UPDATE (Oct. 16, 12:35 p.m. ET): U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan partially granted Jack Smith’s motion for a gag order in Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case. The order prohibits Trump from making statements about potential witnesses, or attacking prosecutors from Smith’s office, their families or any courthouse staff.
On Monday, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, presiding over the prosecution alleging former President Donald Trump interfered in the 2020 presidential election, will conduct a hearing to determine whether she should order limitations on Trump’s speech to prevent him from endangering witnesses, prosecutors and judges and to stop him from tainting future jury pools. On one hand, this hearing is extraordinary: It could result in a so-called gag order on a political party’s likely presidential nominee. On the other hand, this kind of hearing is regularly conducted in courts throughout the U.S. when defendants on pretrial release engage in conduct detrimental to the fair and orderly administration of justice.
Last month, special counsel Jack Smith filed a motion seeking “a narrowly tailored order” restricting Trump’s “prejudicial extrajudicial statements.” Smith urged the court to limit Trump’s speech to stop his “inflammatory and misleading statements,” which “would cause others to harass and harm perceived critics or adversaries,” and to block his attempt to “undermine confidence in the justice system and prejudice the jury pool.”
Judges have significant discretion to place limitations on defendants who are on release pending trials — let alone four trials, like Trump.
In a reply that reads more like an extended social media post or a campaign ad than a well-reasoned legal brief, Trump’s lawyers argued that prosecutors want to “muzzle” him and “unlawfully silence” him in violation of his First Amendment free speech rights.
Smith then filed his own reply, pointing out that Trump was ratcheting up the dangerous rhetoric against witnesses. Specifically, prosecutors reproduced in their court filing a Sept. 22 Truth Social post in which Trump “falsely claimed” that one of the witnesses against him — the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley — “had committed treason and suggested that he should be executed.”
Judges have significant discretion to place limitations on defendants who are on release pending trials — let alone four trials, like Trump.
On pretrial release, a person’s rights are significantly diminished. For example, a judge can order the surrender of a defendant’s passport, significant travel restrictions, curfews, periodic drug testing, GPS monitoring or even home detention until trial. At its most restrictive, a judge can order a defendant detained — jailed — pending trial if the judge concludes, by clear and convincing evidence, that the defendant is either a flight risk or a danger to the community. None of these restrictions would be constitutionally permissible if they were imposed on a person who was not on pretrial release.
Regarding court-imposed limitations on a defendant’s speech, in 1991 the Supreme Court made it clear that courts can restrict extrajudicial statements that pose a “substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing” a judicial proceeding without running afoul of the First Amendment’s free speech guarantees. That precedent, laid out in Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada, applies to every person in the U.S. criminal justice system who is a defendant in a criminal case, including a former president and current presidential candidate.








