OPINION OF THE COURT
William Oscar Harris appeals from the District Court’s denial of his motion to vacate an order of civil contempt that has been in effect for over five years. The order of contempt has its roots in an underlying criminal proceeding in which Harris was convicted of conspiracy and fraud and sentenced to 188 months’ imprisonment. The clock on that 188-months, however, has yet to begin ticking: for the past five years, Harris has been incarcerated on the order of contempt that resulted from his refusal to comply with an order entered in the underlying proceeding. Because the Court structured the order of contempt so that it tolled the commencement of Harris’s criminal sentence, only if and when the contempt is lifted will he begin serving that sentence. We will affirm.
I.
Harris considers himself a member of the so-called Al-Moroccan Empire, a group that believes the Uniform Commercial Code can be deployed to gain access to secret “straw man” bank accounts held by the United States Department of the Treasury; indeed, Harris considers himself to be a “Moorish sovereign being.”1 These claimed beliefs, and actions taken in reliance upon them by Harris and his cohorts, have come at a price: on May 6, 2003, he and various of those cohorts were indicted on a panoply of conspiracy and fraud counts arising from the production and distribution of fraudulent financial documents.
The events which ultimately led to this appeal began following the indictment. Harris and his co-conspirators sent out bogus financial documents that purported to create liens and judgments against the judges and prosecutors involved in the underlying prosecution. In response, the government moved for, and the District Court granted, a temporary restraining order (and eventually a permanent injunction) that prohibited Harris and his co-conspirators from continuing those activities.
Unfortunately, the restraining order and injunction did not have the desired effect, and the harassing activities continued unabated. As a result, the District Court held a show-cause hearing on April 13, 2004. Following this hearing, the Court held Harris and his co-conspirators in contempt, and ordered that they be incarcerated until such time as they agreed, in *514writing, to stop sending bogus liens and judgments. Granting a five-day grace period to allow for one last opportunity to comply, the Court ordered that Harris’s contempt begin on April 27, 2004.2 The Court later dropped the writing requirement, stating that it would lift the contempt if Harris simply “affirmatively ceased sending out new documents.” (App.l63a.)
Trial in the underlying criminal proceeding began on June 7, 2004. On July 2, 2004, Harris was convicted on all counts of the indictment, and was subsequently sentenced to 188 months’ imprisonment with that sentence to follow his confinement for civil contempt. He appealed, and we affirmed the judgment of sentence.
Harris has continued to send out bogus documents and, accordingly, has remained incarcerated for contempt for the entirety of the past five years. In November 2007, he filed a pro se motion that recycled his oft-rejected arguments about the jurisdiction of the federal courts, see supra note 1, a motion the District Court construed as one to terminate Harris’s sentence for civil contempt — and, as we characterize it for purposes of this Opinion, a motion to vacate the order of civil contempt. The Court gave careful consideration to each of Harris’s arguments, and on February 20, 2008 denied the motion. We cannot overemphasize the fact, and fact it be, that throughout the proceedings before the District Court, the Court scrupulously avoided basing its finding of contempt on any conduct directed by Harris against it and at all times displayed extraordinary patience.
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § § 401 and 3231. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the Court’s legal conelusions de novo, and will reverse “only where the decision is based on an error of law or a finding of fact that is clearly erroneous.” Marshak v. Treadwell, — F.3d -, 2009 WL 1886153 (3d Cir.2009).
II.
It has long been recognized that courts possess the inherent authority to hold persons in contempt. See United States v. Hudson, 7 Cranch 32, 34, 3 L.Ed. 259 (1812) (“To fine for contempt-imprison for contumacy — inforce the observance of order ... are powers which cannot be dispensed with in a Court, because they are necessary to the exercise of all others.”); see also Int’l Union, United Mine Workers of Am. v. Bagwell, 512 U.S. 821, 831, 114 S.Ct. 2552, 129 L.Ed.2d 642 (1994). There are two types of contempt, civil and criminal, and it is not always easy to distinguish between them: as the Supreme Court has observed, the distinction is “somewhat elusive.” Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 830, 114 S.Ct. 2552.
Civil contempt orders are intended to be coercive or compensatory in nature, and do not require, inter alia, a jury trial. Rather, civil contempt is imposed by the judge upon a finding that one has failed to comply with a valid court order. See Shillitani v. United States, 384 U.S. 364, 370-71, 86 S.Ct. 1531, 16 L.Ed.2d 622 (1966) (“The conditional nature of the imprisonment — based entirely upon the eontemnor’s continued defiance — justifies holding civil contempt proceedings absent the safeguards of indictment and jury, provided that the usual due process requirements are met.”) (internal citations and quotations omitted); Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 827, 114 S.Ct. 2552 (“[C]ivil contempt sanctions, or those penalties designed to compel future compliance with a court order, are *515considered to be coercive and avoidable through obedience, and thus may be imposed in an ordinary civil proceeding upon notice and an opportunity to be heard. Neither a jury trial nor proof beyond a reasonable doubt is required.”).
With civil contempt, the contemnor will be released subject to compliance with some condition. He is thus understood, in a by-now familiar observation, to “carr[y] the keys of his prison in his own pocket.” Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 828, 114 S.Ct. 2552 (internal citations and quotations omitted). At the same time, the civil contempt power is regarded as “uniquely ... liable to abuse” because such “proceedings leave the offended judge solely responsible for identifying, prosecuting, adjudicating, and sanctioning the contumacious conduct.” Id. at 831,114 S.Ct. 2552 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
Criminal contempt, on the other hand, is punitive in nature — it punishes for some past contumacious act. A person subject to criminal contempt is entitled to greater procedural protections than a person subject to civil contempt: most importantly, the purported contemnor has a right to trial by jury. See, e.g., Bloom v. Illinois, 391 U.S. 194, 88 S.Ct. 1477, 20 L.Ed.2d 522 (1968).
III.
Harris claims that his order of contempt is de facto an order of criminal contempt because it is, or has become over the passage of time, punitive in nature. He thus argues that for two reasons the order must be lifted because criminal contempt requires a trial by jury and other procedural protections that have not been afforded to him.
Harris contends, first, that the District Court could not continue to hold him in contempt after the termination of the underlying proceeding. He also contends that regardless of the merits of the order of contempt and his admitted ability to comply with that order, due process imposes a freestanding and discernible temporal limitation on the Court’s contempt authority. We disagree with both contentions, and address them in order.
A.
It is Harris’s contention that a district court cannot continue to hold a person in contempt once the underlying proceeding that gave rise to the contempt has terminated. Here, it is undisputed that the underlying proceeding is final and complete: Harris has been convicted and sentenced, and his appeal was unsuccessful. Thus, he posits, the Court exceeded its authority in continuing the contempt.
The precise nature and contours of Harris’s argument are a bit muddled. Strictly speaking, he does not make a jurisdictional argument,3 although what he argues does relate to a court’s power: in essence, the argument goes, a court’s power over the parties before it necessarily terminates at the conclusion of the proceeding. In support of his position, he plucks a quote from the Fifth Circuit: “[i]f the civil contempt proceeding is coercive in nature, the gen*516eral rule is that it is mooted when the proceeding out of which it arises is terminated.” Petroleos Mexicanos v. Crawford Enters., Inc., 826 F.2d 392, 400 (5th Cir.1987).
We do not disagree with this unremarkable proposition, as most orders of civil contempt are inextricably intertwined with the underlying proceeding — civil or criminal — and thus rendered moot by that proceeding’s end. To take a classic scenario, a recalcitrant witness is haled before a grand jury, and refuses to testify despite being granted immunity. If such a “witness” persists in his refusal to testify, a court will often hold him in contempt until such time as he complies. Such a contempt, it is universally acknowledged, must end when the underlying proceeding is over: when the grand jury’s term expires, the recalcitrant witness can no longer comply with the order and purge the contempt, so coercion has become a factual impossibility.
But other contempt orders are not mooted by the termination of the underlying proceeding. Indeed,- the very case cited by Harris, Petroleos Mexicanos, illustrates that orders of civil contempt can outlive the underlying proceeding: the Fifth Circuit found that the termination of the underlying proceeding did not require that the contempt be lifted.4 See id. at 400.
Similarly, the termination of the underlying proceeding here has not rendered the order of contempt moot. Harris can, and he surely should, stop his harassment of the prosecutors and judges involved in his case. Accordingly, the purpose and concomitant coercive intent of the order of contempt remain alive and well. Because the District Court’s jurisdiction cannot seriously be challenged, and because we do not take issue with the Court’s continued exercise of that jurisdiction, the Court did not abuse its discretion, under the circumstances before us, in refusing to vacate the order of contempt on this ground.
B.
Stripped to its essence, Harris’s second contention is that due process places a temporal limitation on the amount of time for which a civil contemnor can be confined, regardless of the validity of the underlying order on the merits and the contemnor’s ability to comply with that order. Harris asserts that a coercive civil contempt necessarily becomes punitive after the passage of some period of time, and points to the eighteen-month period of confinement established by Congress for recalcitrant witnesses as an appropriate presumptive benchmark. See 28 U.S.C. § 1826. Because he has been incarcerated for more than five years, Harris contends that the District Court erred in denying his motion.
We reject that contention. As an initial matter, it is critical to emphasize two undisputed facts: first, the underlying order, on the merits, is unquestionably valid and eminently appropriate; second, as Harris himself admits, he is able to comply with the order at any time.5 There is simply no *517better example of a situation where a contemnor “ ‘ “carries the keys of his prison in his own pocket.” ’ ” Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 828, 114 S.Ct. 2552 (quoting Gompers v. Buck’s Stove & Range Co., 221 U.S. 418, 442, 31 S.Ct. 492, 55 L.Ed. 797 (1911) (quoting In re Nevitt, 117 F. 448, 461 (8th Cir.1902))).
Harris argues, however, that due process requires that a district court lift a contempt order if there is no substantial likelihood that the contemnor will comply with the order.6 In support of his argument, he points to our thirty-year old decision in In re Grand Jury Investigation (Braun), 600 F.2d 420 (3d Cir.1979) (hereinafter “Braun”). In Braun, a recalcitrant witness was given immunity from prosecution but refused to testify before the grand jury. After being held in contempt, the contemnor challenged his continued confinement, arguing that due process required that he be released before the expiration of the eighteen-month maximum period of confinement provided for in the Recalcitrant Witness Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1826. We rejected that contention, and affirmed the district court’s refusal to lift the contempt.
In so doing, we observed that even when “the witness can still purge himself of contempt by testifying, he may no longer be held once it becomes evident that the duress will not succeed in breaking his silence.” Braun, 600 F.2d at 424. At the same time, we noted that “[ojbviously, the civil contempt power would be completely eviscerated were a defiant witness able to secure his release merely by boldly asserting that he will never comply with the court’s order.” Id. at 425. We then observed that other jurisdictions had placed on the contemnor the “burden of establishing that there is no ‘substantial likelihood’ that continued confinement would accomplish its coercive purpose.” Id.
For several reasons, we do not believe that Braun requires us to disturb the District Court’s decision. For one thing, Braun is distinguishable in that it is a recalcitrant witness case: the ultimate holding in Braun arose squarely from the Recalcitrant Witness Statute. See id. (noting that the “often perplexing” due process issue in Braun “is ameliorated in the present case” by the Recalcitrant Witness Statute). That statute is wholly inapplicable here for one obvious reason: Harris is not, and was not, a recalcitrant witness.
Moreover, any language in Braun indicating our approval of the “no substantial likelihood” test has been seriously undermined in the past thirty years even were that language not dicta, which it is. In Bagwell, for example, the Supreme Court clearly indicated that there is no temporal limitation on the amount of time that a contemnor can be confined for civil contempt when it is undisputed that the contemnor has the ability to comply with the underlying order:
The paradigmatic coercive, civil contempt sanction ... involves confining a contemnor indefinitely until he complies with an affirmative command such as an order to pay alimony, or to surrender property ordered to be turned over to a receiver, or to make a conveyance.
512 U.S. at 828, 114 S.Ct. 2552 (internal citations and quotations omitted) (emphasis added). Under such circumstances, the Supreme Court emphasized, “the contem*518nor is able to purge the contempt and obtain his release ... and thus carries the keys of his prison in his own pocket.” Id. (internal citations and quotations omitted).
In Chadwick v. Janecka, 312 F.3d 597 (3d Cir.2002), we had occasion to discuss the implications of Bagwell. The petitioner in that habeas action, Mr. Chadwick, had been involved in a divorce in state court, and was found to have improperly transferred marital assets to third parties for the purpose of shielding them from the divorce court’s jurisdiction (and, ultimately, his ex-wife’s possession). In response, the state court held petitioner in contempt, ordering him incarcerated until he turned over the assets. Significant litigation concerning his confinement followed, and, after nearly seven years of confinement, his case reached us.
Petitioner did not argue that he was incapable of complying with the state court’s order to turn over the assets, but rather that due process limited the amount of time for which the court could confine him for civil contempt.7 The case was before us on habeas review, and we rejected petitioner’s claim, concluding that the state court’s determination was not “contrary to ... clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.”8 Id. at 606-07.
In the course of reaching this holding, then-judge now Justice Alito squarely addressed Bagwell and its “indefinitely until he complies” language:
[Petitioner], however, urges us not to take Bagwell at face value. He contends that the phrase ‘indefinitely until he complies’ in Bagwell does not mean ‘permanently and without other recourse.’ Instead, he maintains that ‘[t]he word ‘indefinitely’ is apparently used in its most precise sense, to mean ‘with no predetermined ending date.’ We have no quarrel with this definition, but this understanding of the term ‘indefinitely’ does not explain away the critical statement in Bagwell that a civil eontemnor may be confined ‘indefinitely until he complies.’
The meaning of the statement in Bag-well that a eontemnor may be held ‘indefinitely until he complies’ is perfectly clear. The phrase ‘until he complies’ sets the point in time when confinement must cease. The term ‘indefinitely’ describes the length of confinement up to that point, namely, a period ‘having no exact limits,’ because the end point (the time of compliance) cannot be foretold. Mr. Chadwick’s contrary interpretation — that ‘indefinitely until he complies’ means ‘indefinitely until he complies or it becomes apparent that he is never going to comply’ — is insupportable.
Id. at 608 (internal citations and quotations omitted) (emphasis in Bagwell).
We fully agree with this analysis of Bagwell, and thus conclude that, under the circumstances before us, the order of contempt was not only validly issued but val*519idly continued.9 Any incidental punitive consequences arising from the contempt can be squarely laid at Harris’s own feet. We will not, as the District Court said so well, “dissolve a lawful order ... merely because the contemnor persists in violating it.” (App.l65a.) Cf. Shillitani 384 U.S. at 370, 86 S.Ct. 1531 (“While any imprisonment, of course, has punitive and deterrent effects, it must be viewed as remedial if the court conditions release upon the contemnor’s willingness to testify.”) (emphasis added). The Constitution does not require such a perverse result.
Additionally, the order of contempt is not punitive simply because there are repeated and discrete violations of the underlying order. Indeed, “[m]ost contempt sanctions ... to some extent punish a pri- or offense as well as coerce an offender’s future obedience.” Bagwell, 512 U.S. at 828, 114 S.Ct. 2552. Because a court would not be justified in holding a person in contempt until he demonstrated a refusal to comply with an order, prior instances of disobedience will almost always accompany an order of contempt. Thus, the fact of prior instances does not mean that the order of contempt punishes; to the contrary, a valid order of civil contempt such as that before us reacts to prior instances of disobedience by seeking to compel and coerce future obedience. See, e.g., id. at 835, 114 S.Ct. 2552 (“But the distinction between coercion of affirmative acts and punishment of prohibited conduct is difficult to apply when conduct that can recur is involved, or when an injunction contains both mandatory and prohibitory provisions.”).
We cannot conclude that an order such as the one at issue here could ever lose all of its coercive effect. After all, the order requires Harris to simply stop what he is doing, with the District Court indicating that a period of inaction is all that is needed for it to lift the contempt. Considering the benefit to be gained by Harris in complying with the Court’s order — to wit, the lifting of the contempt and the commencement of the underlying sentence— we do not believe that the circumstances of this case present any constitutional problem.10
*520In the final analysis, we simply cannot countenance a situation where a contemnor’s insistence on continuing his contumacious conduct inures to his benefit, and we surely do not believe that the Constitution requires such a result. To the contrary, a valid order of civil contempt does not become punitive simply because the contemnor persists in punishing himself. We, therefore, hold that an order of civil contempt will only become punitive if a contemnor is unable to comply with the order, or if the circumstances indicate that a court is maintaining the contempt for an impermissible punitive purpose.
Harris has made the choice to do what he is doing, a choice which thumbs its nose at the District Court’s authority. The order of contempt seeks to coerce him into making a different choice — which is precisely the justification for and purpose of civil contempt. Due process is not offended by that order.11 While we can conceive of circumstances where indefinite detention pursuant to a court’s civil contempt authority may be so attenuated from its original, valid purpose as to constitute a due process violation, we see no such violation here.12 Harris can comply with the order in question at any time and the order will be lifted.
IY.
We will affirm the February 20, 2008 order of the District Court.