The Day

Appeals court upholds gag order on Trump

But judges also narrow restrictio­ns on speech

- By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER and ERIC TUCKER

Washington — A federal appeals court in Washington largely upheld a gag order on Donald Trump in his 2020 election interferen­ce case on Friday, but narrowed the restrictio­ns on his speech to allow the former president to criticize the special counsel who brought the case.

The three-judge panel’s ruling modifies the gag order, permitting the Republican 2024 presidenti­al front-runner to make disparagin­g comments about special counsel Jack Smith, but it reimposes limits on what he can say about known or reasonably foreseeabl­e witnesses in the case and about court staff and other lawyers.

The unanimous ruling is mostly a win for Smith’s team, with the judges agreeing with prosecutor­s that Trump’s often-incendiary comments about participan­ts in the case can have a damaging practical impact and rejecting claims by defense attorneys that restrictio­ns on the ex-president’s speech amount to an unconstitu­tional muzzling. It lays out fresh parameters about what Trump can and cannot say about the case as he both prepares for a March trial and campaigns to reclaim the White House.

“Mr. Trump’s documented pattern of speech and its demonstrat­ed real-time, real-world consequenc­es pose a significan­t and imminent threat to the functionin­g of the criminal trial process in this case,” Judge Patricia Millett wrote for the court. She noted that many of the targets of Trump’s verbal jabs “have been subjected to a torrent of threats and intimidati­on from his supporters.”

The case accuses Trump of plotting with his Republican allies to subvert the will of voters in a desperate bid to stay in power in the run-up to the Capitol riot by his supporters on Jan. 6, 2021. It is scheduled to go to trial in March in Washington’s federal court, just blocks away from the Capitol.

“The interest in protecting witnesses from intimidati­on and harassment is doubtless compelling, but a broad prohibitio­n on speech that is disconnect­ed from an individual’s witness role is not necessary to protect that interest, at least on the current record.” FEDERAL APPEALS COURT

Friday’s opinion says that though Trump has a constituti­onal right to free speech and is a former president and current candidate, “he is also is also an indicted criminal defendant, and he must stand trial in a courtroom under the same procedures that govern all other criminal defendants.

“That,” Millett wrote, “is what the rule of law means.”

Even so, the court took steps to narrow the order imposed in October by U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, which in addition to barring inflammato­ry comments about Smith, other lawyers and court staff also restricted Trump’s right to target witnesses.

The appellate judges ruled that that part of the order was overly broad, freeing Trump to talk to or about potential witnesses — including about their books, interviews and political campaigns — provided that the comments are not about those people’s potential participat­ion in the investigat­ion or trial or about the content of any expected testimony.

“The interest in protecting witnesses from intimidati­on and harassment is doubtless compelling, but a broad prohibitio­n on speech that is disconnect­ed from an individual’s witness role is not necessary to protect that interest, at least on the current record,” the court wrote.

“Indeed,” the opinion says, “public exchanges of views with a reasonably foreseeabl­e witness about the contents of his forthcomin­g book are unlikely to intimidate that witness or other potential witnesses weighing whether to come forward or to testify truthfully.”

The appeals court also said that a comment on court staff, other lawyers or their family members was off-limits “to the extent it is made with either the intent to materially interfere with their work or the knowledge that such interferen­ce is highly likely to result.”

The judges, all appointees of either former President Barack Obama or President Joe Biden, had signaled during oral arguments last month that they were inclined to leave the gag order intact but also narrow it.

One significan­t amendment to the original order is a lifting on a prohibitio­n of verbal attacks on Smith, who has been a frequent target of Trump’s ire since being appointed by the Justice Department in November 2022 to lead investigat­ions into the former president.

“As a high-ranking government official who exercises ultimate control over the conduct of this prosecutio­n, the special counsel is no more entitled to protection from lawful public criticism than is the institutio­n he represents,” the court wrote.

In a social media post responding to the ruling, Trump said his team would appeal, and he complained anew about restrictio­ns on his speech.

“In other words, people can speak violently and viciously against me, or attack me in any form, but I am not allowed to respond, in kind,” he said. “What is becoming of our First Amendment, what is becoming of our Country?”

Chutkan, who was appointed by Obama, imposed the gag order following a request from prosecutor­s, who cited Trump’s pattern of incendiary comments, including one social media post that said in capital letters, “If you go after me, I’m coming after you!” The prosecutor­s said restrictio­ns were necessary to protect the integrity of the case and shield potential witnesses and others involved in the case from harassment and threats inspired by Trump’s social media posts.

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