
    that “[a] request for attorney’s fees should not result in a second major litigation.” Hensley v.
    Eckerhart, 
    461 U.S. 424
    , 437 (1983). Instead, “[p]arties . . . should make a conscientious effort,
    where a fee award is to be made, to resolve any differences.” 
    Blum, 465 U.S. at 902
    n.19.
    IV.    DISCUSSION
    The court begins its analysis by considering the proper method for calculating fees in this
    case. Because the court concludes that this is a fee-shifting case, it then turns to analyze the
    lodestar and Plaintiffs’ argument that an enhancement to the lodestar is appropriate. The court
    ends with a discussion of Plaintiffs’ proposed calculation of an enhanced lodestar.
    11
    A.      Lodestar Versus Percentage of the Fund
    Any inquiry into the reasonableness of attorneys’ fees begins with determining the proper
    method for calculating fees. Courts generally calculate attorneys’ fees in one of two ways: the
    lodestar method or the percentage-of-the-fund approach, depending on whether the case involves
    a fee-shifting provision or a fee-spreading arrangement.
    “Fee shifting” is an exception to the general rule in the American legal system that “[e]ach
    litigant pays his own attorney’s fees, win or lose, unless a statute or contract provides otherwise.”
    Hardt v. Reliance Standard Life Ins., 
    560 U.S. 242
    , 253 (2010). Fee shifting may arise “(1) when
    a statute grants courts the authority to direct the losing party to pay attorney’s fees; (2) when the
    parties agree in a contract that one party will pay attorney’s fees; [or] (3) when a court orders one
    party to pay attorney’s fees for acting in bad faith.” In re Home Depot Inc., 
    931 F.3d 1065
    , 1078
    (11th Cir. 2019); Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y, 
    421 U.S. 240
    , 275 (1975)
    (Marshall, J., dissenting). Generally speaking, fee-shifting cases use the lodestar method for
    determining a reasonable fee. See Perdue v. Kenny A., 
    559 U.S. 542
    , 551 (2010). The lodestar is
    equal to the “hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable hourly rate,”
    
    Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433
    . The Supreme Court has described the “lodestar” method as the “guiding
    light of our fee-shifting jurisprudence.” 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 551
    .
    The “percentage-of-the-fund method,” on the other hand, “is the appropriate mechanism
    for determining the attorney fees award in common fund,” or what some courts refer to as, “fee-
    spreading” cases. Swedish Hosp. 
    Corp., 1 F.3d at 1271
    ; Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1079
    n. 12
    (explaining that “[i]t would arguably be more helpful to describe the difference as between fee-
    shifting (where the fee shifts to the other party) and fee-spreading (where the fee is spread among
    the benefited party)” than as between fee-shifting and “common fund”). As its name suggests,
    12
    under the percentage-of-the-fund method, the attorneys whose efforts benefitted the fund are
    entitled to a reasonable fee to be paid from the fund as a whole. Boeing Co. v. Van Gemert, 
    444 U.S. 472
    , 478 (1980). In this Circuit, “common fund class action awards fall between twenty and
    thirty percent.” Swedish 
    Hosp., 1 F.3d at 1272
    . The rationale for this doctrine rests on the
    equitable notion that the payment of “fair and just allowances for expenses and counsel fees”
    should be spread among all the beneficiaries of the fund lest they be unjustly enriched by the
    attorneys’ efforts. Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund v. Greenough, 
    105 U.S. 527
    , 536
    (1881); see also Cent. R.R. & Banking Co. of Ga. v. Pettus, 
    113 U.S. 116
    , 126–27 (1885);
    
    Boeing, 444 U.S. at 478
    . Because the attorneys’ fees come from the fund, which would otherwise
    be payable to the attorneys’ clients, it is the clients, not the losing party, that pays the attorneys.
    In this sense, a common fund fee award is generally not considered to be an exception to the
    American Rule. See generally William B. Rubenstein, 5 Newberg on Class Actions § 15:25, at 60
    n.3 (5th ed.) (“Courts occasionally state that fees taken from a common fund represent another
    exception to the American Rule, . . . [b]ut that is not quite right: when fees are extracted from a
    common fund to pay class counsel, the class members’ recoveries are reduced accordingly and
    hence those class members themselves are paying their own fees.” (citations omitted)).
    The parties vigorously disagree over into which category this case falls: fee-shifting or
    fee-spreading. Plaintiffs argue that the court should treat the settlement as a “constructive common
    fund,” warranting a percentage-of-the-fund fee award. See Pls.’ Mot. at 34–35; see also Pls.’
    Reply at 5. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that this is a fee-shifting case, see Defs.’ Opp’n
    at 18, and therefore the lodestar method is the correct one for calculating that fee award, see
    id. at
    16. 
    As explained below, the court agrees with Defendants.
    13
    1.      The Parties’ Intent
    To start, the parties agree that proper computation of the final fee award in this case is a
    question of contract interpretation. See Oral Argument Tr., ECF No. 1097 [hereinafter Hr’g Tr.],
    at 9:10-14 (Plaintiffs’ counsel agreeing that “this case, in the first instance, [is] a question of
    contract interpretation”), 37:16-19 (government counsel agreeing that “this is a matter of contract
    interpretation”). The relevant contract is the Consent Decree entered into in 2000. Thus, the task
    before the court is to discern the parties’ intent, in 2000, with respect to calculating a final fee
    award.
    Settlement agreements are contracts, and as with interpreting any contract, the court begins
    with its terms. See Keepseagle v. Perdue, 
    856 F.3d 1039
    , 1047 (D.C. Cir. 2017); cf. U.S. v. ITT
    Cont’l Banking Co., 
    420 U.S. 223
    , 238 (1975) (“Since a consent decree . . . is to be construed for
    enforcement purposes basically as a contract, reliance upon certain aids to construction is proper,
    as with any other contract.”). The court must first “determine whether the disputed language is
    unambiguous.” Armenian Assembly of Am., Inc. v. Cafesjian, 
    758 F.3d 265
    , 278 (D.C. Cir. 2014).
    If the relevant clause is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, the court must consider
    “what a reasonable person in the position of the parties would have thought the disputed language
    meant.”
    Id. (quoting Tillery v.
    D.C. Contract Appeals Bd., 
    912 A.2d 1169
    , 1176 (D.C. 2006)).
    The text of the Consent Decree provides little insight into the parties’ intent concerning the
    final fee award. Paragraph 8 of the 2000 Consent Decree provides:
    Plaintiffs shall be entitled to reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses,
    and costs from the initiation of this case through the final
    distribution of amounts in the settlement fund or the final resolution
    of any issues that may arise under this Decree, whichever is later.
    Reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses, and costs shall include
    reasonable fees and expenses associated with administering the
    settlement, including but not limited to notifying the Class Members
    of this Decree, establishing and maintaining a qualified settlement
    14
    fund, distributing the fund to the Class Members, complying with
    legal obligations governing such matters, and retaining appropriate
    third parties to perform such tasks. The parties shall endeavor to
    reach agreement on all of Plaintiffs’ claims for attorneys’ fees,
    expenses, and costs, but each party reserves the right to litigate any
    claims that cannot be resolved informally.
    DEX 10-13 at 6–7. On its face, the Consent Decree says nothing about the method that should be
    used to calculate attorneys’ fees. It says only that “Plaintiffs shall be entitled to reasonable
    attorneys’ fees”—the term “reasonable” is nowhere defined.
    Id. When a settlement
    agreement’s plain text is ambiguous, the court can turn to its structure
    for clues. See Ohio Power Co. v. F.E.R.C., 
    744 F.2d 162
    , 168 (D.C. Cir. 1984). On that score,
    the Consent Decree is illuminating. The Consent Decree, by its very terms, is not a common fund
    settlement. The parties did not contemplate that the final award of attorneys’ fees would be
    deducted from the overall class recovery, such that the fees award would be “spread[ ] . . .
    proportionately among those benefited by the suit.” Boeing 
    Co., 444 U.S. at 478
    . “Fee spreading”
    is an essential feature of a common fund settlement. 
    See supra, at 12
    –13. The parties instead
    agreed that the final fee award would be paid by Defendants over and above the fees paid from the
    settlement fund. See, e.g., Joint Pre-Hearing Br. in Supp. of Consent Decree, ECF No. 904 (on
    file at DEX 10-14), at 9–10 (“Plaintiffs’ reasonable attorneys’ fees, expenses and costs from the
    initiation of this case through the final resolution of the case will be paid by the Defendants over
    and above the $508 million.”). That the parties agreed Defendants would be the source of the final
    fees payment is consistent with principles of fee shifting, not the common fund doctrine. See
    Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1079
    (observing that “the key distinction between common-fund and
    fee-shifting cases is whether the attorney’s fees are paid by the client (as in common-fund cases)
    or by the other party (as in fee-shifting cases)”). Thus, the settlement structure is strong evidence
    15
    that the parties did not contemplate that Plaintiffs would be paid a final fees award as a percentage
    of the benefit received by the class, as Plaintiffs now demand.
    Other evidence confirms this understanding of the Consent Decree. See Ohio Power 
    Co., 744 F.2d at 168
    (“[W]hen the meaning of [a] contract cannot be determined from its text and
    structure or from the application of canons of contract interpretation,” the court may consider
    extrinsic evidence “to discern the meaning that the parties intended to attribute to the ambiguous
    formulation.”). Take the terms of the parties’ twenty-plus fee stipulations following the Consent
    Decree. Each expressly contemplates that the final fee award would be calculated using the
    lodestar method. For example, the “Joint Stipulation and Order Regarding Plaintiff’s Ninth
    Request for Attorneys’ Fees and Expenses”—the first such stipulation following the parties’ entry
    in the Consent Decree—states that the
    stipulation is without prejudice to either party’s position with
    respect to issues which have been reserved pending entry of final
    judgment and exhaustion of any appeal in this action and the final
    resolution of the various interim fee petitions, including but not
    limited to issues regarding reimbursable expenses, the appropriate
    interest rate, and enhancement of the lodestar.
    Ninth Fee Petition Stip. at 1–2 (emphasis added). Subsequent fee stipulations, up until the last,
    contain an identically-worded reservation of rights. See Defs.’ Surreply in Opp’n to Pl’s Mot. for
    Final Determination of Att’ys’ Fees, ECF No. 1088-1, at 1–2 & n.1; Joint. Stip. & Order Regarding
    Pls.’ Twenty-Eighth Request for Att’ys’ Fees & Expenses, ECF No. 1079. Plaintiffs cannot now
    genuinely assert that they intended to seek a final award on a percentage-of-the-fund basis when
    for nearly two decades they have reserved the right to ask for an “enhancement of the lodestar.”
    Finally, and perhaps most telling, is Mr. Fredrickson’s personal account of the negotiations
    over the Consent Decree. He makes clear that he deliberately chose not to negotiate a percentage-
    of-the-fund award for attorneys’ fees at the time of the settlement and that he always envisioned a
    16
    final award of fees based upon the lodestar method. In his initial declaration, Mr. Frederickson
    states that, in 1999 when negotiating the settlement,
    I knew that class counsel in some other cases had pursued
    simultaneous negotiations concerning both the merits and their own
    fees, and had secured a percentage of the recovery as a fee. I also
    knew that courts had approved the resulting fees. I believed,
    however, that class counsel in Hartman should avoid any suggestion
    of a conflict of interest and should negotiate only about the merits,
    reserving the amount of the fees for later discussion or judicial
    decision.
    Frederickson Decl. ¶ 65. As for the final fee award, Mr. Frederickson attests that he intended to
    pursue such an amount as an “enhancement to the lodestar at the conclusion of the litigation.”
    Id. Mr. Frederickson amplifies
    this history in his supplemental declaration. He explains that, “from
    the start of the representation of the class, I informed the class members that we would work on a
    contingency fee basis, accept no portion of any recovery of any awards to class members, and rely
    upon our opportunity under Title VII to obtain our reasonable attorneys’ fees directly from the
    defendant.”      Suppl. Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 9.               By referencing a fee award under Title VII,
    Mr. Frederickson plainly is referring to Title VII’s fee-shifting provision, which uses the lodestar
    methodology to calculate fees.
    Mr. Frederickson’s candor is commendable. He makes plain that, from the outset, he
    understood the Consent Decree reserved for Plaintiffs the right to seek a final fee award based on
    an enhancement of the lodestar, not through a percentage-of-the-fund approach. That is the
    methodology the court therefore must apply to carry out the parties’ intent. 8
    8
    It bears noting that simply because parties agree to a contractual fee-shifting arrangement does not mean that the
    law concerning statutory fee shifting automatically applies. The Eleventh Circuit emphasized this point in Home
    Depot, observing that “[t]his case . . . is a contractual fee-shifting case, and the appropriate method for such a case is
    not clearly governed by any binding 
    precedent.” 931 F.3d at 1081
    –82. The court in Home Depot nevertheless upheld
    the trial court’s application of the lodestar method because, although class counsel believed it to be a common-fund
    case, several of the claims were brought under fee-shifting statutes, and the parties agreed that the district court had
    discretion to choose either the percentage or the lodestar method. See
    id. at
    1082. 
    Unlike in Home Depot, this court
    17
    2.       Constructive Common-Fund Cases
    Plaintiffs attempt to avoid this result by characterizing the Consent Decree as having
    established a “constructive common fund,” under which Plaintiffs reserved the right to seek a
    percentage recovery. Pls.’ Mot. at 26. But this argument does not match the evidence and falls
    under its own weight.
    The constructive common-fund doctrine is based on the equitable notion that, even in cases
    where attorneys’ fees and class settlements are paid from separate funds, so long as the two
    amounts are negotiated as a “package deal” such that “[t]he defendant is concerned, first and
    foremost, with its total liability,” Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1080
    , common fund principles should
    apply, see generally In re Heartland Payment Sys., Inc., 
    851 F. Supp. 2d 1040
    , 1072 (S.D. Tex.
    2012) (providing an overview of the constructive common-fund doctrine). This is because “as a
    practical matter, defendants undoubtedly take into account the amount of attorney’s fees when
    they agree on an amount to pay the class.” Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1080
    ; see also Brytus v.
    Spang & Co., 
    203 F.3d 238
    , 246 (3d Cir. 2000) (“[C]onsideration of the attorney’s fees was likely
    factored into the amount of settlement.”).
    The cases Plaintiffs cite illustrate this feature of a constructive common fund. For example,
    in Vista Healthplan, Inc. v. Warner Holdings Co. III, the court approved a settlement agreement
    that included separate funds for attorneys’ fees and class recovery, and found that the agreement
    qualified as a constructive common fund where both amounts were determined at the time of
    settlement. 
    246 F.R.D. 349
    , 363–64 (D.D.C. 2007). In Ingram v. Coca Cola Co., the court
    reviewed and approved a settlement agreement in which Coca Cola agreed to a cash payment
    totaling $103.5 million, comprising several funds—a “Compensatory Damages Fund
    has no choice because the parties here made their intentions clear: Plaintiffs’ final fee award would be calculated
    using the lodestar method.
    18
    (approximately $58.7 million); [a] Make–Whole Relief Back Pay Fund (approximately $24.1
    million); and [a separate payment of] specified attorneys’ fees (approximately $20.7 million).”
    
    200 F.R.D. 685
    , 694 & n.16 (N.D. Ga. 2001). There, the court explained that “[w]hile attorneys’
    fee constitute[d] 20% of th[o]se current cash payments, the fee percentage [would] become[] much
    smaller as additional, future relief to the class [was] factored in.”
    Id. And in In
    re Chrysler-
    Dodge-Jeep Ecodiesel Marketing Sales Practices and Products Liability Litigation, the court
    approved a settlement agreement wherein the parties agreed that class counsel would receive
    “$59 million in attorneys’ fees . . . to be paid by the Defendants in addition to the compensation
    available to the Class,” after it found that amount to be “reasonable, whether a percentage method
    or lodestar method [was] used.” No. 17-md-02777-EMC, 
    2019 WL 2554232
    , at *2 (N.D. Cal.
    May 3, 2019).
    The “package deal” feature of these cases is absent here. Plaintiffs’ final fee award was
    not coupled with the settlement of class-wide liability, such that Defendants would have
    understood their “total liability” at the time of resolution. Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1080
    . To the
    contrary, the parties expressly declined to fix a final fee award under the Consent Decree. What’s
    more, Mr. Frederickson’s declaration makes clear that there was no “package deal” with respect
    to class recovery and attorneys’ fees. He says, “[i]nstead, [they] negotiated a consent decree which
    contemplated reasonable attorneys’ [fees] upon the conclusion of the case.” Suppl. Fredrickson
    Decl. ¶ 9. “[H]ad [we] tried to negotiate fees at the same time as we negotiated the class recovery,”
    Mr. Frederickson explains, “[Plaintiffs] would have demanded a fund much greater than $508
    million” and “negotiations would have faltered.”
    Id. ¶ 11.
    Nothing about Mr. Frederickson’s
    understanding of the settlement resembles a constructive common fund.
    19
    Plaintiffs also assert that they negotiated a constructive common fund “[b]ecause the fees
    are to be borne by the defendant rather than the class, [as] a valuable addition to the settlement,”
    and “[w]hen the defendant’s payments are added together, the full value of the settlement is
    known.” Pls.’ Mot. at 26. But under that logic, every fee-shifting case would be transformed into
    a common fund case merely by establishing a settlement fund. “It would be virtually impossible
    to contract for fee-shifting, . . . absent perhaps some magic-word requirement.” Home 
    Depot, 931 F.3d at 1081
    .
    Finally, Plaintiffs try a different tack, appealing to the court’s natural instinct to want to
    execute an administratively efficient calculation of a final fee award.         They point to the
    D.C. Circuit’s ruling in Swedish Hospital and its observations that the lodestar approach
    “encourages significant elements of inefficiency” and that “a percentage-of-the-fund approach is
    less demanding of scarce judicial resources than the lodestar 
    method.” 1 F.3d at 1268
    , 1269; Pls.’
    Reply at 10. Swedish Hospital is, of course, a different case, as Plaintiffs recognize, because it
    involved a common fund. And, although the Circuit’s observations concerning the efficiency of
    the percentage-of-the-fund method are surely true, that is not what the parties here negotiated. The
    court’s role is to effectuate the parties’ intent, and they agreed to a fee-shifting arrangement that
    would use the lodestar method to calculate the final award. The court turns now to making that
    determination.
    B.        Whether to Enhance the Lodestar
    Calculating the lodestar is, in theory, a straightforward exercise. See 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 551
    (lauding the “lodestar method as readily administrable”). As noted, the lodestar is achieved
    by multiplying the “the hours reasonably expended on the litigation multiplied by a reasonable
    hourly rate.” 
    Hensley, 461 U.S. at 433
    . Using that simple mathematical equation here produces
    20
    an interim lodestar of $22,878,155.67. See Lang Decl., Ex. A, at PDF p. 19. That amount
    represents the sum of all 28 interim attorneys’ fee awards.
    Id. But Plaintiffs assert
    that “this is the
    rare and exceptional case warranting enhancement of the lodestar.” Pls.’ Mot. at 36. For their
    part, Defendants assert that Plaintiffs are entitled to no more than what they have been paid to date.
    “[T]he burden of proving that an enhancement [to the lodestar] is necessary must be borne
    by the fee applicant.” 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 553
    . There is a “strong presumption” that the “lodestar
    method yields a . . . sufficient [fee],”
    id. at
    546, 552, 
    because “the lodestar figure includes most, if
    not all, of the relevant factors constituting a ‘reasonable’ attorney’s fee,” Pennsylvania v. Del.
    Valley Citizens’ Council for Clear Air, 
    478 U.S. 546
    , 566 (1986) (“Delaware Valley I”). To
    overcome the presumption of reasonableness, “a fee applicant seeking an enhancement must
    produce ‘specific evidence’ that supports the award,” 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 553
    (quoting 
    Blum, 465 U.S. at 899
    , 901), and “an enhancement may not be awarded based on a factor that is subsumed in
    the lodestar calculation,”
    id. For example, “the
    novelty and complexity of a case generally may
    not be used as a ground for an enhancement because these factors presumably are fully reflected
    in the number of billable hours recorded by counsel.”
    Id. (cleaned up). Although
    the Supreme
    Court has “never sustained an enhancement of a lodestar amount for [superior attorney]
    performance,”
    id. (emphasis added) (citing
    Delaware Valley 
    I, 478 U.S. at 565
    ; 
    Blum, 465 U.S. at 897
    ; and 
    Hensley, 461 U.S. at 435
    ), the Court has held open the possibility that an enhancement
    may be appropriate in “rare” and “exceptional” circumstances, so long as the fee applicant provides
    “specific evidence that the lodestar fee would not have been adequate to attract competent
    counsel,”
    id. at
    554.
    In Perdue v. Kenny A., the Supreme Court identified three possible circumstances in which
    lodestar enhancement might be warranted. First, “an enhancement may be appropriate where the
    21
    method used in determining the hourly rate employed in the lodestar calculation does not
    adequately measure the attorney’s true market value, as demonstrated in part during the litigation.”
    Id. at 5
    54–55. 
    “This may occur,” the Court explained, “if the hourly rate is determined by a
    formula that takes into account only a single factor (such as years since admission to the bar).”
    Id. at 5
    55. 
    In such a case, “to provide a calculation that is objective and reviewable, the trial judge
    should adjust the attorney’s hourly rate in accordance with specific proof linking the attorney’s
    ability to a prevailing market rate.”
    Id. Second, “an enhancement
    may be appropriate if the
    attorney’s performance includes an extraordinary outlay of expenses and the litigation is
    exceptionally protracted.”
    Id. In that case,
    “the enhancement must be calculated using a method
    that is reasonable, objective, and capable of being reviewed on appeal, such as by applying a
    standard rate of interest to the qualifying outlays of expenses.”
    Id. Third, “there may
    be
    extraordinary circumstances in which an attorney’s performance involves exceptional delay in the
    payment of fees.”
    Id. at 5
    56. 
    Compensation for that delay should generally be “made either by
    basing the award on current rates or by adjusting the fee based on historical rates to reflect its
    present value.”
    Id. (cleaned up). Plaintiffs
    argue that this case involves the first and third of these scenarios. That is, that
    the interim lodestar does not reflect “the true market value of the services performed by counsel,”
    Pls.’ Mot. at 40, and “[t]he use of current rates to compute the lodestar” is appropriate to
    compensate Plaintiffs for delay
    ,
    id. at
    42. 
    The court addresses these arguments in turn, and agrees
    in part.
    22
    1.       True Market Value
    Plaintiffs advance two arguments for why the rates used to calculate the interim fee awards
    do not reflect the true market rate.
    a.        Junior lawyers paid at lower rates
    First, they maintain that, “for much of this case, attorneys at a very junior level undertook
    work normally done by more senior attorneys,” and therefore “[t]he rates awarded for their services
    were [ ] much lower than if a more senior attorney had undertaken the tasks.” Pls.’ Mot. at 37.
    Plaintiffs liken this case to McKenzie v. Kennickell, 
    875 F.2d 330
    (D.C. Cir. 1989), which they say
    is “the only case where the D.C. Circuit has upheld a multiplier for quality of representation,” Pls.’
    Mot. at 37. 9 Similar to this case, the “young attorneys [in McKenzie] stayed active on the case for
    its fifteen-year duration, which the District Court [in McKenzie] found to be an ‘extremely rare’
    occurrence.”
    Id. (quoting McKenzie v.
    Kennickell, 
    684 F. Supp. 1097
    , 1107 (D.D.C. 1988)). The
    district court found that “[s]uch continuity promote[d] tremendous efficiency and necessarily
    reduce[d] the ultimate expenditure of hours,” 
    McKenzie, 684 F. Supp. at 1107
    , and so “the lodestar
    fee could not possibly reflect the benefits derived from [counsel’s] extensive experience and
    intimate knowledge with this litigation,”
    id. For this reason,
    the district court granted a 25-percent
    enhancement for quality of representation
    , id., which the D.C.
    Circuit 
    affirmed, 875 F.2d at 339
    .
    Plaintiffs ask the court to apply similar logic here.
    9
    Plaintiffs have already received an enhancement to the lodestar based on McKenzie for a portion of the case. In the
    Special Master’s report on Plaintiffs’ First Petition, he recommended that Mr. Frederickson and Ms. Brackshaw
    “receive a 25% enhancement on the lodestar rates applicable to them for the years 1980–1990,” Special Master’s Rep.
    on Mot. by Pls. for Interim Attys.’ Fees, Feb. 18, 1994, ECF No. 126 (on file at DEX 10-2), at 73, because, “in th[o]se
    years, . . . [they] carried the laboring oar in this complex class action and achieved success that is remarkable for two
    lawyers who had begun their work on the case early in their careers,”
    id. at
    75. Relying on McKenzie, the court
    approved the Special Master’s recommendation in its opinion resolving Plaintiffs’ motion for final resolution of the
    First and Second Petitions. See 
    Hartman, 973 F. Supp. at 202
    . As a result, Plaintiffs received an enhancement totaling
    $188,968.70. See Defs.’ Opp’n at 12; Lang Decl., Ex. A, at PDF p. 18.
    23
    Analogizing this case to McKenzie is problematic though, because the D.C. Circuit
    “overrule[d]” McKenzie only two years later in King v. Palmer, 
    950 F.2d 771
    , 773 (D.C. Cir. 1991)
    (en banc), and it is unclear how much of McKenzie, if any, survived. The panel in McKenzie made
    two holdings. It first held that a court could enhance the lodestar based on objective proof of the
    difficulty of ascertaining counsel in similar cases, as opposed to the actual difficulty faced by the
    plaintiff in the case at hand. See 
    McKenzie, 875 F.2d at 338
    –39. Additionally, as discussed, the
    panel affirmed a 25-percent enhancement of the lodestar based on the quality of work performed
    by junior lawyers who had stayed on for the duration of the case. See
    id. at
    338–39. 
    In overruling
    McKenzie, the en banc court in King rejected the panel’s enhancement of the lodestar based on
    objective evidence of the difficulty of ascertaining counsel, and instead required a prevailing
    plaintiff to produce, at least, evidence of actual difficulty. See 
    King, 950 F.2d at 773
    , 778.
    Although the en banc court did not address the panel’s affirmance of the 25-percent enhancement,
    King at least casts doubt on the continued viability of McKenzie’s enhancement for quality of
    performance. Indeed, no circuit or district court decision since King has cited McKenzie to support
    the enhancement of the lodestar. If anything, the trend in this Circuit has been away from
    enhancements. As the Circuit observed in Swedish Hospital Corp., since King, “we have generally
    disavowed the use of enhancement, in recognizing that enhancing factors are reflected in the
    original 
    lodestar.” 1 F.3d at 1267
    n.3. McKenzie therefore does not help Plaintiffs’ cause.
    b.      USAO Laffey Matrix rates are below true market rates
    Plaintiffs’ second reason for seeking an enhancement is more convincing. They contend
    that “the rates used to determine the lodestar for the interim petitions were not market rates that
    reflected the true value of the attorneys’ services,” because “they were based on the rates contained
    in the Laffey matrix.” Pls.’ Mot. at 38. Recall that, starting in 1996, “the parties agreed that, for
    24
    the purposes of [the third, and all subsequent] interim petitions, the parties would use actual rates
    for counsel with established billing rates to the extent those rates did not exceed the applicable rate
    for the timekeeper under the Laffey matrix, and that Laffey rates would be used for counsel without
    established billing rates.” Lang Decl. ¶ 21; Fredrickson Decl. ¶ 63. “The practical effect of this
    agreement,” Plaintiffs say, “was that Laffey rates were used for all subsequent petitions” and that
    those rates do not represent their true market value. Lang Decl. ¶ 21.
    A brief history of the Laffey rates is necessary to elucidate Plaintiffs’ argument. Laffey v.
    Northwest Airlines, Inc. was a Title VII employment discrimination class action involving female
    flight attendants. See 
    572 F. Supp. 354
    , 371 (D.D.C. 1983), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other
    grounds, 
    746 F.2d 4
    (D.C. Cir. 1984), overruled in part, Save Our Cumberland Mountains, Inc. v.
    Hodel, 
    857 F.2d 1516
    (D.C. Cir. 1988). The case established the Laffey fee matrix, which
    “recommends a presumptive maximum hourly rate for Washington, D.C.-area attorneys engaged
    in ‘complex federal litigation.’” Makray v. Perez, 
    159 F. Supp. 3d 25
    , 31 (D.D.C. 2016) (citing
    
    Laffey, 572 F. Supp. at 372
    ). “The original Laffey matrix presented a grid which established hourly
    rates for lawyers of differing levels of experience during the period from June 1, 1981 through
    May 31, 1982.” Salazar v. District of Columbia, 
    123 F. Supp. 2d 8
    , 13 (D.D.C. 2000). The rates
    were determined by “inquiring into the billing rates of firms in Washington, D.C., which were
    engaged in active litigation practice in the federal courts.” DL v. District of Columbia, 
    924 F.3d 585
    , 589 (D.C. Cir. 2019). “The Court of Appeals accepted the 1981–1982 matrix in [Save Our
    Cumberland 
    Mountains], 857 F.2d at 1525
    , and the parties to that case updated it through May 31,
    1989, as part of a settlement.” 
    Salazar, 123 F. Supp. 2d at 13
    (citing Covington v. District of
    Columbia, 
    839 F. Supp. 894
    , 898 (D.D.C. 1993)). To calculate fees in subsequent years, the
    USAO updated the Laffey rates for inflation by using the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
    25
    Consumers (“CPI-U”) 10 of the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics. See USAO Laffey Matrix–
    2014–2015. 11
    Over the last several decades, much ink has been spilled in this Circuit on the validity of
    the Laffey rates. While many disputes have “revolved around whether a case [is] sufficiently
    complex to warrant Laffey rates,” 
    DL, 924 F.3d at 589
    (citing as example Reed v. Dist. of
    Columbia, 
    843 F.3d 517
    , 525–26 (D.C. Cir. 2016)), as the years have gone on, the focus has turned
    to the accuracy of the underlying data and how to properly update the matrix to account for
    inflation, see, e.g.
    ,
    id. at
    590; 
    Eley v. Dist. of Columbia, 
    793 F.3d 97
    , 101 (D.C. Cir. 2015); Salazar
    v. District of Columbia, 
    809 F.3d 58
    , 64–65 (D.C. Cir. 2015). Specifically, plaintiffs’ attorneys
    have increasingly argued that the inflationary index used to update the 1983 Laffey rates, which
    measures inflation for commodities generally, has “failed to capture the true rate of inflationary
    change” for legal services. 
    DL, 924 F.3d at 589
    . “[L]ess than 0.325 percent of the data in the CPI-
    U involves legal services,” 
    Eley, 793 F.3d at 101
    (cleaned up), which is why many “critics [of the
    USAO Laffey Matrix] have advocated, to some degree of success, for a competing Laffey Matrix
    (LSI Laffey Matrix) that uses the Legal Services Index [“LSI”] of the Bureau of Labor Statistics
    to adjust for inflation,”
    id. (citing Salazar v.
    Dist. of 
    Columbia, 123 F. Supp. 2d at 15
    (finding that
    the LSI Laffey Matrix “more accurately reflects the prevailing rates for legal services in the D.C.
    community”)). 12 Plaintiffs here advance a similar argument. They contend that the USAO Laffey
    rates used to calculate their interim fee awards failed to keep pace with “prevailing market rates
    10
    “The CPI-U measures inflation across 100,000 commodities including food, fuel, and housing for a given
    geographic area.” Eley v. Dist. of Columbia, 
    793 F.3d 97
    , 101 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).
    11
    U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Laffey Matrix – 2014-2015, http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/usao-
    dc/legacy/2014/07/14/Laffey%20Matrix_2014–2015.pdf (last visited Oct. 11, 2020).
    12
    The court finds it peculiar that neither party mentioned the “LSI Laffey matrix” in their briefs, despite the
    D.C. Circuit recently finding it to be more representative of complex federal litigation rates in Washington, D.C. See
    
    DL, 924 F.3d at 590
    ; accord Feld v. Fireman’s Fund Ins., No. 12-1789-JDB, 
    2020 WL 1140673
    , at *6 (D.D.C. Mar.
    9, 2020) (“[T]he D.C. Circuit has recently confirmed that the applicable matrix for “complex federal litigation” in
    D.C. is the LSI Laffey Matrix.” (citing 
    DL, 924 F.3d at 589
    )).
    26
    for complex federal litigation in the District of Columbia.” Pls.’ Mot. at 41. As a consequence,
    the interim lodestar understates the true market value of their work. This argument has merit.
    It is well established that the USAO Laffey rates have failed to keep pace with the true rate
    of inflation, which is why “[w]hen the two [are] pitted against each other, courts frequently [find]
    the LSI Laffey matrix more persuasive.” 
    DL, 924 F.3d at 589
    ; see also 
    Salazar, 809 F.3d at 65
    (affirming the district court’s choice to apply the LSI Laffey matrix over the USAO’s). To
    demonstrate the divergence between USAO Laffey rates and true market rates, Ms. Lang includes
    as an Exhibit to her declaration the 2011 ALM Survey of Law Firm Economics (“2011 SLFE”),
    which tracked general inflation and billing rates from 1985 to 2011. See Lang Decl., Ex. E, at
    PDF p. 86. The survey shows that while the CPI-U (the measure of inflation used to update the
    Laffey matrix) increased 110% during that time period, billing rates for fifth-year associates rose
    207% over the same time, and rates for partners with 25 to 29 years of experience rose 195%.
    Id. This difference is
    due to the fact that the CPI-U-updated USAO Laffey matrix is based on the
    flawed assumption that “the rate for legal services in the Washington, D.C. area increases in
    lockstep with the overall rise in the cost of all goods and services, including pizza delivery and
    cleaning services for the area.” Eley v. District of Columbia, 
    999 F. Supp. 2d 137
    , 153 (D.D.C.
    2015), vacated & remanded on other grounds, 
    793 F.3d 97
    . On the contrary, a comparison of the
    Bureau of Labor Statistics data for the CPI-U and the LSI show that the “cost of legal services
    nationally has far outstripped the increase in overall prices.”
    Id. 13
    In fact, “[t]he nationwide cost
    of legal services has jumped ninety-one percent, nearly twice as much as the general CPI, since
    13
    As the district court in Eley explained, this data can be verified on the Bureau of Labor Statistics website at
    http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/srgate. For the legal services index, enter “CUUR0000SEGD01” into the text box; click
    the “Next” button; under the Specify Year Range button, select “1997” from the “From:” drop down menu; click the
    “Retrieve Data” button. For the general CPI, enter “CUUR0000SA0” into the text box; click the “Next” button; under
    the Specify Year Range button, select “1997” from the “From:” drop down menu; click the “Retrieve Data” button.
    See 
    Eley, 999 F. Supp. 2d at 153
    .
    27
    1997.”
    Id. In his declaration,
    Crowell & Moring, LLP Partner Thomas P. Gies speaks to this
    divergence from his personal experience:
    When I first worked on this case in 1990, my standard billing rate
    was $255 and the Laffey rate for an attorney with my level of
    experience was $250, or 2% lower. The next year my rate was $275,
    but the Laffey rate was $265, or 3.7% lower or $10 per hour below
    market. In 1994 my rate was $290 but the Laffey rate was still $265
    or 9% lower or $25 per hour below market. The gap continued to
    widen with each year. My current standard billing rate is $1,020,
    and this is the rate that I am regularly paid by clients that are billed
    hourly for my services. The current USAO rate applicable to me is
    $637, or 38% lower or $383 per hour below market.
    Pl.’s Mot., Ex. 4, Decl. of Thomas P. Gies, ECF No. 1081-4, ¶ 49. The case law and evidence thus
    conclusively establish that, over the life of this case, the USAO Laffey rates did not keep up with
    market rates for complex litigation in Washington, D.C.
    Precisely when those rates began to diverge is somewhat less certain. Plaintiffs offer some
    evidence. The Lang Declaration reproduces a chart from the 2011 SLFE, which is reproduced
    below.
    28
    Lang Decl. ¶ 64. The chart shows that rates for both partners in their twenty-fifth to twenty-ninth
    years of practice and fifth-year associates began to diverge from the CPI factor used to annually
    increase the USAO Laffey Matrix rates around 1998. That divergence continued to grow through
    2011. The 2011 SLFE survey data thus shows that the USAO Laffey Matrix rates used to calculate
    Plaintiffs’ interim fee awards have not always reflected counsel’s “true market value.” 
    Purdue, 559 U.S. at 555
    .
    But this rationale for an enhancement only goes so far.          Plaintiffs seek a lodestar
    enhancement for their work over the entire life of the case. The record, however, shows that such
    a full-term enhancement, if applied, would overcompensate Plaintiffs’ counsel. For at least the
    first 21 years of this case, Plaintiffs’ counsel either received the rates they asked for, or were
    compensated with USAO Laffey rates that were virtually identical to then-prevailing market rates.
    Through December 31, 1994, class counsel’s fee petitions, which the court largely approved, were
    29
    supported by affidavits stating that the requested hourly rates corresponded to actual billing rates
    charged by Plaintiffs’ counsel from fee-paying clients for similar legal services. See Defs.’ Opp’n
    at 24–27; see also, e.g., Mem. in Supp. of Pls.’ Second Mot. for Interim Attys.’ Fees & Expenses,
    DEX 3, at 12. In the ensuing years, the parties agreed to compute the lodestar for the third and
    subsequent interim petitions using either actual billing rates or rates from the Laffey matrix,
    whichever was lower. The record shows that as late as June 30, 1998, those Laffey rates provided
    a close approximation of market rates. See DEX 7, 1999 Malson Decl. ¶¶ 41–42 (stating that the
    non-contingent rates actually charged by a Crowell & Moring associate during that time were only
    “somewhat different” than the hourly Laffey rate applied to the seventh fee petition (covering 1/1
    to 6/30/1998)). 14 In sum, for the services rendered from the start of the case through June 1998—
    the first two decades—Plaintiffs’ counsel were paid based on their true market value.
    In their reply brief, Plaintiffs seek to downplay the representations made in these early
    petitions about market rates. They emphasize that those rates were for “noncontingent matters
    where fees [were] paid promptly.” Pls.’ Reply at 19 n.19. But the Supreme Court in Dague
    rejected such a distinction, explaining that “an enhancement for contingency would likely
    duplicate in substantial part factors already subsumed in the 
    lodestar.” 505 U.S. at 562
    .
    Specifically, the Court explained, “[t]he risk of loss in a particular case (and, therefore, the
    attorney’s contingent risk) is the product of two factors: (1) the legal and factual merits of the
    claim, and (2) the difficulty of establishing those merits. The second factor, however, is ordinarily
    reflected in the lodestar—either in the higher number of hours expended to overcome the difficulty,
    14
    The seventh fee petition was the last formal interim fee petition submitted by Plaintiffs. All subsequent fee requests
    were resolved informally. Thus, the record of this case does not include contemporaneous data about historic market
    rates for periods after June 30, 1998. See Defs.’ Opp’n at 30.
    30
    or in the higher hourly rate of the attorney skilled and experienced enough to do so.”
    Id. Stated differently, the
    additional risk associated with a contingency fee is already baked into the lodestar.
    In the end, this means that, for the period at least through the seventh fee petition, Plaintiffs
    cannot reasonably contend that the lodestar “does not adequately measure the attorney’s true
    market value.” 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 545
    –55. Accordingly, no enhancement to the lodestar for that
    period is warranted. As the Supreme Court said in Perdue, “[t]here [is] nothing unfair about
    compensating [ ] attorneys at the very rates they requested.”
    Id. at 5
    57 
    n.7. But for the time period
    encompassing the eighth through the final interim fee petition—when the USAO Laffey rates were
    below the prevailing market rates for complex civil litigation in Washington, D.C.—Plaintiffs have
    the better argument that the interim lodestar does not reflect their true market value.
    c.      Defendants’ responses
    For their part, Defendants resist applying any enhancement to the interim fees lodestar for
    any period of time. They concede an eventual divergence between Laffey rates and market rates,
    but insist that no enhancement is required for two reasons. First, they assert that for much of the
    life of the case, the USAO Laffey rates were comparable to market rates for complex federal
    litigation in Washington, D.C. Defs.’ Opp’n at 27–29. Second, they maintain that “any significant
    divergence . . . did not occur until well after the litigation in Hartman was over.”
    Id. at 31.
    More
    to the point, they contend that Plaintiffs’ attorneys were not engaged in complex federal litigation
    after the parties entered the 2000 Consent Decree, and therefore they are not entitled to prevailing
    market rates for such work.
    Id. As to their
    first argument, Defendants cite Berke v. Bureau of Prisons, 
    942 F. Supp. 2d 71
    (D.D.C. 2013), “as one of many cases” they say supports their position that the Laffey rates were
    “relevant evidence of the ‘prevailing’ rates in the Washington, D.C. area” at least as of 2012.
    Id. 31 at 30.
    In Berke, the court found that rates charged by five attorneys with the law firm Ballard
    Spahr in a civil rights case in 2012 were “very much ‘in line’ with [the Laffey rates].” Id. (quoting
    
    Berke, 942 F. Supp. 2d at 78
    ). Comparing Ballard Spahr to Plaintiffs’ counsel at Crowell &
    Moring, Defendants argue that the findings of Berke apply with equal force to this case through
    2012.
    Id. at 30
    n.12.
    The court is not convinced. As discussed, the court finds the 2011 SLFE and Bureau of
    Labor Statistics CPI data persuasive. It shows that the “nationwide cost of legal services has
    jumped . . . nearly twice as much as the general CPI, since 1997.” 
    Eley, 999 F. Supp. 2d at 153
    .
    The 2011 SLFE data also shows that in Washington, D.C., market rates for senior partners and
    mid-career associates began to outstrip the CPI inflationary index in 1998. 
    See supra, at 29
    . This
    data identifies the divergence between prevailing market rates and USAO Laffey rates as occurring
    more than a decade before Defendants concede a divergence occurred. Defendants’ reliance on
    various district court cases from 2007 to 2011 that used the USAO Laffey Matrix to compute fees
    does not compel a different result, see Defs.’ Opp’n at 30–31, as none of those cases took a hard
    look at whether the USAO Matrix during that time period reflected actual market rates for complex
    civil litigation in Washington, D.C., see, e.g., Heller v. District of Columbia, 
    832 F. Supp. 2d 32
    ,
    48 (D.D.C. 2011) (relying on the “the frequency with which the USAO Laffey Matrix rates are
    applied to be strong evidence of both their prevalence and their reasonableness”).
    Defendants’ second argument—that Plaintiffs’ counsel are not entitled to rates for complex
    federal litigation during the post–Consent Decree phase of the case—is equally unconvincing.
    Defendants contend that “[a]fter the parties signed the Consent Decree on March 21, 2000, the
    litigation between Plaintiffs and Defendants ceased, and the [case] entered a distinct and lengthy
    non-litigation phase.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 31. The relative simplicity of that work, Defendants
    32
    maintain, does not justify complex rates. See
    id. That assertion, however,
    is flawed for two
    reasons.
    First, it mischaracterizes the record. Following approval of the Consent Decree on July 12,
    2000, see Mem. & Order, July 12, 2000, ECF No. 917, the in-court legal work did not cease. In
    fact, by Defendants’ own telling,
    [f]our women (the “Petitioners”) who had unsuccessfully petitioned
    to be included in the class, appealed from that decision [approving
    the Consent Decree], contending that the original class notice was
    constitutionally defective. That contention was rejected by the
    Court of Appeals, which summarily affirmed the District Court’s
    approval of the Consent Decree on March 15, 2001, and denied
    Petitioners’ rehearing petitions on June 14, 2001. Petitioners’ [then
    filed a] petition for a writ of certiorari[, which] was denied by the
    Supreme Court on January 7, 2002. See Dillon v. Powell, 
    2001 WL 41046
    (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 
    534 U.S. 1078
    (2002).
    Defs.’ Opp’n at 9. Thus, for at least a year and a half following entry of the Consent Decree, class
    counsel were engaged in what would be considered traditional litigation. They also were involved
    in additional work to make the settlement meaningful to the class, including individual remedy
    proceedings, which Plaintiffs note “were often highly complex, involving interpretation of federal
    regulations and their application to individual claimants’ employment history.” Pls.’ Reply at 20.
    Defendants do not dispute this characterization.
    Second, Defendants’ position finds no support in the law. The only case that Defendants
    cite for the proposition that “it is proper for the Court to analyze [the post–Consent Decree] phase
    of the case separately to determine a reasonable attorney fee award” is In re Olson, 
    884 F.2d 1415
    (D.C. Cir. 1989), but that case is inapposite. Defs.’ Opp’n at 33. Olson involved the Independent
    Counsel Reauthorization Act, which authorized recovery of legal fees that would not have incurred
    “but for” the operation of the 
    Act. 884 F.2d at 1419
    . The court’s discussion of phases in that case
    was limited to whether the fees sought for each phase met the “but for” standard.
    Id. at 1419–22. 33
    No portion of Olson supports the proposition advanced here that an otherwise concededly complex
    case is divisible into complex and non-complex phases for purposes of awarding fees.
    Moreover, the closest Supreme Court precedent conflicts with Defendants’ position. In
    Delaware Valley I, a case arising under the Clean Air Act, the losing party argued that certain
    “work performed after issuance of the consent decree” was not fairly categorized as part of the
    litigation and therefore was not compensable. Delaware Valley 
    I, 478 U.S. at 553
    , 557–58. The
    Court rejected that argument. In doing so, the Court analogized the Clean Air Act’s fee-shifting
    provision with that of the Civil Rights Act of 1976, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and agreed with those courts
    that had held under § 1988 that “post-judgment monitoring of a consent decree is a compensable
    activity for which counsel is entitled to a reasonable fee.”
    Id. at 5
    59. 
    The Court also found no
    pre- and post-settlement distinction on the facts. Phase II and IX of the case involved, respectively,
    monitoring of the consent decree and hearings before a federal agency. The Court acknowledged
    that those phases “were not ‘judicial’ in the sense that they did not occur in a court room or involve
    ‘traditional’ legal work such as examination of witnesses or selection of jurors for a trial.”
    Id. at 5
    58. 
    Yet, the Court held that “the work done by counsel in th[o]se two phases was as necessary
    to the attainment of adequate relief for their client as was all the earlier work in the courtroom
    which secured [their client’s] initial success in obtaining the consent decree” and therefore was
    compensable all the same.
    Id. So, too, here.
    The work done by class counsel after entry of the
    Consent Decree in March 2000 was “as necessary to the attainment of adequate relief” as their
    prior work. If the post-settlement phase of the case was less complicated, it surely involved fewer
    hours, which would be reflected in a reduced lodestar.
    In light of the foregoing, the court finds that Plaintiffs have provided “specific evidence”
    that the rates used to calculate the lodestar for Plaintiffs’ eighth through twenty-eighth interim fee
    34
    petitions (covering years 1998–2018) “[did] not adequately measure the attorney[s’] true market
    value.” 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 554
    –55. An enhancement of the lodestar for those petitions is
    therefore necessary to “approximate the fee that the prevailing attorney would have received if he
    or she had been representing a paying client who was billed by the hour in a comparable case.”
    Id. at 5
    51.
    
    2. 
         Delay
    The second ground that Plaintiffs say justifies an enhancement of the interim fees lodestar
    is delay in receiving payment. In Perdue, the Court explained that “enhancements to compensate
    for delay in reimbursement for expenses must be reserved for unusual cases,” because “when an
    attorney agrees to represent a civil rights plaintiff who cannot afford to pay the attorney, the
    attorney presumably understands that no reimbursement is likely to be received until the successful
    resolution of the case.”
    Id. at 5
    55. 
    In elaborating on what might constitute an “unusual case,” the
    Court stated that “there may be extraordinary circumstances in which an attorney’s performance
    involves exceptional delay in the payment of fees,”
    id. at
    556, 
    and in those cases, “[c]ompensation
    for [ ] delay is generally made either by basing the award on current rates or by adjusting the fee
    based on historical rates to reflect its present value,”
    id. (cleaned up). It
    also suggested that “an
    enhancement may be appropriate where an attorney assumes these costs in the face of
    unanticipated delay, particularly where the delay is unjustifiability caused by the defense.”
    Id. In one sense
    the delay in this case has been “exceptional,” but in another sense, not at all.
    Plaintiffs’ counsel have waited more than 40 years to receive a final fee award. And it was not
    until 18 years after the case commenced that they received their first fee payment. Those are long
    periods of delay by any measure. But the significance of those delays is tempered substantially by
    three factors. The first is that, starting in 1995, Plaintiffs began to seek and receive interim fee
    35
    payments every six to twelve months. See Lang Decl. ¶ 31. Plaintiffs have received 28 interim
    payments, totaling nearly $23 million. Second, Plaintiffs were awarded prejudgment interest on
    all payments after 1991, thus compensating them to some degree for delay. See DEX 10-13, at
    4–5; Hartman, 
    8 F. Supp. 2d 1
    (finding interest rate on one-year Treasury bills was appropriate).
    Third, the two long periods of delay of 18 and 40 years are largely attributable to choices made by
    Plaintiffs, not impropriety or foot-dragging by the defense. Plaintiffs acknowledge that they
    waited until 1993 to file their first fee petition because they did not wish to be awarded fees until
    the issue of liability was finally resolved by the Circuit. See Suppl. Fredrickson Decl. ¶¶ 5–8.
    And, as for waiting more than 40 years for a final fee award, Plaintiffs agreed to that course as part
    of the Consent Decree in 2000. Perhaps they never conceived that they would have to wait two
    decades for a final resolution, but at the same time, Plaintiffs never sought to accelerate any final
    fee issues. So, although Plaintiffs have experienced delay in receiving final payment, whether this
    case involves the type of “extraordinary circumstances” that warrant an enhancement for
    “exceptional delay” is far from certain. 
    Perdue, 559 U.S. at 556
    .
    None of this is to say that Plaintiffs are not entitled to some additional fees to account for
    delay, for two reasons. One, as discussed, because the interim fee calculations for two decades
    relied on the USAO Laffey Matrix, and those matrix rates began to diverge from prevailing market
    rates in or around 1998, Plaintiffs have been receiving payments based on sub-market rates for
    20-plus years. Plaintiffs are entitled to additional fees to make up for the shortfall, and any such
    make-up payment should reflect its delayed receipt. Two, Plaintiffs assert that the interest on fee
    payments made thus far inadequately compensates them for delay. See Pls.’ Reply at 19 n.19
    (arguing “interest on a submarket lodestar does not make plaintiffs whole”). Defendants respond
    that Plaintiffs have not challenged the prejudgment interest rates in their current fee motion, and
    36
    the prejudgment interest payments are “now final and no longer subject to appeal, reconsideration,
    or review.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 41. But at oral argument, Defendants conceded that the appropriate
    interest rate was an issue preserved for adjudication of the final fee award. See Hr’g Tr. at 52:14–
    53:19. That concession is consistent with the terms of each interim fee petition, in which each
    party expressly reserved the right to contest, among other things, “the appropriate interest rate.”
    Pls.’ Mot. at 4–5 (quoting Ninth Fee Petition Stip. at 1–2). Thus, it remains a live question what
    type of an enhancement is necessary to compensate Plaintiffs’ counsel for any deficiency arising
    from an inadequate interest rate.
    C.      Calculating an Appropriate Enhancement, or the “True Lodestar”
    Thus far, the court has concluded that Plaintiffs’ total interim fee award, or interim lodestar,
    falls short of a “reasonable” fee two reasons, and a possible third: (1) below-market USAO Laffey
    Matrix rates were used to calculate interim fee awards for over 20 years, (2) there has been a delay
    in receiving whatever amount is appropriate to compensate them for the shortfall caused by use of
    those reduced rates, and (3) the interest thus far received on interim fee awards arguably has been
    inadequate to compensate for delay. The question then becomes how to enhance the interim
    lodestar to make up for these shortfalls. Or, perhaps more accurately stated: What is the “true
    lodestar” in this case? Recall that Perdue held that where the original lodestar “does not adequately
    measure the attorney’s true market value, . . . the trial judge should adjust the attorney’s hourly
    rate in accordance with . . . [the] prevailing market 
    rate.” 559 U.S. at 554
    –55. The true lodestar
    in this case thus would reflect prevailing market rates when the fees were incurred.
    37
    By Plaintiffs’ calculation, the true lodestar in this case is $75,232,463.96—more than three
    times the total interim fee payment. See Pls.’ Mot. at 43; Lang Decl. ¶ 75 & Ex. D. How they get
    to this amount is both labor intensive and creative.
    Plaintiffs first tabulated the individual hours worked by each lawyer and paralegal/law
    clerk (“paraprofessional”) who devoted time to the case from its inception. That total is an
    astonishing 116,783.23 hours: over 45,000 hours for partners, over 51,000 hours for associates,
    and nearly 20,000 for paraprofessionals. See Lang Decl., Ex. D., at PDF p. 66. Next, Plaintiffs
    estimated an hourly rate for each of those three categories of timekeepers. That hourly rate is
    drawn from the 2011 SLFE, 15 which was the basis for the USAO Matrix that replaced Laffey in
    2015. Although that Matrix was deemed invalid by the D.C. Circuit in DL v. District of Columbia,
    
    924 F.3d 585
    , Plaintiffs rely on its underlying data. As Plaintiffs explain:
    In 2017, [during the DL litigation] the United States endorsed the
    2011 SLFE as containing “one of the most complete, accurate, and
    up-to-date sets [o]f economic statistics and financial data available
    about law firms.” Statement of Interest of the United States, DL v.
    District of Columbia, Case No. 1:-05-cv-01437, ECF No. 564, at 3
    n.2 (Apr. 27, 2017). Though the new [USAO] matrix itself has been
    invalidated by the D.C. Circuit, DL v. District of Columbia, 
    924 F.3d 585
    (D.C. Cir. 2019), the underlying data provides relevant rates for
    complex federal litigation in the District of Columbia as recently as
    2010. The SLFE gathered data on rates for mid-level associates and
    partners and gave rate values for the lower quartile, median, upper
    quartile, and ninth decile. Given the complexity of this case and the
    superior skill manifested by class counsel, as well as the original
    Laffey characterization of the proper market rate as that for the most
    experienced, highly respected, and capable attorneys, the ninth
    decile rate for the District of Columbia is the most appropriate for
    the timekeepers in this case.
    Pls.’ Mot. at 43.
    15
    
    Discussed supra, at 27
    .
    38
    To unpack that description a bit, to identify the true market rate for their work, Plaintiffs
    rely on the Washington, D.C.-specific data gathered by the 2011 SLFE. The 2011 SLFE identified
    timekeeper rates in 2010 based on various years of experience (the survey identified nine
    experience bands) across different types of law practices (not just complex civil litigators), and it
    isolated four different data points of rates: lower quartile, median, upper quartile, and ninth decile.
    See Lang Decl., Ex. E, at PDF pp. 78–80, 104. The survey did not have data for every years-of-
    experience grouping for Washington, D.C. firms, but it did have robust data for associates with
    four or five years of experience and for partners with 16 or more years of experience, which were
    broken down into four timekeeper categories (one for associates and three for partners). See
    id. at
    PDF p. 104. The survey also provided composite rates for just two categories of Washington, D.C.
    attorneys: “Associate/Staff Lawyer” and “Partner/Shareholder-Equity/Non-Equity.” See
    id. at
    PDF p. 100. Plaintiffs used those composite rates, calculated at the ninth decile, on the assumption
    that complex civil litigators would command the highest rates in Washington, D.C.
    Id. ¶ 73.
    As
    for paraprofessionals, because the 2011 SLFE did not capture their rates, Plaintiffs used the
    average rate for those timekeepers charged in 2010 by two firms that worked on the matter, Steptoe
    & Johnson and Crowell & Morning.
    Id. ¶ 74.
    The resulting 2010 hourly rates were $204.50 for
    paraprofessionals, $450 for associates, and $675 for partners. See
    id., Ex. D. at
    PDF p. 66.
    Plaintiffs then multiplied those rates by the total hours worked for each timekeeper category to
    come up with a “9th Decile 2010 Lodestar” of $57,871,126.13.
    Id. Finally, Plaintiffs updated
    the
    2010 lodestar to 2019 dollars by applying an inflation factor of 1.3.
    Id. ¶ 75. 16
    The resulting true
    16
    Plaintiffs use the Producer Price Index – Office of Lawyers (“PPI-OL”), also published by the Bureau of Labor
    Statistics, to adjust for inflation. See Lang Decl. ¶ 10.
    39
    lodestar in 2019 dollars, according to Plaintiffs, is $75,232,463.96.
    Id. A chart summarizing
    these
    calculations is reproduced below.
    Position                         Hours           2010 9th Decile SLFE 9th Decile 2010
    DC Rate              Lodestar
    PARAPROFESSIONAL*                      19,833.75 $ 204.50                $ 4,056,001.88
    ASSOCIATE                              51,670.11 $ 450.00               $ 23,251,549.50
    PARTNER                                45,279.37 $ 675.00               $ 30,563,574.75
    TOTAL                                 116,783.23                        $ 57,871,126.13
    adjusted to 2019 Rates using
    PPI/OL, dividing August                                                1.300     $ 75,232,463.96
    2019 number by Dec. 2010
    number
    Id., Ex. D.,
    at PDF p. 66.
    Plaintiffs’ true lodestar calculation suffers from at least three problems. First, and most
    glaringly, nowhere do Plaintiffs justify the logic of applying updated 2010 rates to all hours worked
    on the case. That approach might be justifiable if Plaintiffs had not received a penny in interim
    fees and were seeking to fully compensate themselves for delay by basing the final award on
    current rates. But, of course, Plaintiffs have received multiple interim fee awards along the away,
    and they cannot enlarge the final award by applying current rates or an inflationary adjustment to
    hours worked for which compensation has not been delayed. Second, Plaintiffs’ approach fails to
    account for the fact that, at least through 1998, they received compensation at or near market rates
    for the hours they committed to the case. They were not undercompensated due to a below-market
    rate for those years; they received exactly what they sought. Third, as for the years in which the
    USAO Laffey Matrix Rate diverged from prevailing market rates, arbitrarily using 2010 rates and
    applying an inflationary multiplier to the hours worked in those years would result in
    overcompensation. That is particularly true for the earlier years of that divergence, when the delta
    between Laffey rates and the prevailing market rate was less pronounced.
    40
    Without applying the updated 2010 rates to all hours worked in the case—an approach the
    court has now rejected—Plaintiffs’ justification for using three composite rate categories falls
    apart. See Lang Decl. ¶ 72 (explaining that “use of these general rate categories provides a good
    approximation of what the lodestar would be” because “although the . . . rate will be high for
    associates in their earliest involvement,” since many of them “stayed with the case for many
    years,” the use of the composite rates “for all years gives a reasonable approximation of the
    lodestar” (emphasis added)). Plaintiffs offer the expert opinion of Professor William Rubenstein,
    the author of the leading treatise on class actions, Newberg on Class Actions, to support their
    methodology. See Pls.’ Mot., Expert Report of Prof. William B. Rubenstein, ECF No. 1081-1
    [hereinafter Rubenstein Report]. In his expert report, Professor Rubenstein says that “given the
    40-year arc of this case, re-calculating a new lodestar hour by hour, time-keeper by time-keeper,
    would be unduly burdensome, if not outright impossible, and the use of the three-rate approach is
    a sensible and efficient approach.” Rubenstein Report ¶ 38(a). That is no doubt true to some
    extent. But convenience cannot justify overcompensating class counsel to the tune of millions of
    dollars. Additionally, having reviewed cases in this Circuit where the court adopted the LSI-
    adjusted matrix, for example, it does not seem like it would be unduly burdensome to apply that
    matrix, or something similar, which contains rates at a greater level of specificity than the 2011
    SLFE, and which has already been found reasonable for complex federal litigation. See 
    DL, 924 F.3d at 589
    . To the extent the LSI-adjusted matrix requires information pertaining to years of
    experience to discern the hourly rate, Exhibit C of Ms. Lang’s declaration appears to provide that
    information. It details, by fee petition, the hours billed by each attorney, including their years
    since graduation from law school. See Lang Decl., Ex. C, at PDF pp. 36–51. Thus, the necessary
    data for an LSI-adjusted matrix calculation, though perhaps cumbersome, would appear to exist.
    41
    Professor Rubenstein also points to the NFL litigation in which he served as an expert to
    support the reasonableness of Plaintiffs’ composite rates by showing that the average hourly rate
    under Plaintiffs’ calculation ($574.17) is well below the “blended rate” the court used in the NFL
    litigation ($623.05). See Rubenstein Report ¶ 39. But unlike this case, the NFL litigation involved
    work done by more than twenty law firms, and the hourly billing rates by partners across the firms
    diverged by $850. In re Nat’l Football League Players’ Concussion Injury Litig., No. 12-MD-
    02323-AB, 
    2018 WL 1635648
    , at *8–9 & n.8 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 5, 2018). Relying on an approach
    endorsed by the Third Circuit, the NFL court chose to average the rates of all partners, associates,
    and paralegals to arrive at a “blended rate” for the purposes of the lodestar cross-check.
    Id. at *9.
    But in this case, the court is not calculating an updated lodestar for a cross-check, so this
    comparison is not useful. As the NFL court explained, “[s]ince the lodestar cross-check is ‘not a
    full-blown lodestar inquiry,’ the evaluation can be based on summaries and less precise
    formulations.”
    Id. at *8
    (quoting In re Rite Aid Corp. Sec. Litig., 
    396 F.3d 294
    , 307 n.16 (3d Cir.
    2005)). Indeed, that is in part the problem with Plaintiffs’ suggested calculation overall—it is
    provided primarily as a cross-check on the percentage-of-the-fund award they seek and is not
    precise enough.
    *      *       *
    In light of the foregoing, Plaintiffs need to go back to the drawing board. They bear the
    burden of “identifying a factor that the lodestar does not adequately take into account and proving
    with specificity that an enhanced fee is justified.” 
    Purdue, 559 U.S. at 546
    . Although it is apparent
    that an adjustment to the lodestar for the eighth through twenty-eighth fee petitions (covering years
    1998–2018) is necessary to “approximate[ ] the fee that the prevailing attorney would have
    received if he or she had been representing a paying client who was billed by the hour in a
    42
    comparable case,” the court lacks the information necessary to “adjust the attorney’s hourly rate
    in accordance with specific proof linking the attorney’s ability to a prevailing market rate.”
    Id. at 5
    51. 
    Furthermore, although some additional compensation is appropriate to account for delay of
    amounts unpaid, Plaintiffs have not proposed “a method that is reasonable, objective, and capable
    of being reviewed on appeal” to calculate such amount.
    Id. Although the court
    denies Plaintiffs’ request for a final attorneys’ fee award at this juncture,
    the court hopes that its rulings will assist the parties in reaching a resolution.
    V.      CONCLUSION AND ORDER
    For the reasons set forth above, the court denies without prejudice Plaintiffs’ Motion for a
    Final Determination of Attorneys’ Fees, ECF No. 1080. The parties shall appear for a status
    hearing on November 13, 2020, at 10:30 a.m., to discuss further proceedings in this matter.
    Dated: November 3, 2020                                        Amit P. Mehta
    United States District Court Judge
    43