Full opinion text
ORDER EDENFIELD, District Judge. Before the Court is a slew of motions filed by plaintiffs Pearl River Polymers, Inc. (“Pearl River”), and Chemtall, Incorporated (“Chemtall”), against defendants Citi-Chem, Inc. (“Citi-Chem”) and Calvin M. King. King has filed some of his own. The caption above has been amended to reflect the Court’s consolidation of Chemtall, Incorporated v. Citi-Chem, Inc. and Calvin M. King, CV496-218 with Pearl River Polymers, Inc. v. Citi-Chem, Inc., Calvin M. King, CV496-192. The two eases present common questions of law and fact within the meaning of F.R.Civ.P. 42(a). Pearl River, originally assigned to Judge W.T. Moore, is reassigned to the undersigned. See CV496-192, doc. # 69. Henceforth, all filings shall bear the consolidation caption used above and shall be filed, for administrative convenience only, under the Pearl River proceeding, CV496-192. 1. BACKGROUND A. The Product Sales Agreement In the 1980s,' Citi-Chem — then and now 100% owned and controlled by King — entered into a sales relationship with Chemtall. CV496-218, doc. #40, exh. A (Stipulations (a) & (d)). Chemtall, a Riceboro, Georgia company, manufactured water-treatment polymer products for sale by Citi-Chem under its “Citi-Chem” trade name. Carlson Aff. ¶ 6, CV496-192 doe. # 56, exh. I. Chem-tall shipped its products from Georgia directly to Citi-Chem customers, then billed CitiChem, located in New Jersey. Carlson Aff. ¶¶ 6, 27. Citi-Chem, in turn, simultaneously invoiced its customers, and on each invoice instructed them to remit their payments to a Georgia bank lockbox. Carlson Aff. ¶¶ 6-7. From there the money would be divided pursuant to the parties’ agreement. Carlson Aff. ¶¶ 6-7, 9. After Chemtall’s Georgia-based parent company acquired Pearl River, which also manufactures water-treatment polymers but is located in Louisiana, Pearl River joined Chemtall in the same arrangement with CitiChem. Carlson Aff. ¶¶ 10-12, 25-26. Chem-tall’s corporate parent managed Pearl River from Riceboro, Georgia. Carlson Aff. ¶ 10. Citi-Chem’s “Pearl-River” customers were also to remit to the Georgia lockbox. Id. ¶ 19. B. Lockbox Problems — “The Early Days” The lockbox arrangement originated from Chemtall’s conclusion that neither Citi-Chem nor King, who is Citi-Chem’s CEO, were creditworthy. Carlson Aff. ¶ 7; CV496-218, doe. #40, exh. A (Stipulations); see also 1/28/97 King Dep. at 47-48 (King insisting that he did not know why the parties entered into the lockbox arrangement); but see id. at 86 (admitting that the lockbox was set up “[t]o control the receivables of Citi-Chem”). Nevertheless, Chemtall initially agreed to let King act as the lockbox’s “managing agent.” Carlson Aff. ¶ 13. Hence, it left it to King to divide the revenues according to the marketing agreement and send Chemtall its share, while issuing a check to Citi-Chem for its share. Carlson Aff. ¶ 14. By 1991, however, King began to take too long in forwarding to Chemtall (and now Pearl River) their share, so the parties mutually agreed that Chemtall would replace King as the managing agent vested with sole check-writing authority. Carlson Aff. ¶ 13. Chemtall/Pearl River performed all lockbox accounting activity in Georgia, and from there sent cheeks to Citi-Chem in New Jersey. Id. As before, all payments should have been sent directly from Citi-Chem customers to the Georgia lockbox, not to CitiChem directly. Carlson Aff. ¶ 17. In his 1/28/97 deposition, King denied that Citi-Chem had agreed to do that, see 1/28/97 King Dep. at 115-16, though he had previously acknowledged that plaintiffs “forced” him to comply with such “arrangement.” Id. at 86. In the next breath, however, he conceded that in fact he did “agree” to it, id. at 87, but only because he “had no choice. I was told what to do.” Id.; see also 7/14/97 Cobb Dep. at 48. In that King has advanced no formal coercion or duress defense here, see Fields v. Thompson, 164 Ga.App. 331, 332-33, 297 S:E.2d 100 (1982); Evans v. Merrill Lynch, 213 Ga.App. 808, 810, 446 S.E.2d 215 (1994), nor could he, see Evans, 213 Ga.App. at 810, 446 S.E.2d 215, the Court finds no factual dispute — only King’s puerile semantics — on this point: plaintiffs and CitiChem in fact did reach the lockbox agreement that plaintiffs have described. C. 1995-1996 Lockbox Problems According to plaintiffs, Citi-Chem began to violate the lockbox agreement in late 1995. Carlson Aff. ¶ 13. They maintain that King, without their knowledge, directed Citi-Chem customers to send their payments to a New Jersey address that he controlled. Carlson Aff. ¶ 13. Citi-Chem then failed to remit to Chemtall/Pearl River their share of the revenues. Id. ¶ 18. These diversions continued into 1996, though they were not uniform. In a 4/29/96 letter to a Los Angeles municipal customer, Citi-Chem instructed it to send its remittance to the Georgia lock box. CV496192, doc. #56, exh. 11. Carlson had called Citi-Chem and requested that this be done. 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 27-28. Plaintiffs claim that this was one of the factors that induced them to continue shipping their products to Citi-Chem customers. CV496192, doc. # 59 at 7. Nevertheless, it was just one week later that Citi-Chem instructed a Louisiana municipal customer to remit payments directly to Citi-Chem. CV496-192, doc. #56, exh. 12. And, a Citi-Chem agent also verbally contacted another customer — the City of New Orleans — to likewise remit to CitiChem, and not to the lockbox address. CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 7; # 56, exh. 12 (handwritten notation); 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 51-52. D. “Shifting Testimony” (1) Calvin King In his January, 1997 deposition King initially denied knowledge of the above-mentioned lockbox diversions, see 1/28/97 King Dep. at 81, but then agreed that Citi-Chem received remittances directly, id. at 82, though he insisted that they were not for Chemtall or Pearl River products. Id. at 83. A moment later, however, King conceded that Citi-Chem diverted one payment for Pearl River products and simply kept' the money. Id. at 84-85 (admitting that CitiChem “used the money for operations”). Still, he refused to admit that he advised the customer in question to divert payment from the lockbox to Citi-Chem. Id. at 99. And, he denied that he ever directed any customer to ignore the lockbox address and instead remit directly to Citi-Chem. Id. at 101, 104-05; id. at 118-19 (denying any knowledge that Citi-Chem’s bookkeeper, L. Stackhouse, wrote a Los Angeles municipal customer and instructed it to remit to CitiChem instead of the lockbox); id. at 223 (“Q. Do you know of any efforts after [8/15/96] to contact Citi-Chem’s customers directly and tell them to mail the money direct to [CitiChem’s P.O. Box in] Cherry Hill [N.J.]? A. I don’t know of any specific instance, no. I don’t recall any”). As for why, after four years (1991-1995), numerous Citi-Chem customers supplied with Chemtall/Pearl River products “suddenly” stopped remitting to the lockbox and instead remitted to Citi-Chem, King claimed ignorance. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 180-81. In other words, having denied that he or a CitiChem employee or agent directed them, he simply could not explain how Citi-Chem’s customers “spontaneously” began remitting to Citi-Chem’s New Jersey P.O. Box rather than to the Georgia lockbox address. See, e.g., 1/28/97 King Dep. at 142 (“Q. How do you believe that L.A. Water and Power started to send checks directly to Citi-Chem in New Jersey rather than to the [Georgia] lockbox? A. I don’t know”); see also id. at 150, 159-60. King suggested that perhaps his customers were “incompetent”: Q. And you have no idea as to how a customer who gets an invoice telling them to mail it to P.O. Box 93146, Atlanta, ends up sending money to P.O. Box 3836 [N.J.], assuming that to be the case? A. Do I know? Q. Yes, sir. A. Incompetence, perhaps. Q. On the part of the customers? A. Right, Id. at 145. Even though he repeatedly denied knowledge or complicity in those diversions, King nevertheless repeatedly conceded that hundreds of thousands of dollars were diverted from the lockbox to Citi-Chem. Indeed, he authored a 4/29/96 memo admitting that CitiChem had collected $656,621.34 in invoices constituting money Citi-Chem now owes to Chemtall/Pearl River. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 114-117, 149, 177 & exh. 54; 1/29/97 King Dep. at 256-57; 1/28/97 King Dep. at 185-86 (further conceding that all of the $656,621.34 in Chemtall/Pearl River-based customer payments listed on his 4/29/96 memo were remitted directly to his company in New Jersey, and not the Georgia lockbox). And he did not dispute Pearl River’s computation showing that Citi-Chem owes it $1,259,854.05 in customer remittances that Citi-Chem failed to turn over to Pearl River. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 140-42. King also conceded that plaintiffs were not informed of the diversion; he justified this by insisting that somehow the lockbox agreement dissolved, as did his obligation to communicate that belief to the plaintiffs. This is reflected in his rhetorical response, .“Why. did I have to inform them?” 1/28/97 King Dep. at 186 (emphasis added). When pressed again on this point, King retreated to his now oft-used “I don’t recall” response: Q. Did you ever inform [plaintiffs] [prior to the spring of 1996] that [the payments were not] going to the Atlanta lockbox? A. I don’t recall. Id. at 188. He admitted, however, that at the end of 1995 he decided to direct Citi-Chem’s bookkeeper, L. Stackhouse, to cease sending customer remittance funds to the plaintiffs. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 189-90. To summarize thus far: somewhere in the 1995-1996 time period, King decided that he no longer had to adhere to the lockbox agreement, but felt no obligation to inform plaintiffs of this decision. In the meantime, the company he owned and controlled collected more than a million dollars in diverted customer remittances that “just happened” to come his way “perhaps” due to customer “incompetence.” And, he either had no part in the diversions or did but “just can’t recall.” (2) Citi-Chem’s Pre-Litigation Correspondence Intermixed with King’s deposition denials and contradicting concessions is his testimony concerning a 4/29/96, “remit to the lock-box” letter that Citi-Chem sent to its customers. King initially denied ever seeing it before. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 175-77. However, he later conceded that, pursuant to what he characterized as a “work out agreement,” Citi-Chem in fact did mail the letter to its Chemtall/Pearl River-supplied customers. Citi-Chem did so after being confronted by plaintiffs, and thus to assure them that the customer revenues in fact would be remitted to the lockbox. 1/29/97 King Dep. at 266-67; see also 1/28/97 King Dep. exh. 54 at 3. E. Other Citi-Chem Pre-Litigation Representations As the 4/29/96 .memo and “remit to the lockbox” letter reveal, plaintiffs confronted King prior to commencing this litigation. At that time King admitted, through counsel, that Citi-Chem had been receiving “lockbox” payments directly from its customers. CV96-192, doe. 56, exh. 1 (Carlson Aff.) ¶ 20 & sub-exh. A (Citi-Chem’s counsel’s 5/1/96 Ltr. at 2:“[Citi-Chem] has recently received $70,000 in checks for some of the Pearl River invoices. These amounts can be sent immediately as a gesture of good faith and our desire to cooperate with [Pearl River]”). This followed King’s 4/29/96 memo to Carlson, wherein King admitted receiving payment for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of Chemtall/Pearl ■ River invoices. CV496-218 doc. #37, exh. 1 ¶. 11, sub-exh. B; CV496-192, doc. #56, exh. 1, sub-exh. A, 2nd attachment (totaling $656,621.34), exh. 2 (4/29/96 King memo to Carlson itemizing invoices for which Citi-Chem had received payment); CV496-218 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 45-46. By the date of King’s 4/29/96 memo acknowledging that invoice payments to the lockbox were $656,000 behind, CV496-192, doc. # 56, exh. 1 (Carlson Aff.), sub-exh. A at 1; exh. 2; 1/28/97 King Dep. at 112-114, the parties were negotiating in an effort to resolve the dispute. See CV496-192 doc. # 56, exh. 1 (Carlson Aff.) sub-exh. A (Talty Letter). In a 5/1/96 letter-response to plaintiffs’ inquiry about what had become of the money (i.e., if Citi-Chem’s customers were being properly invoiced, then where were the invoice payments?), Citi-Chem’s counsel, Dennis Talty, acknowledged the diversions but emphasized that the lockbox agreement was not' “written,” and in any event plaintiffs simply must have been aware of the diversions since they had been accepting checks directly from Citi-Chem. CV496192, doc. # 56, exh. 1, sub-exh. A at 1. But he also insisted that Citi-Chem had nothing to do with the customer-payment diversion: Lastly, [the] remittance address of the lockbox appears on all invoices. Therefore, the failure of monies going to the lockbox representing your Ghent’s invoices is not a new development, was not a result of any action or conduct on the part of Citi-Chem and was a fact known to your client for several months or which could have been ascertained had sufficient controls been in place. CV496-192, doc. # 56, exh. 1, sub-exh. A at 2 (emphasis added). By this point in time, however, the plaintiffs had not yet uncovered what Citi-Chem’s former employees have since revealed: the “dummy” invoice re-labeling scheme, which obviously contradicts Talty’s claim i.e., because of the “dummy”-invoicing scheme, the “remittance address of the lockbox [in fact did not ] appear[ ] on all invoices,” id., only the “dummy”, invoices that Citi-Chem had sent to plaintiffs, while, at the same time, Citi-Chem’s payment-address .appeared on the invoices that Citi-Chem sent to its customers. Nor did plaintiffs know that CitiChem had diverted a substantial amount of customer payments from the lockbox. See 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 73-74. F. Diverting Corporate Resources It was also in May 1996 that King instructed his employees to activate a “Citi-Chem, Inc., D.C.” bank account (hereafter, the “CCI-DC account”), for the deposit of CitiChem, Inc. funds. CV496-192 doc. #74 (Miller Aff.) ¶ 14; see also 7/14/97 Cobb Dep. at 27. This followed Carlson’s trip to New Jersey to investigate what became of the missing customer payments. Miller Aff. ¶ 14; 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 58-59. Citi-Chem’s then bookkeeper has since testified that King set the CCI-DC account up to hold the diverted lockbox revenues. 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 58-59, 69-70. “Lockbox” customer payments went directly into that account. 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 74-76; 7/14/97 Cobb Dep. at 33. With King’s knowledge, customers were instructed to make their cheeks out to CCI-DC, and this continued past • Citi-Chem’s bankruptcy filing. 7/14/97 Cobb. Dep. at 36-37. At the same time, King also set up new businesses. One was called “King’s Liquors.” Miller Aff. ¶ 15. Another was a clothing store called “Sport-King.” 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 69-70. Multiple payments of “around ten or more” thousand dollars in CCI-DC monies were transferred to Sport-King. 7/14/97 Stackhouse Dep. at 66-67; Stackhouse Aff. (CV492-192, doc. #72) ¶ 9 (“$69,000 of this money was used for Sport[-]Kings____”); but see 3/12/97 King Dep. at 79-80 (King testified that only his wife owns Sport-King, and that only one CCI-DC check had been “inadvertently” written to it but “I returned the money”). King also transferred, via payment to himself as a “consulting fee,” $45,000 “to fund King’s Liquors.” Stackhouse Aff. (CV492-192, doe. # 72) ¶ 10. And, he used $6,000 in CCI-DC funds “to purchase a BMW.” Id. ¶ 9. In June and July, 1996, King transferred two automobiles out of Citi-Chem and into his own name, 1/28/97 King Dep. at 23-24, though he claims that he cannot remember what he paid Citi-Chem for them, nor what he received for them when he shortly thereafter sold one to Ms. Miller and the other to his daughter. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 25-28. G. Plaintiffs File Suit Claiming a $152,082.80 arrearage (doe. # 37, exh. 1 ¶ 16) and breach of contract, Chemtall sued Citi-Chem and King in a Georgia State court on 8/9/96 (CY496-218 doc. #37, exh. 1, sub-exh. A) and obtained several Temporary Restraining Orders (“TROs”) aimed at preventing them from accepting any more direct payments from Citi-Chem customers for Chemtall products, or otherwise diverting any more funds away from the lockbox. CV496-218 doc. # 37, exh. 3 at 3-5 (8/15/96, 8/19/96 & 8/22/96 orders). The State court essentially ordered the defendants, inter alia, to ensure that Chemtallbased customer revenues be sent to the lock-box. Id., doc. #5 at 1-2. On 9/5/96, CitiChem notified its customers that (1) it was aware of the fact that its customers had been mailed a copy of one of the above-mentioned TROs, but that (2) such should be disregarded because they “only hold[ ] jurisdiction in the state of Georgia.” CV496-192 doc. # 75, exh. 35. Claiming diversity jurisdiction, Pearl River instituted similar proceedings in this Court on 8/9/96, seeking $1,162,625.99. CV496-192 doc. # 1 (Complaint). In both cases the plaintiffs have since amended the Complaints to allege fraud, conversion, constructive trust and related theories. CV496-218 doc. 54, 69 at 2; CV496-192 doc. # 7, 66. Citi-Chem filed for bankruptcy in New Jersey on 9/9/96. CV496-192 doc. # 18; #56, exh. 14 (Savage Aff.) ¶¶5-6. King would later justify Citi-Chem’s defiance of the State court injunction by claiming that “the law allowed it after [Citi-Chem] filed [a Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Petition].” 1/28/97 King Dep. at 225. Although King put the company in Chapter 11, he failed to open a debtor-in-possession account for incoming revenues. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 41. He also wrote to the Georgia “lockbox” bank to terminate the lockbox itself. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 61. And, he later requested that CitiChem be liquidated under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 62-63. According to the bankruptcy trustee, however, King failed to inform the bankruptcy court or the trustee that he had activated CCI-DC and shifted Citi-Chem’s business into it. See CV496-192, doc. # 64, exh. A. Citi-Chem and King removed the “Chem-tall” State court proceeding to this Court, CV496-218, doc. # 1, and Kang has since moved to dismiss (CV496-218 doc. # 6, 15), as well as for a stay pending disposition of Citi-Chem’s N.J. bankruptcy proceeding. CV496-218, doc. 43-44. Several discovery disputes have since erupted in the instant cases, resulting in sanctions imposed against Eng for stalling or evading discovery. See infra note 18. H. Facing Some of The Music By the time King was re-deposed in March, 1997, he admitted that, beginning in 1996 he diverted Citi-Chem business to CCI-DC in response to plaintiffs’ pursuit of Citi-Chem for the revenues claimed here. 3/12/97 Eng Dep. at 89-92; 99-100 (plaintiffs began contacting Citi-Chem’s customers, so Eng shifted Citi-Chem’s business to CCI-DC to avoid plaintiffs’ “interference”); see also CV496-192 doc. # 73 (L/ Miller Aff.) ¶ 14. This in ho small part enabled Eng to pay himself “consulting fees” out of the CCI-DC account. CV496-192 doc. # 75, exh. 41 ¶¶ 1-6 (Citi-Chem’s former bookkeeper’s affidavit recounting King’s direction to set up the CCI-DC account, run virtually all Citi— Chem transactions through it, and draw his “consulting fees” checks from it). In that respect, plaintiffs have submitted a schedule of checks dated between 8/12/96 and 11/27/96 showing $110,900 in payments from the CCI-DC account to King. Doc. # 37, exh. 22. This is in addition to a $75,000 CCI-DC check to King issued on 12/11/96. CV496192 doc. #75, exh. 40; exh. 41 (L. Stack-house Aff.) ¶¶ 9-10 (recounting' how King “laundered” $75,000 and $45,000 “consulting fee” checks). King at best was equivocal about what corporate formalities he observed. See 3/1^97 King Dep. at 46 (denying that “there [was] any kind of consulting agreement or contract that was in effect between [King] and CCI-DC”); id. at 46-49 (after King’s counsel asked whether that question encompassed only “written agreements,” King claimed that he “thought” the question was limited to “written” agreements, then admitted that — pursuant to what King evidently views as an “oral” agreement between himself and CCI-DC — he in fact had submitted “invoices” from himself to CCI-DC for his “consulting” fees); id. (King justifies this by insisting that he at that time acted as a “one-man sales force” to preserve both Citi-Chem and CCI-DC’s business; he insists that, by the time he received the 11/96 CCI-DC “consulting” payments, he was “acting as a consultant for [CCI-DC]” and also as a CCI-DC salaried employee). , I. Other Corporate Resources King claimed that he could not explain what a 12/31/96, $832,187.48 “Management Fee Expense” disbursement from CitiChem’s coffers represented, 1/28/97 King Dep. at 142, but later indicated that it was paid to CCI-DC. Id., at 214, 216; but see 3/12/97 King Dep. at 18-21 (denying that any fees “out of the ordinary” were paid by CitiChem to CCI-DC, though he conceded that he transferred Citi-Chem business and resources to CCI-DC because “we were being, you know, chased; hounded. Our accounts were being stolen [by plaintiffs]”); 3/12/97 King dep. at 43 (testifying-that he was unable to identify “numerous references to ... Management Fee, Inc.”); but see id., at 44-46 (conceding that he charged CCI-DC “consulting fees” for his efforts and that this continued after CCI-DC took over CitiChem’s business in 1996); CV496-192, doc. # 64, exh, A. (copy of 4/29/97 Trustee’s Adversary Proceeding Complaint to extend bankruptcy proceedings from Citi-Chem to CCI-DC and to recover “compensation to [Citi-Chem’s] estate for fraudulent transfer of property”); id. at 4 (demanding “judgment against Calvin King for a sum sufficient to compensate [Citi-Chem’s bankruptcy] Estate for ... losses [arising from 11 U.S.C. § 548, pre and post-petition transfers and State common law fraud]”). J. King’s Continued Business Activities Under CCI-DC Among the various motions filed in this case are plaintiffs’ Motions To Strike, CV496-192, doc. #58, 74; CV496-218, doc. 35, 75, 77, which are in part based on their claim that King has committed perjury, most particularly with respect" to his testimony and actions surrounding CCI-DC. Hence, some further detail on that set of facts is warranted here. To reiterate, King created CCI-DC as a “parallel Citi-Chem” company (i.e., a second company which used the same “CitiChem” name) in 1985 but did not actually use it in any significant way until early 1996. See supra note 6. While being deposed, King differentiated between Citi-Chem and CCI-DC. See 3/12/97 King Dep. at 7; see also CV496-192, doc. # 55 at 10-11. But to the public the two corporations not only used the same name, 3/12/97 King Dep. at 7, but also the same employees and principal place of business. Id. at 15, 25. Both are fully owned by King, Id. at 12, and both sell water treatment polymers. Id. at 10. Plaintiffs illuminate evidence showing that King filtered Citi-Chem business and revenues through CCI-DC months before he placed Citi-Chem in bankruptcy. See, e.g., 7114191 Stackhouse Dep. at 75-76 (“lockboxbound” revenues were diverted into the CCI-DC entity’s account both before and after Citi-Chem’s 9/96 bankruptcy filing). They then underscore King’s contradictory testimony regarding that commingling. At one point King testified that “CCI-DC” was a separate entity from Citi-Chem, 1/28/97 King Dep. at 172, and that it maintained a corporate checking account at a Washington, D.C. bank. Id. And, at that time he claimed that CCI-DC did not have any customer accounts. Id. As mentioned above, however, he later admitted that he used CCI-DC to carry on Citi-Chem’s business once Citi-Chem effectively terminated operations upon its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. And, as the Trustee’s filings show, he evidently did not inform the bankruptcy court. In that regard, Pearl River obtained, as a creditor in Citi-Chem’s bankruptcy, a copy of CCI-DC’S check register showing that, during 1996, CCI-DC paid nearly $500,000 to other water treatment polymer manufacturers for their products. CV496-192, doc. # 55 at 11-12; doe.- # 56, exh. 18. Pearl River also obtained, from a third-party supplier of CCI-DC, documentation showing that King opened a second CCI-DC checking account at a N.J. bank. CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 10; # 56, exh. 15. For all intents and purposes, plaintiffs contend, King simply siphoned off Citi-Chem’s assets and business contacts, then resumed its operation under CCI-DC’s name, See CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 9-14, even though he denied, in his 1/28/97 deposition, that he was selling any more polymers. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 162. It is against this background that plaintiffs express special dismay over King’s insistence, during his 1/28/97 deposition, that the original Citi-Chem (i.e., the defendant in the instant cases), had ceased doing business following its 1/6/97 Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation, and his further representation that CCI-DC did not have any customer accounts. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 162, 172; CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 9-14. In fact, CitiChem did continue doing business, only through CCI-DC, which then paid King massive amounts of “consulting fees.” Plaintiffs point to, inter alia, this testimony: Q. And are you doing any business in [CCI-DC’s] name as we speak? A. : In their name? Q. Yeah. A. We picked, up. a couple of accounts I think — no. I’m sorry. We didn’t. We didn’t get the accounts. Q. Does [CCI-DC] have any accounts? A. No. 1/28/97 King Dep. at 172. This and similar testimony, plaintiffs contend, was designed to mislead them away from a potential source (i.e., CCI-DC) from which to recover the over $1 million in revenues Citi-Chem, through King, admitted to diverting. They argue that such testimony, combined with King’s other bad faith and obstructionistic discovery tactics, justify striking King’s Answer as a perjury/discovery sanction. See CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 9-14. K. “Consulting Fee” Payments While Obstructing Discovery Plaintiffs also point to King’s “consulting fee” payments in support of their strike motions — specifically the context in which he paid himself those fees. After plaintiffs commenced these actions, King’s inconsistent testimony, constant “I don’t recall” responses and obstructionistic discovery tactics (i.e., baseless objections, resulting in sanctions, see infra note 18; constant deposition rescheduling, see CV496-192, doe. # 35 at 2-5), compelled them to discover much of the above-cited information from third parties. Plaintiffs have enumerated their efforts, see CV496-192, doc. #59 at 14, including their need to file successive motions to compel discovery. See CV496-192, doc. # 59 at 14; note 18 infra. In that vein, plaintiffs have had to depose King three times, and, as they point out, CV496-192, doe. # 59 at 15-16, many of his objections and non-responsive answers, combined with his deposition scheduling delays, enabled him to continue doing business under CCI-DC so he could pay himself substantial consulting fees. For example, during the latter half of 1996, and while plaintiffs attempted to depose him, King furthered CCI-DC’s business by servicing former CitiChem customers and paying himself more than $110,000 in “consulting fees.” CV496192, doc. # 59 at 16; doc. # 56, exh. 22. ■ In its 5/12/97 Motion For Contempt, Chemtall has presented the Court with evidence showing that $146,458.97 of Citi-Chem customer revenue funds were deposited into CCI-DC accounts — funds traceable to Chemtall/Pearl River product shipments. CV496-218, doc. # 34 at 5. II. ANALYSIS A. Personal Jurisdiction Challenge King does not challenge subject-matter jurisdiction, CV496-218, doc. #40, Stipulations ¶ (c), but argues that this Court is without personal jurisdiction over him. CV496-218, doc. # 6; CV496-192, doc. # 36. He swears that, while he thrice visited Chemtall’s Riceboro facility, each visit was “unscheduled” —something he did merely while passing through Georgia on his way to service a Florida customer. CV496-192, doc. #36, exh. A (King Aff.) ¶¶ 5-6. Thus, he stands before this Court as a nonresident who has “never been in [Georgia] to negotiate any agreements or orders with [Chemtall/Pearl Rivers].” King Aff. ¶¶ 4-5. He does not deny, however, that Citi-Chem engaged in a multi-year long, steady stream of orders, billings, payments, and correspondence between Riceboro, Georgia, and Citi-Chem’s N.J. offices. King Aff. ¶ 8. But, he emphasizes that “[a]lmost all of the orders were placed by Citi-Chem’s orders clerk, and not by me.” King Aff. ¶ 9. As for Pearl River’s case against him, he points out that “[a]ll of the [disputed] orders” in the Pearl River action were shipped from Pearl River’s Louisiana plant to non-Georgia customers. King Aff. ¶ 10. King does not reference, however, the now undisputed fact that Citi-Chem participated in a multi-year arrangement whereby it received Pearl River billing from Riceboro, Georgia, then directed its customers to remit Pearl River-based product payments to the Georgia lockbox. King also invokes the corporate veil by insisting that he signed the lockbox agreement while in N.J. and only in his capacity as Citi-Chem’s president. King Aff. ¶ 11. The plaintiffs, he points out, managed the lockbox at its Georgia site, not he. King Aff. ¶ 13. Again, King does not reference the fact that he managed the lockbox early on, until Chemtall took the task away from him. In any event, his arguments implicate the evidentiary burdens and standards governing the establishment of personal jurisdiction, as well as application of corporate veil-piercing doctrines. 1. Personal Jurisdiction — Governing Standards A federal court can exercise personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant only after it first determines that the forum State’s Long Arm statute authorizes jurisdiction and doing so will not violate the defendant’s due process rights. Sculptchair, Inc. v. Century Arts. Ltd., 94 F.3d 623, 626 (11th Cir.1996); Abraham v. Agusta, 968 F.Supp. 1403, 1406 (D.Nev.1997); Allegiant Physicians Services, Inc. v. Sturdy Memorial Hosp., 926 F.Supp. 1106, 1112 (N.D.Ga.1996). No such violation occurs where the defendant has purposefully established minimum contacts with the forum State so that exercising personal jurisdiction would not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice. Sculptchair, 94 F.3d at 626; cf. U.S. S.E.C. v. Carrillo, 115 F.3d 1540, 1542 (11th Cir.1997) (applying same analysis in “alien defendant,” F.R.Civ.P. 4(k) context). Courts analyze a defendant’s contacts with the State under “general” and “specific” jurisdictional inquiries. See Smith v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 968 F.Supp. 1356, 1360 (W.D.Ark.1997); Allegiant, 926 F.Supp. at 1113 n. 3. General jurisdiction simply refers to the power of a State to adjudicate a cause of action involving a particular defendant, regardless of where the cause of action arose. Smith, 968 F.Supp. at 1360; see also Carrillo, 115 F.3d at 1542 n. 2. On specific jurisdiction, courts focus on the relationship among the defendant, the forum and the litigation. A defendant’s contacts must (1) be related to the cause of action or have given rise to it; (2) involve some act by which he purposely availed himself of the privilege of conducting activities within the forum, thus invoking the protection and benefits of its laws; and (3) be such that he should reasonably anticipate being haled into á forum-State court. Allegiant, 926 F.Supp. at 1113; Smith, 968 F.Supp. at 1359-60; Rudo v. Stubbs, 221 Ga.App. 702, 704, 472 S.E.2d 515 (1996). Sitting in diversity jurisdiction, this Court must apply the law of the forum State — Georgia—to determine whether it has personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant. Brady v. Burtt, 979 F.Supp. 524, 528 (W.D.Mich.1997). Since plaintiffs have presented, inter alia, a breach of contract claim, CV496-192, doc. # 1, Counts Two — Three; CV496-218, doe. # 1 (Complaint) Count Two, the “transacting business” provision of Georgia’s Long Arm statute applies. See O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91(1). That statute confers personal jurisdiction to the maximum allowed by the Due Process Clause. Allegiant, 926 F.Supp. at 1113. The same must be said for tortfeasor analysis under § 9-10-91(3), see Urspruch ii. Greenblum, 968 F.Supp. 707, 710 (S.D.Ga.1996), as plaintiffs also have raised tort claims. CV496-192, doc. # 66, Counts Seven - Eight; CV496-218, doc. #54, Counts Five - Nine. 2. Personal Jurisdiction — Burden of Proof Because this Court has chosen not to conduct a discretionary evidentiary hearing, but instead has allowed plaintiffs to conduct discovery in support of their jurisdictional allegations, see 2 Moore’s Federal Practice 3d § 12.31 [7] (1997); Doddy v. Oxy USA Inc., 101 F.3d 448, 460 (5th Cir.1996); Chudasama v. Mazda Motor Corp., 123 F.3d 1353, 1367 (11th Cir.1997), [plaintiffs] have the burden of establishing a prima facie case of personal jurisdiction over [King], Madara v. Hall, 916 F.2d 1510, 1514 (11th Cir.1990); Morris v. SSE, Inc., 843 F.2d 489, 492 (11th Cir.1988), appeal after remand, 912 F.2d 1392 (11th Cir.1990); Delong Equip. Co., v. Washington Mills Abrasive Co., 840 F.2d 843, 845 (11th Cir.1988). To do so [they] must present enough evidence to withstand a motion for directed verdict. Madara, 916 F.2d at 1514. The Court must accept as true all facts alleged in the complaint that are uncontroverted by the defendant’s affidavits. E.g., Madara, 916 F.2d at 1514; Cable/Home Communication Corp. v. Network Prod., Inc., 902 F.2d 829, 855 (11th Cir.1990). Where, however, the defendant’s affidavits and the plaintiff’s assertions conflict, the Court must construe all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff. E.g., Madara, 916 F.2d at 1514; Cable/Home Communication, 902 F.2d at 855. Willingway Hosp. Inc. v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Ohio, 870 F.Supp. 1102, 1103-04 (S.D.Ga.1994) accord, Lisseveld v. Marcus, 173 F.R.D. 689, 695 (M.D.Fla.1997). The Court “may determine the jurisdictional issue by examining affidavits, interrogatories, depositions, oral testimony, or any combination of the recognized methods of discovery.” Doddy, 101 F.3d at 460. 3. Piercing The Corporate Veil Part of the Court’s jurisdictional analysis turns on application of corporate veil-piercing doctrine to King, since he has invoked the corporate veil in support of his jurisdictional and “Stay” motions. See CV496-192, doc. # 61 (King’s “Stay” brief); doc. #36-37 (motion, brief and affidavit arguing that, because he dealt with plaintiffs in his capacity only as Citi-Chem’s representative, he himself cannot be subjected to personal jurisdiction, much less substantive liability); see also doe. #64 (plaintiffs’ response brief) at 3-4 (citing Moore v. Barge, 210 Ga.App. 552, 554, 436 S.E.2d 746 (1993)). This veil-piercing concept drives the Court’s consideration of King’s jurisdictional motion (as well as his bankruptcy-based stay motion, see infra Part 11(B)). “In general, the activities of an officer on behalf of a corporation do not confer jurisdiction over the officer individually.” Brady, 979 F.Supp. at 529. However, if King pierced his corporate-veil prior to the commencement of these proceedings, such conduct may be considered to the extent it impacted plaintiffs in Georgia. - Furthermore, one who “is sued in his personal capacity, whether the alter ego, an officer or agent of a corporation, may not escape personal liability for his tortious misconduct damaging ... third parties by hiding behind the corporate veil even in those situations where the corporation might also be a proper party to the action.” Moore, 210 Ga.App. at 554, 436 S.E.2d 746 (internal quotes and cite omitted). Sole shareholdership alone is not dis-positive on a commingling-based, veil-piercing claim. “There must be evidence of abuse of the corporate form. [In other words,] [p]laintiff[s] must show that the defendant disregarded the separateness of legal entities by commingling on an interchangeable or joint basis or confusing the otherwise separate properties, records or control.” Heyde v. Xtraman, Inc., 199 Ga.App. 303, 306, 404 S.E.2d 607 (1991) (internal quotes & cites omitted). Aside from commingling, plaintiffs also can show that King is directly liable because he personally participated in a tort or directed his corporations (and thus, corporate employees and agents under his control) to do so: “[a] corporate officer “who takes part in the commission of a tort by the corporation is personally liable therefor, but an officer of a corporation who takes no part in the commission of a tort committed by the corporation is not personally liable unless he specifically directed the particular act to be done or participated or cooperated therein (or if he disregarded the corporate form so as to authorize piercing of the corporate veil).’ ... [Cit.]” Fussell v. Jones, 198 Ga.App. 399(1) (401 S.E.2d 593) (1991). See also Lincoln Land Co. v. Palfery, 130 Ga.App. 407, 411(1)(a) (203 S.E.2d 597) (1973). Weir v. McGill, 203 Ga.App. 431, 432, 417 S.E.2d 57 (1992); accord Jennings v. Smith, 226 Ga.App. 765, 766, 487 S.E.2d 362 (1997). As an example, the corporate veil can be pierced where a corporate officer participates with his corporation in wrongfully converting another’s property, see DCA Architects, Inc. v. American Bldg. Consultants, 203 Ga.App. 598, 600, 417 S.E.2d 386 (1992); CV496-218, doc. # 54, Count Five (Conversion); CV496192, doc. # 66, Count Nine (Constructive Trust), and' no personal benefit need be shown: It is unnecessary to show that the defendant- applied it to his own use, if he exercised dominion over it in defiance of the owner’s right, or in a manner inconsistent with it. It is in law a conversion whether. it be for his own or any other’s use.... Thus, there is no requirement that a corporate officer personally profit from the conversion of property, only that he participate in or direct the commission of the act. Id., 203 Ga.App. at 600, 417 S.E.2d 386 (quotes and cites omitted). Courts nationwide generally subscribe to the same bottom line: those who commingle corporate assets, take actions to hinder or defraud creditors, disregard corporate formalities, directly engage in tortious conduct (or direct their company to do so), or otherwise abuse the corporate form for an unethical or illegal purpose, will pierce the corporate veil which otherwise insulates them from personal liability. See Thoni Trucking Co. v. Foster, 243 F.2d 570, 571 (6th Cir.1957) (where, shortly after dominant stockholder learned of accident and expected claims against his company, he drained it of assets under the guise of salaries and dividends, then transferred remaining assets to his other corporation, and also misled plaintiffs through correspondence, he reduced the corporate entity to a sham; the district court therefore properly disregarded that entity when it held the stockholder personally liable for default judgments entered against the corporation); Mitcham, v. Blalock, 214 Ga. App. 29, 34, 447 S,E.2d 83 (1994) (“The concept of piercing the corporate veil is applied in Georgia to remedy injustices which arise where a party has overextended his privilege in the use of a corporate entity in order to defeat justice, perpetrate fraud, or evade contractual or tort responsibility”) (internal quotes and cite omitted); J-Mart Jewelry Outlets, Inc. v. Standard Design, 218 Ga. App. 459, 460-61, 462 S.E.2d 406 (1995); B.J. Howard Corp. v. Skinner, Wilson & Strickland, 172 Ga.App. 180, 182-83, 322 S.E.2d 306 (1984); Combs vr Ryan’s Coal Co., 785 F.2d 970, 982-83 (11th Cir.1986); Lawson v. Athens Auto Supply & Electrical, Inc., 200 Ga.App. 609, 612-13, 409 S.E.2d 60 (1991); Seaside Industries, Inc. v. Cooper, 766 S.W.2d 566, 568-69 (Tex.App.1989); Ann., Stockholders’ Personal Conduct of Operations Or Management of Assets As Factor Justifying Disregard of Corporate Entity, 46 ALR 3d 428 § 5 (Appropriation or use of corporate funds or property for personal purposes); id. § 6 (Stripping Corporation of Assets); 6A.Eeyc. of Ga.L. §§ 61-62 (1997) (where an existing corporation is corrupted to commit torts, hinder and defraud creditors, or a new corporation is formed and used for that purpose, the corporate veil can be pierced and the controlling party can be held hable under Georgia law). Here the plaintiffs have adduced ample evidence showing that King abused the corporate form and pierced his own corporate veil — all while engaging in a steady stream of business and fraud-furthering contacts with this State. The Court need only reference the facts — most of them undisputed — as exhaustively detailed above. King obviously saw the plaintiffs closing in on the over $1 million in debt that he himself conceded at the time — debt comprised of the very customer invoice revenues that Citi-Chem, under King’s direction, diverted. So, he reactivated CCI-DC and used it to siphon both funds and corporate accounts out of CitiChem and into CCI-DC so that he could continue to pay himself substantial “consulting fees” while hindering plaintiffs’ recovery efforts. In addition, he lied to plaintiffs (i.e., through his lawyer-agent’s 5/1/96 letter) as part of his then-mushrooming scheme to hinder, delay and defraud these creditors. 4. Personal Jurisdiction Over King As the precedent cited above- shows, King cannot escape “personal contacts” analysis by claiming he acted only in a “corporate capacity,” or that one of his employees, not he, physically placed “most” of the Citi-Chem orders with the plaintiffs. Corporations are animated by people; those who control such corporations hire others to perform on the corporation’s behalf. Hence, it is King, the controlling person, who is ultimately counted under the personal contacts analysis, for the evidence shows that he engaged in (directly and through his employees) fraud, deceit, and other veil-piercing conduct that exposes him to direct personal liability. . In that respect, the Miller, Cobb and Stackhouse evidence alone shows that he pulled the strings and personally directed the fraudulent, “dummy” invoice scheme which, when combined with King’s pre-litigation (e.g., the 4/29/96) memos and letters (most partieulary the misleading 5/1/96 “Talty” letter), comprised a substantial number of fraud-furthering, conversion-causing contacts with this State. Those contacts' occurred prior to the commencement of these cases and formed part of the continuum of contacts that had transpired between the parties. The Court therefore concludes that, by his repeated acts of fraud, active and passive misrepresentation, conversion and outright corporate looting for the purpose of defrauding and hindering the plaintiff creditors, King pierced his corporate veil and subjected himself to this Court’s personal jurisdiction. In light of his ample contacts with this State, it violates neither due process nor O.C.G.A. § 9-10-91 to exercise personal jurisdiction over him. To that end, all of King’s cases are easily distinguishable. In Taeger Enterprises v. Herdlein Technologies, 213 Ga.App. 740, 445 S.E.2d 848 (1994), for example, the act constituting conversion occurred in Illinois and caused injury in Florida, thus supporting the Georgia trial court’s finding of no personal jurisdiction. Id. at 748, 445 S.E.2d 848. Here King converted plaintiffs’ funds in New Jersey, thus unquestionably depriving (and legally injuring) plaintiffs in Georgia — the site of the lockbox, where Citi-Chem had obligated itself ultimately to perform (i.e., cause customers remittances to be sent to it) under the parties’ product-supply agreement. B. King’s Motion to Stay In moving for a stay, King contends that (1) plaintiffs’ claims against him belong to Citi-Chem’s bankruptcy estate; (2) only the bankruptcy trustee has standing to litigate those claims; therefore (3) this ease must be stayed against him until the trustee litigates or abandons those claims. CV496-192, doc. # 61. This argument raises some rather subtle bankruptcy law distinctions. King correctly notes that both plaintiffs are creditors of Citi-Chem while it presently, remains a debtor in bankruptcy. He also is correct in pointing out that if a claim (e.g., misappropriation of corporate assets) belongs to the debtor’s estate, then only the trustee, and not an individual creditor, has standing to assert that claim during the pendency of a bankruptcy case. See In re Foundation for New Era Philanthropy, 201 B.R. 382, 391 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1996) (citing Matter of Educators Group Health Trust, 25 F.3d 1281, 1283-84 (5th Cir.1994); John L. Motley Associates, Inc. v. Rumbaugh, 104 B.R. 683, 687-88 (E.D.Pa.1989)). The rationale for this is contained in the “ ‘general bankruptcy policy of ensuring that all similarly-situated creditors are treated fairly [thus] requiring] that the trustee have the first opportunity to pursue estate actions without interference from individual creditors.” Educators Group, 25 F.3d at 1284 (quoting Matter of S.I. Acquisition Inc., 817 F.2d 1142, 1153-54 (5th Cir.1987)). But which claims belong to the estate? Underlying State law controls, and courts “look at the nature of the injury-for which relief is sought.” Educators Group, 25 F.3d at 1284. The Educators Group court drew this line: Where a creditor’s complaint against a debtor’s corporate principal alleges a direct injury to the plaintiff, such claim belongs solely to that plaintiff (in Educators Group this included fraud, and negligent misrepresentation of the debtor’s financial status). Id. ,at 1284-86. However, where the claims directly impact the debtor corporation (e.g., negligent management, breach of a corporate officer’s fiduciary duty tQ the corporation), and only indirectly impact the plaintiff creditors, then the claims belong exclusively to the debtor (typically the trustee). Id. Here the fraud, conversion, and breach of contract claims belong to the plaintiffs, and not the trustee. Any doubt on that score should be resolved in favor of the plaintiffs, since Citi-Chem’s bankruptcy trustee, having been placed on notice of plaintiffs’ claims here (his counsel participated in deposing King), has simply not seen fit to intervene in this case. Compare Educators Group, 25 F.3d at 1283. Moreover, the Court’s review of the N.J. bankruptcy court’s adversary proceeding docket reveals that the trustee has already pursued King on related estate-based claims. That pursuit resulted in an “Order dismissing Case Against Defendant Calvin King.” See Krell v. Citi-Chem, Inc. and Calvin M. King, No. 97-1133-GMB, doe. #32 (Bkrtcy.D.N.J.12/31/97) (“the above-captioned adversary proceeding is dismissed against defendant, Calvin King, without prejudice and without bar by the entire controversy doctrine, to the chapter 7 trustee bringing future claims against Calvin King”). The Court also notes that the plaintiffs have raised a viable constructive trust claim over tbe assets sought to be recovered here. See Kelly v. Johnston, 258 Ga. 660, 661, 373 S.E.2d 7 (1988) (a “constructive trust arises with respect to property the title to which was acquired by fraud, or where although acquired originally without fraud, it is against equity that the title should be retained by the one who holds it”); Atlanta Classic Cars, Inc. v. Chih Hung USA Auto. Corp., 209 Ga.App. 908, 910, 439 S.E.2d 498 (1993). Normally, such funds never become part of the bankruptcy estate in the first place. See First Bulloch Bank & Trust Co. v. Inca Materials, Inc., 880 F.2d 1307, 1311 (11th Cir.1989) (constructive trust impressed upon a joint payment to a debtor/sub-subcontractor and its supplier such that the payment did not become part of the Chapter 11 estate). Accordingly, King’s stay motion must be denied. C. King’s Motion For Summary Judgment In CV496-218, King moves for summary judgment against Chemtall on the grounds that he was acting only, in his corporate capacity and as an agent for a disclosed principal. See doc. 46-48. King filed this motion prior to the plaintiffs’ adduction of the Cobb, Stackhouse and Miller evidence against him. As set forth in the extensive factual recitation and personal jurisdiction analysis supra, ample evidence exists to support plaintiffs’ showing that King, under alter ego, corporate veil-piercing liability theories, can be held personally liable on both plaintiffs’ tort as well as their contract-based claims. In that, at a minimum, a question of fact exists, King’s motion must be denied. D. King’s Motion to Preclude Stack-house and Cobb Testimony As mentioned above, Stackhouse and Cobb, former Citi-Chem employees who have since testified against the defendants, initially invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege in response to plaintiffs’ deposition subpoenas. See 5/22197 Cobb/Staekhouse Dep. at 27-28, 58. Citing precedent holding that a litigant cannot selectively invoke and then waive the privilege to her own benefit, King now moves to preclude consideration of the post-Fifth Amendment Stackhouse and Cobb testimony. CV496-218, doc. # 66. This motion is without merit. It is true that, “once a witness testifies, she may not invoke the fifth amendment privilege so as to shield that testimony from scrutiny. To allow her [or him] to do so would constitute a positive invitation to mutilate the truth.” U.S. v. Two Parcels Property Located at 2780 Highway 31, Jemison, Chilton County, Ala., 909 F.Supp. 1450, 1456 (M.D.Ala.1995) (internal cites and quotes omitted; brackets original). In such cases the witness is selectively invoking the Fifth Amendment to his or her litigational benefit. But it is also true that King’s former employees did not testify first, then invoke the Fifth Amendment; instead, they did the opposite. More importantly, they testified against him, and thus did not selectively invoke the privilege to their litigational benefit. This motion likewise must be denied. E. Plaintiffs’ Motions to Strike (1) “The Parade of Horribles” As mentioned above, both plaintiffs move to strike King’s Answer based on perjury and discovery-sanction grounds. CV496-192, doc. # 58-59, 74; CV496-218, doc. # 35, 75, 77. They point to a variety of King’s misdeeds: (a) King lied under oath about his “dummy invoice” scheme. See CV496-218, doc. #36 at 4-9, see also doc. #75 at 3-5 (summarizing former Citi-Chem employee testimony contradicting King’s). (b) Through Talt/s misleading letter, King lied and tried to conceal that scheme during pre-suit negotiations. See CV496218, doc. # 36 at 4-5. (c) King directed the reactivation and misuse of CCI-DC in order to siphon off Citi— Chem’s incoming, “lockbox-bound” revenues and accounts, then funneled Citi— Chem’s money into a new bank account to hinder and avoid the plaintiff creditors and convert their funds; and, he subsequently lied under oath about critical details in order to conceal his misdeeds. See CV496-218, doe. # 36 at 9-13. (d) Because King lied under oath about CCI-DC and its continuation of Citi— Chem’s business in order to further hinder plaintiffs, they were forced to bear the unnecessary expense of obtaining the truth from third parties (i.e., Citi-Chem customers, banks, twice deposing Stackhouse and Cobb, obtaining affidavits from Miller and Stackhouse, etc.). See CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 9-12. (e) King violated State court injunction orders (at least during the intervening few weeks between their 8/15/96-8/22/96 issuance and Citi-Chem’s 9/9/96 bankruptcy). See CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 17-20. (f) Even after plaintiffs’ initial round of strike motions, in which they illuminated King’s contradictory testimony, he failed to file “any affidavit or other evidence in the record which explains his previous testimony, or in any way defends against the accusations of perjury.” CV496-218, doc. # 75 at 5-6. (g) Even after this Court (by Order and subpoena) ordered him to do so, King presented misleading documents at his 1/29/97 deposition (i.e., he turned over a different set of invoices than those that he actually sent to his customers) — all as part of his continuing effort to conceal the “dummy invoice” fraud that he perpetrated against the plaintiffs. See CV496-218, doc. # 75 at 7-9. (h) King also lied under oath about his personal receipt of funds (in the form of a “loan”) from Citi-Chem. See CV496-218, doc. # 75 at 9-10. (i) King paid himself a $75,000 “consulting fee” from Citi-Chem while it was bankrupt, but that fact was covered up in King’s initial production of the company’s check register. See CV496-218, doc. # 75 at 10-11. (j) In addition to exploiting the bankruptcy stay, CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 15-16, see, e.g., 10/2/96 King Dep. at 5, 20-21, 157-62, King blocked discovery to the point of triggering sanctions, all as part of his overall effort to hinder plaintiffs’ recovery, CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 14-15; he had to be deposed three times, and even at that he constantly delayed his deposition reschedulings to buy himself more time so he could pay himself over $100,000 in “consulting fees” from CCI-DC (derived from diverted, Citi-Chem customer revenues). CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 16-17. In short, plaintiffs wish to unsheath the “Samurai Sword.” See Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Corp., 148 F.R.D. 362 (S.D.Ga.1991), aff'd, Malautea v. Suzuki Motor Co. Ltd., 987 F.2d 1536, 1544 (11th Cir.) (default sanction may be proper for violation of discovery orders even when not preceded by lesser sanctions, where lesser sanctions would not be effective; such default may be entered irrespective of the probable merits of the sanctioned party’s case); see also id. at 1545-46 (district court has inherent power to sanction party or attorney who shows bad faith by hampering enforcement of court order, though such power must be exercised with restraint and discretion), cert. denied, 510 U.S. 863, 114 S.Ct. 181, 126 L.Ed.2d 140 (1993). Among the points raised above, plaintiffs specially illuminate King’s violation of the State court orders. They do so while referencing their constructive trust claim because, like their conversion claim, see supra note 12, it requires that funds be traced. Plaintiffs urge the Court to view King’s false testimony in that light, especially as to (a) whether any entity with which he was connected was involved in the business of selling water polymer products; and (b) the location of any CCI-DC bank accounts. King lied under oath, plaintiffs contend, in no small part to frustrate their constructive trust claim, since he obviously compounded tracing difficulties by commingling funds and assets between the two corporations he controls. CV496218, doe. #36 at 20. Plaintiffs also seek to bring King’s perjury under the F.R.Civ.P. 37 sanction-precedent umbrella (such cases typically involve demonstrated defiance of a court order). To that end, they emphasize that there was no need for a formal court order commanding King to tell the truth because he was independently obligated (by force of his oath and the perjury statute) to do so. Id. at 20; see 18 U.S.C. § 1621(1) (applies to false statements, made under oath, to a tribunal); 18 U.S.C. § 1621(2) (applies to false statements, made in a written declaration that the author “subscribes as true” under penalty of perjury); U.S. v. Holland, 22 F.3d 1040, 1047 (11th Cir.1994) (perjury is not “less seriqus when made in a civil proceeding”). On these premises, plaintiffs contend that Rule 37(b)(2)(C), alternatively Rule 37(d), authorizes this Court to strike King’s Answer. CV496-218, doc. # 36 at 21. They also point to this Court’s inherent power, as recognized by Malautea, 987 F.2d at 1545. CV496-218, doc. #36 at 22-23. In their supplemental motion (filed after further discovery uncovered even more of King’s activities), plaintiffs illuminate King’s persistent practice of contradicting his own testimony, “of telling only half- or non-truths, of attempting to delay the [p]laintiff[s]’ legitimate discovery, and of producing ■ inaccurate documents CV496-218, doc. # 75 at 12. King has failed to respond to most of plaintiffs’ factual allegations and legal contentions. Indeed, in Pearl River, the Magistrate Judge had to order him to respond. See CV496-192, doc. #70 (order advising King to respond to Pearl River’s Motion to Strike or it would be granted). Even at that, King’s largely superficial, 10/6/97 response (CV496-192, doc. # 71) consists of little more than a reprint of his 5/23/97 Chemtall “Strike” response brief. And, he filed his 5/23/97 response before plaintiffs obtained the Cobb, Stackhouse and Miller depositions/affidavits implicating King in the assorted fraud and unethical conduct described above. One would think that King would be inclined to use his 10/6/97 response brief to confront that testimony, or at least insist that such testimony was untrue, and thus disputed. Alas, he did not. By failing to respond to, much less make any effort to rebut, the “post-Fifth Amendment” testimony against him, King therefore indicates no opposition to, and thus admits, the otherwise supported factual assertions set forth above. See Local Rule 7.5. The issue, then, is whether plaintiffs are entitled to have King’s Answer stricken. Since King’s due process and jury-trial rights are implicated here, pause must be taken to examine plaintiffs’ motion under the proper evidentiary and discretion-governing standards — a point largely ignored by the parties’ briefs. (2) Governing Standards “In addition to the power to sanction under Rule 37, this [C]ourt has the inherent power to protect the integrity of the judicial system, and prevent abuses of the Judicial process. Shepherd v. American Broadcasting Companies, 62 F.3d 1469, 1474 (D.C.Cir.1995).” Webb v. Government for D.C., 175 F.R.D. 128, 143 (D.D.C.1997). Generally, “ ‘a district court may use its inherent power to enter a default judgment only if it finds, first, by clear and convincing evidence — a preponderance is not sufficient — that the abusive behavior occurred; and second, that a lesser sanction would not sufficiently punish and deter the abusive conduct while allowing a full and fair trial on the merits.’ ” Richardson v. Union Oil Co. of California, 167 F.R.D. 1, 4 (D.D.C.1996), modified in part, 170 F.R.D. 333, 334-35 (D.D.C.1996) (quoting Shepherd 62 F.3d at 1472-73). The case law reveals a variety of fact and circumstance-sensitive contexts in which the “ultimate” sanction has been employed. A court may impose the default sanction, for example, “where the guilty party has engaged in such wholesale destruction of primary evidence regarding a number of issues that the district court cannot fashion an effective issue-related sanction____” Shepherd, 62 F.3d at 1479. In Shearson Loeb Rhoades, Inc. v. Quinard, 751 F.2d 1102, 1103 (9th Cir.1985), the court affirmed a default judgment entered against the defendant for’“willful and deliberate disobedience of a discovery order, willful concealment of evidence, and attempted fabrication of false evidence.” While many default cases feature evidence destruction, alteration, or fabrication, see McGuire v. Acufex Microsurgical, Inc., 175 F.R.D. 149, 154-57 (D.Mass.1997); Webb, 175 F.R.D. at 147-49, such misconduct often is encapsulated by perjury. See TeleVideo Systems Inc. v. Ueidenthal, 826 F.2d 915, 917-18 (9th Cir.1987) (district court did not abuse its discretion in striking defendant’s Answer and entering default judgment against him on the basis of his perjury during depositions arid his filing of false pleadings, even though he recanted his perjury prior to trial, where he made it clear that his recantation was orchestrated to reap a tactical advantage); cf. Boron v. West Texas Exports, Inc., 680 F.Supp. 1532, 1536-37 (S.D.Fla.1988) (sanction of deeiding personal jurisdiction issue against defendant was appropriate sanction for filin