Sen. Rand Paul awarded more than $580,000 as result of attack by neighbor Rand Paul was attacked by his neighbor in 2017.

We now know punching Sen. Rand Paul will cost you a half million dollars.

A jury ruled on Wednesday that Paul's neighbor, who got into a scuffle with the senator in November 2017, will be required to pay exactly $582,834.82 for his transgression. Paul filed the civil suit against his neighbor, Rene Boucher, in June 2018.

"We're very pleased with the result and we think justice was served," Tom Kerrick, Paul's lawyer, said after the verdict.

Paul, R-Ky., later tweeted about the ruling, saying, "This lawsuit wasn't about me. It was about all of us and what we find acceptable as a society. We need to send a clear message that violence is not the answer - anytime, anywhere."

Officially, Paul was awarded $7,834.82 for medical costs, $200,000 for pain and suffering and $375,000 in punitive damages.

Boucher pleaded guilty last year to assaulting the senator in front of his house in the criminal case. A judge sentenced him to 30 days in jail despite a sentencing guideline of 21 to 27 months. Prosecutors appealed the ruling in December, looking for a harsher sentence.

In the civil complaint, Paul sought an unspecified amount of compensatory and punitive damages from Boucher for "physical pain and mental suffering" resulting from Boucher’s attack of Paul. He said in testimony that he feared for his life and wasn't sure he'd ever get up from the ground after the attack.

Paul sustained multiple rib fractures and has dealt with recurring pneumonia following the incident. He also dealt with a hernia last year attributed to the attack.

According to testimony from Boucher's lawyer during the trial, Boucher raked a pile of leaves along the dividing line between he and his neighbor's lawn the day before the attack. Boucher decided to burn the pile to get rid of it, but accidentally burned himself. When he saw Paul raking another pile of leaves the next day, he confronted Paul, tackled him to the ground and fought with him.

"Certainly not what we were expecting," said Matt Baker, Boucher's attorney. "I'm certain that he's disappointed."

Baker said his client plans to appeal the ruling.

Paul, 56, was elected to the Senate from Kentucky in 2010. He is the son of former Texas Congressman Ron Paul and made a brief run for president in 2016.