I too am fatigued, but that appears to be a screen shot of just the first page. I'll try and find the rest when I am able.
But I trust you. If in fact the two survivors and all the families of the victims are enjoined from speaking, I do understand why SG hired an attorney (but he needs a different one, if he's reading).
It's a misstep by the judge, if you ask me (and I have no idea whether both sides agreed - maybe they did).
I think a gag order might extend to a citizen if the information came from an embargoed source, but seriously, the parents of these murdered kids can't talk unless they're certain the person they are talking to won't "disseminate" their information. I call BS on that. I'm sure it's happened before, but the rest of us don't have to like it.
All it does is push people to go outside the jurisdiction (Twitter, TikTok, etc) and make a bigger deal out of everything. Again, if my child was murdered, I'd be happy to go to jail for my freedom to talk about it - if a judge told me I couldn't, I wouldn't obey. I would use my own sense and feeling and I think victims' families should be able to. I don't see any Supreme Court or Federal District Court rulings supporting this judge's decision (and she probably won't be the judge throughout the whole case, especially if both media and the families sue - it just spends more resources that could be spent on actually finding justice for the four victims).
I understand why many reports (autopsy especially) ought not to be public, but I think the families already have those reports and have been circumspect and responsible - let them continue in that way.