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demands, the judge could determine that all the income the company made from 2005 to present came from selling counterfeit Coach bags.But, in a status update to the court after that order, Coach attorneys wrote that Gata Corp. had "at long last produced many of the documents requested."The judge said that meant Gata Corp. had "complied substantially" with her order, and she wouldn't impose the findings about how they earned their income.But, some documents had still not been turned over, McCafferty noted. Others "raised new questions about defendants' finances" that deserved immediate detention.The judge ordered Gata Corp to turn over invoices for 2009, documents backing up a $100,000 payment Gata Corp. has said was for rent, and documents about mortgages, IRS audits and loans cited in tax returns.Those documents were due by May 19. If they weren't available, Gata Corp.'s attorneys were told to explain why in writing."Failure to comply with the terms of this order will result in sanctions," McCafferty said.But May 19 came and went "without any documents being produced, and without any efforts, at all, to comply with the provisions of the court's order," according to filings by Coach attorney Jeffrey Techentin."Gata has ignored the court's latest order, just as it did earlier orders," he wrote.Gata Corp. also had not paid Coach's legal fees in connection with the contempt motion, as ordered by the court, he wrote."Sanctions are necessary," Techentin wrote.He asked the court to rule Gata Corp. in contempt again. He also asked the judge again to determine Gata Corp. had made all its profit since