NCLA Reply Brief Explains Why Supreme Court Must Still Hear SEC Gag Rule First Amendment Case

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The New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) has escalated its legal battle against government overreach, filing a compelling reply brief with the Supreme Court, urging it to hear a pivotal First Amendment case despite the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) eleventh-hour repeal of its contentious 50-year-old 'Gag Rule.' The NCLA contends the SEC abrupt rescission of Rule 202.5(e) last month — a policy that muzzled individuals who settled enforcement cases from publicly criticizing the agency — is a strategic maneuver to evade judicial review, necessitating a definitive ruling from the nation's highest court. [cite: Original Article Description, 1, 19, 21] At the heart of 'Powell, et al. v. Securities and Exchange Commission' lies a profound constitutional clash: whether a government agency can compel silence as a condition of settlement, effectively imposing a prior restraint on speech. The SEC Gag Rule, in place since 1972, allowed the agency to issue public accusations while forbidding settling parties from ever truthfully denying them. The Ninth Circuit had previously upheld the rule in August 2025, accepting the argument that defendants voluntarily waived their First Amendment rights through settlement, prompting the NCLA appeal to the Supreme Court in March 2026. The timing of the SEC rescission, just as its reply to the certiorari petition was due, coupled with a similar recent move by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), strongly suggests an attempt by federal agencies to sidestep a binding Supreme Court precedent that could curtail their regulatory powers across the board. The NCLA and its co-counsel, led by former U.S. Solicitor General Greg Garre of Latham & Watkins, argue that the Supreme Court must apply the 'voluntary cessation doctrine' to prevent agencies from simply reinstating such unconstitutional rules at will. [cite: Original Article Description, 6, 11, 19] A Supreme Court decision, they insist, is essential not only to definitively declare the Gag Rule unconstitutional but also to ensure that existing gag orders on past settling parties cannot be revived by future administrations or Commissions. [cite: Original Article Description, 17, 19, 22] The ongoing legal saga underscores the critical balance between governmental regulatory authority and fundamental individual liberties, with a Supreme Court decision poised to redefine the limits of agency power and safeguard free speech in federal enforcement actions for years to come.