A federal appeals court on Friday upheld a narrowed version of the gag order against Donald Trump in his federal election interference case, leaving Trump free to speak about special counsel Jack Smith.
Specifically, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirmed U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan’s order to the extent it prohibits all parties and their counsel from making or directing others to make public statements about known or potential witnesses concerning their participation in the case.
The three-judge circuit panel wrote:
The Order is also affirmed to the extent it prohibits all parties and their counsel from making or directing others to make public statements about—(1) counsel in the case other than the Special Counsel, (2) members of the court’s staff and counsel’s staffs, or (3) the family members of any counsel or staff member—if those statements are made with the intent to materially interfere with, or to cause others to materially interfere with, counsel’s or staff’s work in this criminal case, or with the knowledge that such interference is highly likely to result.
The panel vacated the order “to the extent it covers speech beyond those specified categories.”
As a reminder, here’s what Chutkan’s original gag order said:
All interested parties in this matter, including the parties and their counsel, are prohibited from making any public statements, or directing others to make any public statements, that target (1) the Special Counsel prosecuting this case or his staff; (2) defense counsel or their staff; (3) any of this court’s staff or other supporting personnel; or (4) any reasonably foreseeable witness or the substance of their testimony.
The panel on Friday wrote that Chutkan could restrain aspects of Trump’s speech that present a “significant and imminent risk to the fair and orderly administration of justice,” but that her original order wasn’t “narrowly tailored,” so the appeals court modified its scope “to bring it within constitutional bounds.”
Specifically, the circuit judges said Chutkan’s ban on speech that “targets” witnesses and trial personnel “reaches too far.” Rather than prohibiting speech that “targets” known or reasonably foreseeable witnesses, the panel said the order “must focus more directly and narrowly on comments that speak to or are about those persons’ potential participation in the investigation or in this criminal proceeding.”
Notably, the panel left room for Chutkan to impose additional restrictions in the future.
The appeals court said Chutkan’s order went too far in prohibiting any public statements that are directed to or aimed at prosecutors or court staff. For similar reasons, the panel said Chutkan shouldn’t have restricted speech about Smith himself, reasoning that her order already allows statements about the Justice Department and that, as a high-ranking official overseeing the prosecution, Smith is “no more entitled to protection from lawful public criticism than is the institution he represents.”








