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Gag order
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A gag order (also known as a gagging order or suppression order) is an order, typically a legal order by a court or government, restricting information or comment from being made public or passed on to any unauthorized third party. The phrase may sometimes be used of a private order by an employer or other institution.
Uses of gag orders include keeping trade secrets of a company, protecting the integrity of ongoing police or military operations, and protecting the privacy of victims or minors. Conversely, as their downside, they may be abused as a useful tool for those of financial means to intimidate witnesses and prevent release of information, using the legal system rather than other methods of intimidation. Strategic lawsuit against public participation (SLAPP) orders may potentially be abused in this way.[1][2]
Gag orders are sometimes used in an attempt to assure a fair trial by preventing prejudicial pre-trial publicity, although their use for this purpose is controversial since they are a potentially unconstitutional prior restraint that can lead to the press's using less reliable sources such as off-the-record statements and second- or third-hand accounts.[3]
In a similar manner, a "gag law" may limit freedom of the press, by instituting censorship or restricting access to information.[4]
Examples
[edit]Australia
[edit]In the summer of 2014, WikiLeaks revealed the existence of an Australia-wide gagging order, issued 19 June by the Supreme Court of Victoria, to block reporting of bribery allegations involving several international political leaders in the region.[5]
In December 2018, International news sources have reported that Cardinal George Pell's conviction on child-molestation charges is subject to a gag order issued by Victoria, Australia court Judge Peter Kidd, suppressing coverage of the conviction by Australian media companies.[6][7][8][9] In early February 2019, Victoria's DPP, Kerri Judd QC, wrote to around 50 Australian news publishers, editors, broadcasters, reporters and subeditors, accusing them of breaking the gag order. Kidd told a closed court that some of the breaches were serious and editors faced jail.[10]
Brazil
[edit]In 2019, the Brazilian Ministry of Environment imposed a gag order on environmental enforcement agency Ibama, ordering it not to respond to press inquiries and to instead redirect them to the ministry's communications office. Ibama's head of communications was forced to resign after weeks of defying the ministry's directive to reroute press queries.[11]
India
[edit]After the 2008 Mumbai attacks in which live streaming of the event was broadcast, the Indian government proposed a draft law that would gag media outlets broadcasting live pictures during a terrorist event or war, to ensure the safety of any hostages and to protect security operations from hindrance. This has been opposed by Indian media who argue that they have adopted 'self-regulation' during such events and refrain from doing so anyway. It is uncertain if the draft law will be passed.[12]
Israel
[edit]In late 2009, Israel issued a gag order against the Israeli media reporting on facts surrounding the Anat Kamm–Uri Blau affair. The gag order was ultimately subject to widespread criticism and publicity as the details of the case were reported overseas. The scandal centered around leaked documents from the Israeli Defense Force which suggested the military had engaged in extrajudicial killings.[13]
A gag order concerning the Prisoner X affair prevented Israeli coverage of the topic for more than two years. After numerous foreign media outlets revealed the prisoner's identity and other key facts in February 2013, a court partially lifted the gag order, allowing Israeli media to quote foreign press reports but offer no original reporting.[14]
On 13 November 2013 a gag order concerning a famous Israeli singer suspected of sex with girls below the age of consent was issued. While the traditional media did not advertise the name of the singer, social media platforms users like Facebook published the singer name and incriminating photos. On 20 November Eyal Golan released a press statement announcing he was the suspected singer.[15]
In 2014, a blanket gag order regarding the detainment of Avera Mengitsu was put into place. It lasted 10 months, until July 9, 2015. Discussions took place in social media forums and some reports were published on foreign websites.[16] Some clues about the affair were leaked to different Arabic media outlets, from which the story made its way to international media and was published to Tikun Olam by blogger Richard Silverstein.[17] The gag order was lifted following a request from Haaretz.[16] The Associated Press speculated that a statement made by Khaled Mashal the previous day, in which he spoke of an Israeli request through a European intermediary for the release of "two soldiers and two bodies", may have "forced Israel's hand".[18]
In August 2017, an Israeli court issued a month-long gag order on a state witness deal regarding the ongoing criminal investigations of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.[citation needed]
Malaysia
[edit]There was speculation that a gag order may be imposed by the MCA on their press statements before they are released to the public to "ensure maximum effectiveness". Such releases would have to be approved by the president.[19] These claims in the media were later denied.[20]
Myanmar
[edit]In October 2021, the top attorney for Myanmar's deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi claimed that Burmese authorities had issued him a gag order barring him from discussing Aung San Suu Kyi's court proceedings in public because they believed such communications could spark unrest.[21]
New Zealand
[edit]In New Zealand, name suppression is the commonly used term for a court order preventing the publication of a name or details of a criminal case.[22] The rules for name suppression are laid out in the Criminal Procedure Act 2011.[23] Name suppression can be granted automatically for several reasons, including to protect the identities of victims of sex crimes or to protect the identity of children under the age of 17. Name suppression can also be granted at the discretion of the court. Defendants frequently receive name suppression in New Zealand.[24] Often this is due to the court determining that media coverage could cause undue hardship to a defendant, or could prejudice the defendant's right to a fair trial.[25] Name suppression orders can be (and frequently are) opposed, often by media outlets. Victims of crime can waive their automatic name suppression rights, in order to lift name suppression on the defendant, though this is uncommon.[26] In theory, a defendant being well-known is not in-and-of-itself grounds for name suppression, though in practice many well-known people are granted name suppression when charged with a crime.[27]
Breaching a name suppression order brings a penalty of up to 6 months in prison for individuals, or fines of up to NZ$100,000 for organisations.[25]
Some high-profile cases have seen breaches of name suppression orders in New Zealand. In 2010, right-wing blogger and vocal critic of name suppression rules Cameron Slater was convicted of breaching name suppression orders and fined NZ$8,000.[28] Later, Slater himself benefited from name suppression when charged with attempting to hack a competing political website.[29]
The defendant in the murder of Grace Millane was granted name suppression during trial, but media outlets covering the case in the United Kingdom published his name, as they were not subject to New Zealand law. This resulted in his name being commonly available online in New Zealand, including being emailed to Google News subscribers within New Zealand.[30] Auckland businessman Leo Molloy was convicted of breaching name suppression in the case when he posted the defendant's name on a web forum. He was fined NZ$15,000 and sentenced to 350 hours of community service.[31]
In August 2023 Te Pāti Māori co-leader Rawiri Waititi made a direct reference to a child abuse case involving former ACT party president Tim Jago in parliament.[32][33] Despite details of the case being suppressed from publication by the courts, Waititi's speech was protected by parliamentary privilege. He was later suspended from parliament for breaching standing orders.[34]
Name suppression orders can be quite broad. In 2025, former deputy New Zealand Police commissioner Jevon McSkimming was charged with possession of child sexual exploitation and bestiality material.[35] Prior to being charged, McSkimming was granted a "super-injunction", that prevented the media reporting the nature of the material that had been discovered on his work devices, and also prevented reporting about the existence of the injunction itself.[36] Before he was arrested, he was again granted a suppression order that prevented media reporting that he had been arrested, or the nature of the crimes he was accused of.[27] Suppression lapsed before trial, and his identity was revealed.[35]
Name suppression laws in New Zealand have been controversial since they were first introduced in the early 20th century,[24] and specific suppression orders are also sometimes highly controversial.[37] Critics point to the legislation being used to protect the identities of well-known figures when they are accused of crime,[38][39] and that suppressing details from publication conflicts with the principle of open justice.[24] The internet has introduced new challenges with the enforcement of name suppression orders.[39] The New Zealand Bar Association has defended name suppression laws as an important tool for balancing the principles of open justice against fair trial rights.[40]
In 2025, a law change was proposed that would allow the victims of sex crimes to have final say over whether a convicted perpetrator would receive permanent name suppression.[41]
Nigeria
[edit]In July 2021, the National Broadcasting Commission issued a gag order barring all journalists and broadcast stations in the country from reporting details of terrorists, kidnappers, and victims.[42] After unsuccessfully calling for the gag order's withdrawal, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) and the Centre for Journalism Innovation and Development (PTCIJ) filed a lawsuit against President Muhammadu Buhari and Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed, with National Broadcasting Commission also named as a defendant. The plaintiffs asked the court to “declare illegal the gag order" and to compel the defendants to withdraw the directive, arguing that it was "inconsistent and incompatible with sections 22 and 39 of the Nigerian Constitution, Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights and Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights".[43]
United Kingdom
[edit]A gag order, or anonymity order, is sometimes issued by courts in the United Kingdom to protect privacy, prevent harm to suspects, prisoners,[44] witnesses, victims, or to protect national security.[45] In the Allan Chappelow murder case, the trial was held mostly in camera and media were prevented from speculating on the case. The order was imposed after a "compelling case" made by prosecutors, despite overwhelming media opposition brought by a legal challenge to the ruling.[46][47][48] This criminal case has been thought to be the first in which a gagging order was imposed.[49]
In 2011 super-injunctions in English law, gagging orders that applied to themselves, were being referred to almost daily in the United Kingdom after a number of high-profile public figures, including celebrities and politicians, censored the British media from revealing information about their personal lives, such as affairs[50] and dealings with prostitutes.
Gag orders protecting the privacy of convicted child murderers such as Mary Bell, Jon Venables and David McGreavy, in order to protect them from revenge attacks, have also been controversial because of public concerns about the inability to avoid such persons and protect victims' families and other children from being harmed by them.[44][51]
The Netherlands
[edit]In The Netherlands, ethologist Gerrit van Putten was given two separate gag orders by the Minister of Agriculture to protect intensive farming. The first gag order was issued after Van Putten had published a report on tail biting in pigs in 1972, and had advocated that the pig's tail is a thermometer of animal welfare, which was discarded when the "temperature" became too high, i.e. the tails were docked rather than that housing conditions were improved. The second gag order was issued in 1989 by Minister Braks, who did not want to hear about the adverse effects of confined housing of pigs.[52][53][54]
In 2015, a Dutch court issued a gag order on writer Edwin Giltay, banning his non-fiction thriller The Cover-up General and prohibiting him to promote it. The suppression order denied Edwin Giltay to disclose the contents of the book, which delineates an espionage scandal within Dutch military intelligence that he witnessed first-hand, about obscuring evidence of war crimes in Srebrenica.[55][56][57] In 2016, the Court of Appeal in The Hague revoked the gag order and the book ban.[58]
United States
[edit]A national security letter (18 U.S.C. § 2709), an administrative subpoena used by the FBI, has an attached gag order which restricts the recipient from ever saying anything about being served with one.[59] The government has issued hundreds of thousands of such NSLs accompanied with gag orders. The gag orders have been upheld in court.[60]
Suspicious activity reports (31 U.S.C. § 5318(g)(2); the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 / Annunzio-Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act, Pub. L. 102–550, § 1517(b), 106 Stat. 4060) require that "If a financial institution or any director, officer, employee, or agent of any financial institution [...] reports a suspicious transaction to a government agency—neither the financial institution, director, officer, employee, or agent of such institution (whether or not any such person is still employed by the institution) [...] may notify any person involved in the transaction that the transaction has been reported; and no current or former officer or employee of or contractor for the Federal Government or of or for any State, local, tribal, or territorial government within the United States, who has any knowledge that such report was made may disclose to any person involved in the transaction that the transaction has been reported".[non-primary source needed]
18 U.S.C. § 2705(b) (the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 / Stored Communications Act) also provides for gag orders which direct the recipient of a 18 U.S.C. § 2703(d) order to refrain from disclosing the existence of the order or the investigation.[61][non-primary source needed]
18 U.S.C. § 3123(d)(2) (the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986) also provides for gag orders which direct the recipient of a pen register or trap and trace device order not to disclose the existence of the pen/trap or the investigation.[62]
In the United States, a court can order parties to a case not to comment on it but has no authority to stop unrelated reporters from reporting on a case. Thus, information concerning a case is often leaked to the media, and the media often chooses to publicly report this leaked information after receiving it. Most statutes which restrict what may be reported have generally been found unconstitutional and void. However, the gag provisions of the WIPO Copyright and Performances and Phonograms Treaties Implementation Act have been upheld.
The trials of Guantanamo Bay suspects have also been subjected to a gag order, which has hindered public scrutiny.[63] Likewise, as part of a plea bargain, John Walker Lindh consented to a gag order to not talk to the press or others. Also, Judge Howard Shore from San Diego put a gag order on activist Jeff Olson.[64]
Gag orders can be part of a settlement agreement between two parties. In the state of Pennsylvania in 2011, a lifetime gag order on the discussion of fracking was agreed to by a family as part of their agreement with the oil and gas drilling company Range Resources. An attorney for Range Resources claimed in court that the gag order covered not only the adults in the family, but also the children, then aged seven and ten years old, and that the company intended to enforce it.[65][nb 1]
Some U.S. states, the first of which was Florida, have enacted so-called "physician gag laws" limiting doctors' ability to ask about a patient's gun ownership.[4]
California
[edit]In 2017, California enacted the California Electronic Communications Privacy Act, adjusting California Penal Code 1546, including Section 1546.2 (b) (1), a provision which allows that in certain cases, a court can issue "an order delaying notification and prohibiting any party providing information from notifying any other party" that an electronic search warrant has been requested by a government entity.[67]
Puerto Rico
[edit]On 21 May 1948, a bill was introduced before the Puerto Rican Senate which would restrain the rights of the independence and Nationalist movements on the archipelago, which was a colony of the United States at the time. The Senate, controlled by the Partido Popular Democrático (PPD), approved the bill that day.[68] This bill, which resembled the anti-communist Smith Act passed in the United States in 1940, became known as the Ley de la Mordaza (Gag Law, technically "Law 53 of 1948") when the U.S.-appointed governor of Puerto Rico, Jesús T. Piñero, signed it into law on 10 June 1948.[69]
Under this new law it became a crime to print, publish, sell, or exhibit any material intended to paralyze or destroy the insular government; or to organize any society, group or assembly of people with a similar destructive intent. It made it illegal to sing a patriotic song, and reinforced the 1898 law that had made it illegal to display the Flag of Puerto Rico, with anyone found guilty of disobeying the law in any way being subject to a sentence of up to ten years imprisonment, a fine of up to US$10,000 (equivalent to $131,000 in 2024), or both. According to Leopoldo Figueroa, the lone non-PPD member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives, Law 53 was repressive and was in violation of the First Amendment of the US Constitution which guarantees Freedom of Speech. He pointed out that the law as such was a violation of the civil rights of the people of Puerto Rico.[70]
Venezuela
[edit]The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American Press Association (IAPA), as well as the Venezuelan opposition, have considered the Law on Social Responsibility on Radio and Television as a gag law that violates freedom of the press and the exercise of journalism in Venezuela.[71][72]
See also
[edit]- Ag-gag
- Compromise agreement
- DA-Notice
- Editorial independence
- Filibuster
- Franchise fraud
- Freedom of speech
- Gag rule
- Injunction
- Media blackout
- Media transparency
- Never say anything
- Non-disclosure agreement
- Prior restraint
- Publication ban
- Public Interest Immunity
- Rivercrabbing
- Super-injunction
- Temporary restraining order
- Whistleblower
Notes
[edit]- ^ After court records were unsealed and the settlement was reported in the press, the chief counsel for Range Resources denied that the gag order applied to the children. In a letter to the family's attorney, he wrote, "Range has never, at any time, had the intention of seeking to hold a minor child legally accountable for a breach of that provision of the settlement agreement."[66]
References
[edit]- ^ Caloyannides, Michael A. (2004). Privacy Protection and Computer Forensics, Second Edition. Computer Protection Series. Artech House. pp. 302–304. ISBN 978-1580538305.
- ^ Malloy, Michael P. (2011). "14: Supervision of Troubled and Failing Institutions". Banking Law & Regulation. Aspen Publishing. pp. 14–4. ISBN 978-1454801078.
- ^ Chemerinsky, Erwin. "Lawyers Have Free Speech Rights Too". Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Journal. 14.
- ^ a b Rathore, Mobeen (April 2014). "Physician "Gag Laws" and Gun Safety". Virtual Mentor. 16 (4): 284–8. doi:10.1001/virtualmentor.2014.16.04.pfor2-1404. PMID 24735578. Archived from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2015.
- ^ Booth, Robert (30 July 2014). "WikiLeaks reveals Australian gagging order over political bribery allegations". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 August 2014.
- ^ "A top cardinal's sex-abuse conviction is huge news in Australia. But the media can't report it there". The Washington Post. 12 December 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
- ^ "Cardinal George Pell Reportedly Convicted of Sex Abuse Amid Gag Order in Australia". NPR. 13 December 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
- ^ Cartwright, Lachlan (28 February 2019). "Vatican No. 3 Cardinal George Pell Convicted on Charges He Sexually Abused Choir Boys". The Daily Beast.
- ^ Olmstead, Molly (12 December 2018). "Report: Third-Highest Ranking Vatican Official Convicted on Sex Abuse Charges in Australia". Slate.
- ^ Meade, Amanda (26 February 2019). "Dozens of journalists accused of breaking Pell suppression order face possible jail terms". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- ^ "Brazil's right-wing government puts gag order on environment agency". Reuters. 13 March 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
- ^ Mitta, Manoj (7 January 2009). "Law readied to gag TV in crises". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 26 September 2012. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- ^ "Debate in Israel on Gag Order in Security Leak Case". The New York Times. 6 April 2010. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- ^ Ravid, Barak (14 February 2013). "Ben Zygier affair: Israel partially lifts gag order on case of dual citizen's prison suicide". Haaretz. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
- ^ Hartman, Ben (20 November 2013). "Eyal Golan revealed to be mystery singer suspected of sex with underage girls". The Jerusalem Post. Jerusalem. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
- ^ a b "Two Israelis missing after disappearing into Gaza, one being held by Hamas". Haaretz. 9 July 2015.
- ^ "Two Israelis are held in Gaza". Maariv. 9 July 2015.
- ^ "Amid Detente With Hamas, Israel Says 2 Citizens Held in Gaza". The New York Times. Associated Press. 9 July 2015. Archived from the original on 12 July 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
- ^ Order To Endorse Press Statements To Maximise Effectiveness, Says Tee Keat, Bernama, 8 January 2009.
- ^ Tee Keat: No gag order on MCA bureau chiefs[permanent dead link], The Sun Daily, 8 January 2009. [dead link]
- ^ "Lawyer for Myanmar's Suu Kyi says he has been issued a gag order". Reuters. 15 October 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
- ^ "Name suppression", Community Law NZ, 26 July 2021, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Criminal Procedure Act. Wellington: New Zealand Government. 2011. Section 200. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ a b c Tyler, Francine (31 July 2020), "What's in a name? A history of New Zealand's unique name suppression laws and their impact on press freedom", Pacific Journalism Review : Te Koakoa, vol. 26, no. 1, ojs.aut.ac.nz, doi:10.24135/pjr.v26i1.1093, ISSN 2324-2035, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ a b Harcourt, Anna (7 November 2022), "Why people get name suppression in NZ", Re: News, archived from the original on 20 January 2024, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Kidd, Rob, "Taking power away from the perpetrator", Otago Daily Times, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ a b Sherwood, Sam (3 August 2025), "Prominent figure with name supression set to reappear in court", RNZ, retrieved 3 August 2025
- ^ "Blogger fights fine for breaching supression", Stuff, 7 July 2011, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Williams, By (10 May 2016), "Cameron Slater, fearless crusader against name suppression, just had his name suppression lifted", The Spinoff, archived from the original on 10 May 2016, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Hurley, Sam (13 December 2018), "Bar Association says ongoing suppression breaches in Grace Millane murder case endanger trial", The New Zealand Herald, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Owen, Catrin (28 April 2021), "Grace Millane suppression breach: Leo Molloy fined $15,000 for naming killer on forum", Stuff, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ "'Can't believe frankly what I've just heard': Te Pāti Māori's Waititi shocks with comment under parliamentary privilege", Newshub, 23 August 2023, archived from the original on 11 April 2024, retrieved 16 September 2024
- ^ "Oral Questions — Questions to Ministers - August 23 2023", NZ Parliament Hansard Debates, archived from the original on 11 April 2024, retrieved 16 September 2024
- ^ Mcculloch, Craig (29 August 2024), "Te Pāti Māori 'more aware and respectful' of Parliament's relationship with courts", RNZ, retrieved 16 September 2024
- ^ a b Sherwood, Sam (3 August 2025), "Former top cop Jevon McSkimming faces charges of possessing child sexual exploitation, bestiality material", RNZ, retrieved 3 August 2025
- ^ Savage, Jared (19 May 2025), "Jevon McSkimming resignation: 'Super injunction' lifted but media still barred from publishing details of 'objectionable material' allegations against former deputy commissioner", The New Zealand Herald, archived from the original on 20 July 2025, retrieved 3 August 2025
- ^ "Name Suppression: Balancing Open Justice and Privacy", Equal Justice Project, 18 September 2024, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ "What you need to know about name suppression", RNZ, 15 September 2015, archived from the original on 30 October 2022, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ a b Barrett, Jonathan (12 January 2012), "Name Suppression Orders and Web 2.0 Media: the New Zealand Experience", European Journal of Law and Technology, vol. 3, no. 1, ejlt.org, ISSN 2042-115X, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ "Bar Association says current name suppression laws allow for balancing important rights", New Zealand Bar Association, retrieved 8 October 2024
- ^ Wilkinson, Jeremy (21 November 2024), "Proposed name suppression law change would give victims final say on offenders remaining secret", The New Zealand Herald, retrieved 3 August 2025
- ^ Release, Press (18 July 2021). "Insecurity: SERAP asks Buhari govt to withdraw gag order on reportage". Premium Times Nigeria. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
- ^ "Terrorism: SERAP, PTCIJ sue Buhari, Mohammed over media 'gag order'". Premium Times Nigeria. 25 July 2021. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
- ^ a b Alan Travis (22 May 2013). "Triple child killer David McGreavy can be named, high court judges rule: Judges revoke 'mistaken' gagging order about coverage of long-serving UK prisoner's parole application". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
An anonymity order preventing the naming of one of Britain's most notorious child killers as David McGreavy has been lifted by the high court.
- ^ Reporting Restrictions in the Criminal Courts (PDF) (Report). Judicial Studies Board. October 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 June 2013. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
- ^ Casciani, Dominic (15 January 2008). "Secrecy ruling over murder trial". BBC News. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^ Norton-Taylor, Richard (11 January 2008). "Secrets and lies". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^ "News in Brief". The Times. 14 January 2008. Retrieved 10 September 2011.[dead link]
- ^ Gibb, Frances (13 December 2007). "Why is Home Office trying to stage murder trial in secret?". The Times. Retrieved 10 September 2011.[dead link]
- ^ Swinford, Steven (23 May 2011). "Ryan Giggs: from golden boy to tarnished idol". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
- ^ Wright, Simon (24 January 2015). "James Bulger Killer Jon Venables Joins Dating Website Under Different Name". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
- ^ "Andere Tijden: Lekker Dier". 11 July 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
- ^ "Dierenwelzijn, Resource". 30 November 2006. Archived from the original on 23 April 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
- ^ "Braks wil spreekverbod ambtenaar niet opheffen". 14 February 1989. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
- ^ District court The Hague 11 December 2015, C/09/497903 KG ZA 15/1556, ECLI:NL:RBDHA:2015:15050 (in Dutch)
- ^ Husejnović, Alosman (4 January 2016). "Casper ten Dam: Nakon zabrane knjige o Srebrenici pravdu ćemo tražiti do Evropskog suda!" [Casper ten Dam: The Srebrenica book prohibition will lead us to seek justice all the way to the European Court!]. Dnevni Avaz (in Bosnian). Retrieved 4 January 2020.
- ^ "Netherlands: Court bans book on Srebrenica genocide". Mapping Media Freedom, Index on Censorship. 24 December 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
- ^ Court of Appeal The Hague 12 April 2016, 200.183.987/01, ECLI:NL:GHDHA:2016:870 (in Dutch)
- ^ "ACLU Roadmap of Justice Department Inspector General's Review of the FBI's Use of National Security Letters". American Civil Liberties Union. 19 March 2007. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^ Kravets, David (20 October 2009). "Judge Refuses to Lift 5-Year-Old Patriot Act Gag Order". Wired News. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^ In Re: Application of the United States of America for an Order Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 2703(d) of 25 January 2013, p. 4, from the Wikileaks-related Twitter subpoenas
- ^ In Re: Sealing and Non-disclosure of Pen/Trap/2703(d) Orders of 30 May 2008, p. 5
- ^ Finn, Peter (7 January 2009). "Judge's Order Could Keep Public From Hearing Details of 9/11 Trials". The Washington Post. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- ^ "San Diego Judge Puts Unprecedented Gag Order on Sidewalk Chalk Protestor Trial". Truthout. 28 June 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
- ^ Goldenberg, Suzanne (5 August 2013). "Children given lifelong ban on talking about fracking". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2013.
- ^ Hopey, Don (7 August 2013). "Hallowich children not part of Marcellus Shale gag order agreement". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on 10 August 2013. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
- ^ "CA Penal Code § 1546.2 (2017)". Onecle Inc. State of California. 2017. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
- ^ Cintrón, Dr. Carmelo Delgado. "La obra jurídica del Profesor David M. Helfeld (1948–2008)" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 27 March 2012.
- ^ "Puerto Rican History". Topuertorico.org. 13 January 1941. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
- ^ La Gobernación de Jesús T. Piñero y la Guerra Fría
- ^ Hernández, Clodovaldo (26 November 2004). "Venezuela aprueba la polémica ley de control de radio y televisión". El País. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
- ^ "Aprueban en Venezuela la polémica "Ley Mordaza"". El Nuevo Herald. 26 November 2004. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
Gag order
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Conceptual Framework
Core Definition
A gag order is a judicial directive issued by a court that restricts attorneys, parties, witnesses, or other participants in a pending lawsuit or criminal prosecution from publicly discussing or disclosing case-related information to the media or general public.[1][9] Also referred to as a non-dissemination order, it aims to limit extrajudicial statements that could prejudice the proceedings, such as by influencing potential jurors through pretrial publicity.[2][3] In U.S. law, gag orders derive from a judge's inherent authority to regulate courtroom conduct and safeguard the integrity of trials, applicable in both civil and criminal contexts.[1] They typically target direct participants rather than third parties like the press, though violations can result in contempt charges, fines, or sanctions.[2][9] Unlike sealed records or broader protective orders that withhold documents from public access, gag orders specifically curtail speech about ongoing matters to prevent irreversible harm to the judicial process.[1] Such orders must be narrowly tailored, as they implicate free speech protections under the First Amendment, requiring courts to demonstrate a clear and present danger of prejudice before imposition.[3][2] Historical applications trace to high-profile cases where media coverage risked biased outcomes, but empirical evidence on their efficacy in reducing prejudice remains debated among legal scholars.[3]Types and Variations
Gag orders are primarily categorized by the individuals or entities they restrict, with the most common type targeting trial participants to prevent statements that could prejudice jury selection or the trial outcome. These orders typically prohibit attorneys, litigants (including defendants and plaintiffs), and witnesses from discussing case details publicly, such as evidence, confessions, or opinions on guilt.[1][3][2] In criminal and civil proceedings, such restrictions apply during pretrial phases or throughout the trial, often evaluated under standards like the "substantial likelihood of material prejudice" for participants, as established in cases permitting narrower scrutiny than for media restraints.[10] A rarer variation consists of gag orders imposed on the media or press, which act as prior restraints on publication and thus trigger stricter First Amendment review. These prohibit reporting on specific case elements, such as victim identities or defendant statements, but courts presume them unconstitutional unless they demonstrate a clear and present danger to a fair trial that cannot be addressed by alternatives like change of venue or jury sequestration.[1][3][10] The U.S. Supreme Court in Nebraska Press Ass'n v. Stuart (1976) outlined factors for assessing such orders, including the extent of existing publicity and the gag order's predicted effectiveness, leading to their invalidation in that instance due to viable non-suppressive measures.[1] Orders can further vary in scope: narrow restrictions limit commentary to sensitive topics like witness safety or confidential information, while broader ones encompass all case-related speech, though judicial preference leans toward the least restrictive option to comply with constitutional limits.[3][2] Temporary or interim gag orders may be issued pretrial and later modified or lifted based on evolving circumstances, as seen in high-profile cases where appellate courts narrowed initial broad impositions.[10] In non-trial contexts, such as settlements or family law disputes, analogous restrictions sometimes emerge but are often contractual rather than judicial gag orders proper.[2]Legal and Historical Foundations
Historical Origins
The practice of restricting speech to protect judicial proceedings originated in English common law, where courts invoked inherent contempt powers to penalize publications or statements likely to interfere with the administration of justice or prejudice fair trials. As early as 1766, in The King v. Francklin, an English court held a publisher in contempt for a libelous attack on a judge's conduct during an ongoing case, affirming judicial authority to suppress commentary that could undermine public confidence in the courts.[11] This principle extended to attorneys and parties, as seen in Daw v. Eley (circa 1840s), where counsel was punished for publicly arguing the merits of a pending matter in newspapers, reinforcing that extrajudicial speech posed risks to impartiality.[11] These common law doctrines were inherited by American courts, providing the foundational mechanism for controlling prejudicial publicity through contempt sanctions rather than formalized orders. The term "gag order" itself emerged in the early 20th century amid growing concerns over sensationalist journalism, with its first documented use appearing in 1906. [12] By the mid-20th century, as media coverage intensified in high-profile criminal cases, U.S. judges increasingly issued explicit pretrial restrictions on trial participants—such as attorneys, witnesses, and defendants—to prevent tainting potential jurors, evolving the practice into a distinct tool distinct from post-hoc contempt.[7] A pivotal development occurred in Sheppard v. Maxwell (1966), where the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a conviction due to overwhelming prejudicial pretrial publicity, directing trial judges to employ "strong measures," including gag orders on participants, as a proactive means to safeguard the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury.[3] This ruling formalized gag orders as a standard judicial response to media interference, though subsequent cases like Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976) limited their application to the press by deeming such direct restraints presumptively unconstitutional under the First Amendment.[3]Key Legal Principles and Precedents
In United States law, gag orders stem from courts' inherent authority to regulate proceedings and safeguard the integrity of trials against prejudicial publicity, balancing Sixth Amendment fair trial rights with First Amendment protections for speech and press.[1] Courts may impose such orders on trial participants—such as attorneys, parties, and witnesses—to prevent extrajudicial statements that create a substantial likelihood of material prejudice, but restrictions must be narrowly tailored, with less restrictive alternatives like sequestration, venue changes, or jury instructions considered first.[13] Prior restraints on the press or public dissemination are presumptively unconstitutional and require proof of a clear and present danger to fair trial rights that cannot be mitigated otherwise.[10] The Supreme Court in Sheppard v. Maxwell (1966) addressed excessive pretrial and trial publicity that deprived a defendant of due process, ruling that trial courts must actively mitigate "circus-like" media interference through measures including orders limiting statements by participants, though the decision did not directly authorize media gag orders.[14] This precedent emphasized judicial responsibility to control extrajudicial commentary without broadly endorsing speech curbs, influencing subsequent practices where courts targeted lawyers and litigants rather than reporters.[3] Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976) established a stringent test for gag orders on the press, invalidating a pretrial restraint in a high-profile murder case where the Court held that suppressing publication demands evidence of imminent, irreparable harm to the trial process outweighing First Amendment interests, alongside exhaustion of alternatives like expanded jury pools or admonitions to jurors.[15] The 9-0 ruling underscored that gag orders against media represent the "most serious and least tolerable" infringement on free expression, applicable even before jury selection.[16] In Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada (1991), the Court upheld Nevada's disciplinary rule prohibiting lawyers from statements posing a "substantial likelihood of material prejudice" to ongoing proceedings, affirming that attorneys, as court officers, receive tempered First Amendment safeguards to prioritize justice administration over unrestricted advocacy.[17] The 5-4 decision clarified that such rules survive strict scrutiny if they proscribe only prejudicial speech with a realistic risk of influencing outcomes, distinguishing participants' obligations from the press's broader protections.[3] These cases collectively mandate case-specific findings of necessity, with appellate review ensuring orders do not exceed constitutional bounds.[18]Rationales for Imposition
Protection of Judicial Processes
Gag orders serve to protect the integrity of judicial processes by restricting extrajudicial statements from trial participants, such as attorneys, parties, and witnesses, that could prejudice potential jurors or compromise the fairness of proceedings.[1] These restrictions aim to mitigate the risks posed by pretrial publicity, which may bias the jury pool and infringe on the defendant's Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury.[3] In criminal trials, where media attention can amplify inflammatory comments, courts impose such orders to prevent the dissemination of potentially inadmissible or one-sided information that might influence public perception and juror selection.[19] The U.S. Supreme Court in Sheppard v. Maxwell (1966) underscored the necessity of these measures, ruling that pervasive and prejudicial media coverage had deprived the defendant of a fair trial due to a lack of judicial controls on extrajudicial statements and courtroom disruptions.[20] The decision emphasized that trial judges must actively safeguard due process by employing tools like gag orders on participants to ensure an unbiased atmosphere, particularly in high-profile cases where unchecked commentary can saturate community awareness.[21] This precedent established that while First Amendment protections apply, the right to a fair trial takes precedence when statements from involved parties threaten impartiality, prompting courts to limit speech only to the extent necessary to avert substantial prejudice.[14] Unlike prior restraints on the press, which face strict scrutiny as outlined in Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976)—where the Court invalidated a media gag order for violating the First Amendment—orders targeting trial participants are more readily upheld if tailored to protect judicial fairness without broadly suppressing public discourse.[4] Courts assess the likelihood of prejudice from specific statements, requiring evidence of an imminent threat to the trial's administration before issuance, thereby balancing speech rights with the causal link between uncontrolled commentary and compromised verdicts.[10] Empirical concerns arise from studies indicating that while gag orders reduce participant-driven publicity, they do not eliminate media coverage entirely, yet they effectively curb direct influences that could sway witnesses or jurors.[6]Broader Public Interest Considerations
Gag orders are invoked to safeguard the privacy interests of victims and non-parties in criminal and civil proceedings, where public disclosure could exacerbate trauma or invite harassment. For instance, in cases involving sexual assault or domestic violence, courts have upheld restrictions on disseminating victim identities or details to prevent secondary victimization and uphold statutory privacy protections.[22] This rationale draws from empirical observations of media intrusion's psychological impacts, as documented in victim advocacy frameworks emphasizing non-disclosure to facilitate healing and cooperation with authorities.[10] In commercial disputes, gag orders protect trade secrets and confidential business information, thereby promoting economic stability and innovation incentives critical to public welfare. Protective orders routinely seal sensitive filings to avoid competitive disadvantages, with courts balancing disclosure against the broader interest in maintaining market integrity—evidenced by precedents where unrestricted access risked irreversible proprietary leaks.[23] Such measures align with federal statutes like the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016, which prioritize secrecy to deter theft and sustain industrial competitiveness. National security imperatives further justify gag orders in investigative contexts, such as National Security Letters (NSLs) issued by the FBI, where nondisclosure prevents alerting targets and compromising counterterrorism or espionage probes. These provisions extend to tech companies like Apple and Google, restricting them from publicly disclosing specific legal demands for user data, including push notification metadata, often tied to processes like the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).[24][25] From 2003 to 2019, over 500,000 NSLs included perpetual gag provisions to shield ongoing operations, reflecting congressional determinations that such secrecy outweighs individual speech rights in high-stakes threats.[24] Judicial oversight under the USA FREEDOM Act of 2015 mandates review for necessity, underscoring the public stake in unhindered intelligence gathering amid documented plots foiled by covert means.[26] These considerations necessitate narrow tailoring, as overbroad applications risk undermining transparency without proportional benefits, though empirical data on efficacy remains limited to case-specific outcomes rather than systemic studies.[3]Criticisms and Free Speech Conflicts
Constitutional and First Amendment Challenges
Gag orders, as prior restraints on speech, are subject to strict scrutiny under the First Amendment, requiring courts to demonstrate that less restrictive alternatives—such as jury sequestration, changes of venue, or careful voir dire—are insufficient to mitigate prejudice.[15] In Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976), the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated a district court's order barring media from publishing confessions of a defendant charged with multiple murders, ruling that prior restraints on the press are presumptively unconstitutional absent a clear showing of imminent harm to the trial process that cannot be addressed otherwise.[15] The decision emphasized the heavy burden on trial courts to exhaust non-speech-restricting measures first, establishing that gag orders on third parties like journalists rarely survive constitutional review.[27] Challenges extend to restrictions on trial participants, where the Court has permitted narrower tailoring to balance fair trial rights under the Sixth Amendment against free speech. In Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada (1991), the Supreme Court upheld Nevada's disciplinary rule prohibiting lawyers from making extrajudicial statements with a "substantial likelihood of material prejudice" to ongoing proceedings, deeming this standard constitutional as it targets speech posing a real threat without unduly burdening advocacy or public discourse.[17] However, the Court struck down the rule's phrasing as unconstitutionally vague, requiring clearer definitions to avoid chilling protected expression; this precedent underscores that even participant gag orders must be precisely drawn, with violations risking reversal if they sweep too broadly or fail to prove prejudice.[28] In high-profile political cases, such as those involving former President Donald Trump, gag orders have prompted repeated First Amendment challenges alleging viewpoint discrimination and overreach. In the federal election interference prosecution, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan's October 2023 order restricting statements targeting witnesses, prosecutors, or court staff was upheld but narrowed by the D.C. Circuit in December 2023, which found core prohibitions valid to prevent threats but excised references to protected public discourse on the case's merits.[29] Similarly, in New York's 2024 hush-money trial, Judge Juan Merchan's gag order limiting comments on jurors, witnesses, and family members withstood appellate scrutiny, though critics argued it exceeded Gentile's bounds by not sufficiently evidencing prejudice and risked suppressing political speech during an election cycle.[30] The ACLU has intervened in these matters, contending that broad gag orders on defendants undermine public debate on matters of profound national interest, evading First Amendment safeguards through stipulated or unilateral impositions.[31] These disputes highlight ongoing tensions, with appeals courts demanding empirical justification for restrictions amid claims of judicial bias in politically charged contexts.[10]Evidence of Overreach and Ineffectiveness
Gag orders represent a form of prior restraint on speech, which the U.S. Supreme Court has subjected to strict scrutiny due to their potential to suppress protected expression without adequate justification. In Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976), the Court overturned a trial court's prohibition on media reporting of a defendant's confessions in a high-profile murder case, holding that such orders demand proof of "clear and present danger" to a fair trial and exhaustion of alternatives like expanded jury pools or careful voir dire, as empirical evidence showed jurors could often disregard prejudicial publicity.[32] Similarly, in Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Oklahoma County District Court (1977), the Court struck down a gag order barring press publication of a juvenile suspect's name already in the public domain, emphasizing that once information enters circulation, suppression efforts infringe First Amendment rights without advancing trial fairness.[16] Instances of overreach arise when gag orders extend beyond necessary protections, silencing non-participants or broad swaths of commentary without evidence of harm. For example, in the 2023 federal election interference case against former President Donald Trump, a district court imposed restrictions on public statements by trial participants, prompting appeals that highlighted the order's vagueness and failure to tailor limits to specific threats, as modified by the D.C. Circuit to narrow its scope.[30] Critics argue such expansive applications presume prejudice without data, violating the presumption against prior restraints articulated in cases like Near v. Minnesota (1931), where the Court invalidated government suppression of publication absent extraordinary circumstances.[33] Evidence of ineffectiveness stems from empirical observations that gag orders fail to curb information dissemination, particularly in the internet era, while underestimating jurors' ability to remain impartial. Research indicates that even in trials with heavy pretrial publicity, sequestered or instructed jurors rarely convict based on inadmissible evidence, as seen in studies of high-profile cases where exposure did not correlate with biased verdicts.[32] Moreover, gag orders on participants do not reduce overall media coverage but merely limit perspectives, allowing leaks and anonymous sources to proliferate unchecked, as documented in analyses of enforcement challenges in digitized environments.[19] This dynamic underscores causal limitations: suppressing one voice does not eliminate public discourse but shifts it underground, potentially eroding transparency without demonstrably safeguarding justice.[34]Political and Ideological Applications
Gag orders have been applied in high-profile political trials to restrict defendants' public commentary, particularly in cases involving elected officials or candidates. In the United States v. Trump federal election interference case, U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan imposed a limited gag order on October 16, 2023, prohibiting former President Donald Trump from making public statements targeting protected individuals, including prosecutors, court staff, potential witnesses, and jurors, to prevent intimidation or prejudice to the judicial process.[35] The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit upheld the core of the order on December 8, 2023, rejecting Trump's First Amendment challenges while acknowledging the need to balance speech rights with trial integrity, though Trump continued to contest it as an unconstitutional prior restraint on political discourse.[35] Similarly, in the New York hush money trial (People v. Trump), Judge Juan Merchan issued a gag order on March 26, 2024, barring comments on witnesses, jurors, court staff, and their families; Trump was found in contempt for at least 10 violations by April 2024, resulting in $10,000 in fines and warnings of potential incarceration, with the order partially lifted post-verdict on June 25, 2024.[36][37][38] Critics of these applications contend that gag orders in political contexts function as mechanisms to constrain electoral speech, imposing prior restraints that face strict constitutional scrutiny under the First Amendment, especially for core political expression during campaign periods. Legal scholars have argued that such orders, by preemptively silencing defendants rather than punishing post-hoc violations, disproportionately burden public figures whose statements often blend case-specific commentary with broader political advocacy, potentially skewing public debate in ideologically charged prosecutions.[30] Proponents counter that the restrictions are narrowly tailored to avert direct threats or jury taint, not ideological content, and that alternatives like sequestration suffice for fair trials without blanket suppression.[39] Empirical data from Trump's cases show repeated violations leading to escalating penalties, yet no evidence of overturned convictions due to order enforcement, suggesting limited causal impact on trial outcomes but heightened perceptions of judicial overreach in partisan environments.[40] Ideologically, gag orders can intersect with efforts to shield institutional narratives or suppress dissenting viewpoints in cases tied to contentious social or policy disputes, though judicial rationales emphasize procedural safeguards over substantive ideology. For instance, in investigations involving national security or counterterrorism, such as early 2000s Patriot Act probes, government-imposed gag orders on recipients of subpoenas or warrants have concealed operational details, arguably limiting public scrutiny of policies perceived as ideologically driven expansions of state power.[41] In jurisdictions with weaker free speech protections, analogous restrictions—sometimes termed "gag laws"—have been deployed against political opposition and human rights advocates to curtail protests or disclosures challenging ruling ideologies, as documented in analyses of authoritarian-leaning systems where such measures minimize dissent without direct evidentiary ties to fair trial needs.[42] These applications raise causal concerns about entrenching power asymmetries, as empirical patterns indicate higher imposition rates in politically sensitive matters, potentially eroding public trust when perceived as selective enforcement favoring established interests over open ideological contestation.[10]Jurisdictional Applications
United States
In the United States, gag orders are judicial directives issued by trial courts in criminal, civil, or family proceedings to prohibit parties, attorneys, witnesses, jurors, or occasionally the media from making public statements about case details that could prejudice the proceedings or influence potential jurors. These orders derive from the inherent authority of courts to manage trials and safeguard defendants' Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury, balanced against First Amendment protections for speech and press freedoms. Courts impose them when pretrial publicity poses a substantial threat to fairness, but such restrictions qualify as prior restraints, which the Supreme Court has deemed presumptively unconstitutional unless narrowly tailored to avert imminent harm that cannot be mitigated by less restrictive means, such as jury sequestration or careful voir dire.[3][1] The foundational precedent is Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976), where the Supreme Court invalidated a district court's order barring media reporting on confessions in a murder trial, ruling it violated the First Amendment absent proof of a "clear and present danger" to fair trial rights and exhaustion of alternatives like change of venue. The decision emphasized that empirical evidence of actual prejudice from publicity is required, not mere speculation, and that gag orders on the press are rarely justifiable given the press's role in public oversight of judicial processes. Subsequent cases refined standards for non-media participants: in Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada (1991), the Court upheld disciplinary rules limiting attorneys' extrajudicial statements to those with a "substantial likelihood of material prejudice," distinguishing lawyers' regulated speech from the broader protections afforded the public or press. Federal circuits apply varying tests, often requiring clear evidence of prejudice and narrow tailoring, while state courts follow similar strict scrutiny for press restraints but permit broader curbs on litigants to protect trial integrity.[16][19] Gag orders are routinely applied in high-profile federal and state trials to curb inflammatory comments. For instance, in the 2023-2024 New York state prosecution of Donald Trump on hush-money charges, Judge Juan Merchan issued a limited gag order on March 26, 2024, prohibiting comments about jurors, witnesses, court staff, or their families that could intimidate or influence the case, citing Trump's prior social media posts as risking juror harassment; Trump faced multiple contempt findings for violations, including fines totaling $10,000 by May 2024. Similarly, in the federal election interference case against Trump in Washington, D.C., Judge Tanya Chutkan imposed a gag order on October 16, 2023, restricting statements about protected witnesses, later narrowed after appeals. Other examples include the 2020 Harvey Weinstein sexual assault trial, where a Manhattan judge barred attorneys from public comments to prevent juror bias amid intense media coverage, and the 2019 Roger Stone trial, where restrictions on participants aimed to counter politicized publicity. Violations can lead to contempt sanctions, including fines or incarceration, as seen in cases like the 2022 prosecution of Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby, where breaches prompted judicial rebukes.[36][43][44] Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 53 explicitly bans broadcasting or photographing trials but leaves gag orders to judicial discretion, while civil cases often involve protective orders under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c) sealing discovery to encourage candor without public disclosure. Challenges persist, with appeals courts overturning overbroad orders; for example, the D.C. Circuit in 2023 upheld a narrowed Trump gag order but stressed First Amendment limits, requiring evidence of targeted threats over general political speech. Data from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press indicates gag orders on trial participants occur in about half of surveyed jurisdictions, though press restraints have declined post-1976 due to constitutional hurdles. Critics, including free speech advocates, argue many orders evade scrutiny by targeting non-media actors and rely on unproven assumptions about publicity's causal impact on verdicts, with studies showing juries often disregard inadmissible information when instructed.[10][19]International Examples
In the United Kingdom, courts have issued super-injunctions, a stringent form of gag order that prohibits both the disclosure of protected information and any mention of the injunction's existence. These emerged prominently in the early 2010s amid privacy disputes involving public figures; for instance, in January 2010, Chelsea footballer John Terry sought a super-injunction to suppress reports of an extramarital affair, but the High Court rejected the application after initial temporary approval, citing insufficient grounds for anonymity. By 2011, at least 11 super-injunctions or anonymized privacy injunctions were reported in England and Wales, often linked to celebrity infidelity claims, prompting parliamentary scrutiny over their erosion of open justice principles. More recently, in 2023, the UK Ministry of Defence secured a super-injunction barring media coverage of a report on faulty military equipment supplied to Ukraine, which remained in effect for nearly two years until lifted in 2025, delaying public accountability for procurement failures.[45][46][47] Canada employs statutory publication bans under section 486 of the Criminal Code, which courts must grant upon request in sexual offense proceedings to shield complainant identities, prohibiting any publication, broadcast, or transmission of identifying details under penalty of contempt. These bans extend to youth offenders and may be imposed discretionarily to safeguard trial fairness, as affirmed by the Supreme Court in the 1994 Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp. ruling, which required balancing press freedom against prejudice risks. In high-profile applications, such as the 2010 Toronto 18 terrorism trials, interim bans prevented naming certain accused until convictions, though violations via online leaks have tested enforcement; bans are automatic for minors and victims under 18 in many cases, with over 90% of sexual assault trials involving such restrictions per federal data.[48][49][50] Australian jurisdictions utilize suppression and non-publication orders under state-specific laws like Victoria's Court Suppression and Non-publication Orders Act 2010, aimed at preventing prejudice to proceedings or protecting vulnerable parties, with federal courts issuing 351 such orders in South Australia alone during 2022-2023. A notable example occurred in the 2018 New South Wales trial of Cardinal George Pell for historical sexual offenses, where suppression orders concealed complainant identities and certain evidence details to ensure juror impartiality, though the orders faced international media circumvention and were partially lifted post-acquittal in 2020. In employment disputes, the Federal Court in June 2024 suppressed documents revealing executive misconduct allegations in a corporate case, citing privacy and commercial sensitivity, highlighting tensions with transparency mandates.[51][52][53] In Israel, gag orders—termed tzav herem—have surged, with court requests tripling from approximately 80 annually in the early 2000s to 231 in 2015 alone, primarily to shield ongoing investigations from public interference. Issued by magistrate or district courts upon police application, these restrict reporting on suspect identities or evidence; a 2025 case involved the arrest of a prominent model on murder suspicion, where media were barred from naming the individual for over a week despite widespread speculation, illustrating routine use in 70% of sensitive probes per judicial data. Critics, including press freedom advocates, note that such orders often persist post-indictment, correlating with lower conviction rates in publicized cases due to perceived evidentiary contamination.[55]Reforms and Alternatives
Judicial and Legislative Responses
The U.S. Supreme Court has imposed stringent constitutional limits on gag orders as prior restraints on speech, requiring courts to demonstrate a "clear and present danger" to fair trial rights that cannot be addressed through less restrictive alternatives such as jury sequestration, venue changes, or careful voir dire. In Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976), the Court invalidated a trial court's order barring media reports of confessions and other details in a high-profile murder case, holding that such restraints demand empirical evidence of imminent prejudice outweighing First Amendment interests, and emphasizing that "pretrial publicity—even pervasive, adverse publicity—does not inevitably lead to an unfair trial." Similarly, Sheppard v. Maxwell (1966) critiqued unchecked publicity but directed lower courts toward procedural safeguards over broad speech restrictions, reinforcing that gag orders represent a "last resort" only after exhausting options like expanded jury pools or admonitions to jurors. These precedents have shaped judicial practice, prompting appellate courts to narrow or vacate overbroad orders; for instance, in 2023, the D.C. Circuit upheld a modified gag order in a federal election interference prosecution but struck provisions lacking tailored findings of harm, citing the need for specificity to avoid chilling protected political discourse. Lower courts have increasingly applied heightened scrutiny to gag orders on attorneys and parties, adopting the "substantial likelihood" test from Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada (1991), which permits restrictions only if extrajudicial statements pose a real threat of materially prejudicing adjudication without feasible alternatives. This framework has led to reforms in judicial guidelines, such as the American Bar Association's Model Rules urging restraint on speech curbs absent compelling necessity, and federal circuits mandating detailed evidentiary hearings before issuance. In high-profile cases from 2023 to 2025, appeals have frequently resulted in modifications or partial reversals, as seen in a New York civil fraud proceeding where a trial judge temporarily lifted restrictions after arguments that they exceeded fair trial protections.[56] Judicial responses thus prioritize evidence-based tailoring, with data from media monitoring organizations indicating that successful challenges often highlight inefficacy—studies show pretrial publicity rarely sways verdicts when juries are properly instructed, underscoring overreliance on gag orders in lieu of proven mitigations.[10] Legislative responses to general gag orders remain limited, with Congress focusing reforms on narrow contexts like national security surveillance rather than trial proceedings. The USA FREEDOM Act of 2015 amended National Security Letter statutes to require judicial review of gag orders and mandated government justification of necessity, responding to earlier court findings of unconstitutional breadth in FBI practices; this curbed indefinite secrecy by allowing recipients to challenge nondisclosure after proving no ongoing threat. Proposed bills like the NDO Fairness Act have sought further constraints on data request gags, requiring post-expiration notice to targets and heightened burdens for perpetual orders, though such measures have not advanced beyond committees amid debates over executive needs.[57] At the state level, few statutes directly limit judicial gag authority, but some, such as California's rules on family court secrecy, incorporate sunset provisions or appeal rights to prevent overuse in non-criminal matters. Overall, legislative inertia reflects deference to judicial discretion, with reforms emphasizing transparency over outright bans, as broader prohibitions risk undermining legitimate protections against jury bias in sensational cases.Non-Restrictive Mitigation Strategies
Courts addressing pretrial publicity have long prioritized non-restrictive measures to safeguard fair trials without curtailing speech rights under the First Amendment. In Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart (1976), the U.S. Supreme Court mandated that trial judges exhaust alternatives such as change of venue, jury sequestration, and postponements before considering gag orders, emphasizing that prior restraints on publication bear a "heavy presumption" against constitutionality. These strategies focus on insulating jurors from external influences rather than suppressing information flow, aligning with empirical observations that pretrial publicity rarely prejudices verdicts when such procedural safeguards are applied.[58] Change of venue relocates trials to jurisdictions with minimal media saturation, reducing juror exposure to inflammatory coverage. For instance, in high-profile cases like the 1995 O.J. Simpson trial, venue transfer was debated but not pursued; studies indicate it effectively mitigates bias in 70-80% of relocated proceedings by drawing from less-informed pools.[32] Empirical data from federal cases shows venue changes succeed in assembling impartial juries without speech restrictions, as jurors in remote areas exhibit lower pretrial knowledge levels.[59] Jury sequestration physically isolates selected jurors from media and public discourse during deliberations, preventing real-time influence. Implemented in about 5% of federal trials involving publicity risks, it has proven effective in cases like the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing trial, where sequestered jurors deliberated without reported external contamination.[60] Research from the American Bar Association confirms sequestration minimizes bias absorption, with post-trial surveys showing negligible media impact on verdicts when combined with instructions. Thorough voir dire and emphatic jury instructions further bolster impartiality by screening for preconceptions and directing jurors to disregard publicity. Expanded questioning under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 24 allows challenges for cause based on media exposure, excusing up to 20-30% of potential jurors in sensational cases.[61] Courts routinely instruct juries to avoid news sources, with psychological studies validating that such directives, reinforced by sequestration, yield decisions driven by evidence rather than headlines.[10] Continuances, delaying trials by months, allow publicity to fade, as evidenced by reduced juror recall in postponed proceedings per mock trial experiments.[62] These methods collectively demonstrate that fair trials can be secured through juror management, obviating the need for speech curbs.References
- https://reutersinstitute.politics.[ox](/page/Ox).ac.uk/our-research/state-vs-press-rise-gag-orders-israel
