In a massive blow to the Trump administration’s aggressive foreign policy, a federal court has stepped in to halt the use of financial sanctions against international investigators. On Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Richard Leon issued a temporary injunction that effectively paused the government’s attempts to silence a prominent critic of U.S. and Israeli actions in Gaza.
The Case of Francesca Albanese
The legal issue centers on Francesca Albanese, an Italian lawyer and the UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories. In July 2025, Secretary of State Marco Rubio imposed sanctions that barred Albanese from entering the U.S. and, more importantly, “debanked” her, freezing her ability to manage daily finances.
The measures were authorized by an executive order targeting individuals involved with International Criminal Court (ICC) investigations into Israeli war crimes. Albanese’s family—including her daughter, a U.S. citizen- sued, arguing that the administration was using the Treasury Department as a weapon to punish political speech.

The Danger of “Financial Execution”
This ruling is a necessary reality check for an administration that treats the global financial system like a personal “delete” button. Sanctions are designed to stop terrorists and war criminals, not to punish lawyers for writing reports you don’t like.
I find it deeply ironic that an administration touting “freedom” would attempt to argue that a UN expert’s non-binding recommendations are a threat to national security. Judge Leon hit the nail on the head: Albanese hasn’t fired a weapon; she has simply spoken. If the U.S. can successfully freeze the bank accounts of any international official who criticizes our allies, we aren’t leading the free world; we’re acting like the authoritarian regimes we claim to oppose.
A First Amendment Shield for Foreigners?
One of the most controversial aspects of Judge Leon’s ruling is the determination that Albanese’s residency outside the U.S. does not strip her of First Amendment protections.
The judge found that the Trump administration targeted Albanese specifically because of the “idea or message expressed. The court noted that Albanese’s recommendations have zero binding effect on the ICC. They are opinions, and under U.S. law, opinions are protected.
The ruling acknowledged that the sanctions made it “nearly impossible” for Albanese to meet the needs of her daily life, which the court viewed as an excessive and unconstitutional overreach.
The Broader Strategy
Albanese has characterized these sanctions as part of a wider Trump strategy to dismantle international accountability mechanisms. By targeting the individuals who staff the UN and the ICC, the administration aims to make the “cost” of investigating U.S. allies too high to bear.
While this is a temporary block, it signals a major hurdle for Marco Rubio and the State Department. The court has made it clear that “national security” is not a magic word that evaporates the Bill of Rights. For now, the administration’s attempt to use the banking system as a muzzle has been halted. The ruling reminds us that in a democracy, you defeat an argument with a better argument, not by freezing the speaker’s bank account.





