Human rights groups sue over Trump administration's sanctions on ICC for
investigations into Israel
[July 16, 2026]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Two human rights groups say Trump administration
sanctions imposed on the International Criminal Court over its
investigations of Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza have illegally
impeded their ability to advocate for Palestinians.
The organizations say in a lawsuit filed Wednesday that they have been
forced to censor their own advocacy work to avoid scrutiny from the
White House, which in an executive order last year not only targeted the
Hague-based criminal court but prohibited providing or receiving
services to or from entities that have been sanctioned.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Manhattan against top
administration officials by DAWN and Taxpayer Alliance Against Genocide,
seeks a court order that would strike down the restrictions on their
advocacy and their ability to interact with Palestinian human rights
groups and other sanctioned parties.
“The Trump administration is using the blunt instrument of economic
sanctions not only to punish human rights defenders but to police the
political expressions of millions of Americans,” said Omar Shakir, the
executive director of DAWN, a U.S.-based group advocating for democracy
and human rights in the Arab world that was founded by Washington Post
journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed in 2018.
“The government is violating the constitutional rights of American
citizens in order to shield officials of a foreign government who have
committed a genocide," he said in a statement.
The White House did not immediately return an email seeking comment on
the lawsuit.

The Hague-based ICC has been investigating allegations of war crimes in
Gaza during the war that began after Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7,
2023. A panel of judges issued arrest warrants in 2024 for Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav
Gallant. Netanyahu has called the warrants “absurd.”
The U.S. and Israel are not among the court’s member states, and neither
nation recognizes its authority.
In response to the arrest warrants, President Donald Trump, a
Republican, issued an executive order last year that accused the ICC of
engaging in “illegitimate and baseless actions targeting America and our
close ally Israel” and warned of “tangible and significant consequences”
on those responsible for the ICC’s “transgressions.”
The U.S. over the last year has slapped sanctions on Palestinian human
rights groups, a series of ICC judges and staffers — including the
court’s former chief prosecutor — and Francesca Albanese, the U.N.
special rapporteur for the West Bank and Gaza. Her family sued in
February, saying the penalties violated the First Amendment.
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The International Criminal Court (ICC) is seen on Dec. 9, 2025, in
The Hague, Netherlands. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, Pool, File)

Already, the lawsuit says, DAWN has halted work on submissions to
the ICC about Israel’s conduct during the war, stopped exchanging
evidence and legal analysis with sanctioned non-government
organizations and abstained from collaborating with them on advocacy
campaigns. It has also been forced to “discontinue its professional
engagements with Albanese.”
“The chilling effect on Plaintiffs has been profound,” the lawsuit
states. “They now face prison terms and ruinous fines if, in their
interactions with the designated parties, they provide or receive
anything that Defendants could plausibly characterize as a
‘service’— an extraordinarily capacious term that potentially
reaches any act that confers a benefit on its recipient. Fearing
liability, Plaintiffs — and countless others like them —have turned
to self-censorship.”
Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is among the defendants in the
lawsuit, denounced the court as recently as this week, pledging in a
Wall Street Journal opinion piece that Trump's administration would
“dismantle the ICC — brick by brick, if necessary.” He warned that
the court's “overreach,” if left unchecked, could subject Border
Patrol agents, federal prosecutors and U.S. Marines to the
tribunal's jurisdiction.
“The ICC’s interfering with American military and law enforcement
operations isn’t only a grave overreach of its purported
authorities. It would mean the death of the U.S. as a sovereign and
independent nation,” Rubio wrote. “Our decision and our people would
be at the mercy of the ICC and its collaborators in the
'international community.' To accept the ICC is to surrender control
of our national destiny.”
The State Department said the campaign against the court could
include additional sanctions or visa revocations and travel bans for
ICC employees as well as “increased scrutiny” of nations that don't
reject ICC authority.
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