Special Counsel Robert Mueller told a federal judge on Monday about an image Roger Stone posted to Instagram that suggests Mueller 'framed' the former Trump adviser. 'Who Framed Roger Stone,' it read, mimicking the film poster from the 1988 comedy 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit?' Stone's version was a solicitation for his legal defense fund. Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled in February that Stone would be permitted to raise money for his defense, and to proclaim his innocence, but otherwise forbade him from making any public comments about his trial on charges of lying to investigators, witness tampering and obstruction of justice. The note about Ston'e Instagram account was an afterthought. Muellerwrote to alert Jackson that a new introduction Stone wrote to accompany the impending release of his book, titled 'The Myth of Russia Collusion,' was available to the public on Amazon com. In it, Stone writes that 'Mr. Mueller may frame me for some bogus charge in order to silence me or induce me to testify against the president.' Roger Stone posted a series of images on Instagram Sunday, one of which might have violated a February 21 gag order barring him from discussing his case on social media The image, which references being 'framed' by Robert Mueller, which Stone posted on Sunday and later deleted after his lawyer was contacted by a reporter about it 'I now find myself on Crooked Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller's hit list because I've advised Donald Trump for the past forty years. I am being targeted not because I committed a crime, but because the Deep State liberals want to silence me and pressure me to testify against my good friend,' Stone writes. Stone's attorneys also wrote to Judge Jackson on Monday, asking her to clarify her February 21 gag order – and insisting that none of the book's new material was written after her ruling. 'The Publisher received the draft on January 14, 2019; edits were made and approved on January 15, 2019. To the best of Stone’s knowledge, information, and belief, not a single word in the book was created after February 21, 2019,' the attorneys wrote. '[W]ith the pre-February 21, 2019 printing by the Publisher, and the imminent general relase of the book’s contents, including the [introduction], Defendant respectfully requests that the publication of this book ... should not be viewed as contravening the Court’s prohibitions,' they added. Mueller wrote a short time later to tell the judge about the Instagram posting, which mirrored the language in Stone's new writing. 'We note for the Court that according to public reporting, on March 3, 2019, the defendant’s Instagram account shared an image with the title “who framed Roger Stone,' Mueller and Jessie Liu, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, wrote. Stone first published the book as 'The Making of the President 2016' after President Trump's inauguration in 2017. The retitled version includes Stone's new text. 'A preview of the defendant’s book, including the updated Introduction referenced in the defendant’s Motion to Clarify, is currently publicly available on Amazon.com and Google Books,' Mueller and Liu wrote. The Instagram post from Stone, a staunch Trump loyalist, was meant to automatically disappear after 24 hours. Captions visible while it was live read 'I am committed to proving my innocence. But I need your help' and noted that he 'always had Trump's back. Will you have mine?' according to CNBC. The 'framed' image was posted alongside these other two images, which shilled for his merchandise line and also asked for money for his legal defense fund Stone also promoted t-shirts and sweatshirts bearing the slogan 'Roger Stone Did Nothing Wrong.' The 'Who Framed Roger Stone' post was nestled among his commercial pitches. Judge Jackson's gag order covered media interviews, publishing and all social media. She had earlier handed down a more permissive order, permitting Stone to talk publicly about his case as long as he avoided the area immediately around the courthouse in Washington. Jackson quickly superseded that with a new order after Stone posted a photo of her with a rifle crosshair pictured next to her head. Stone is a longtime Trump ally. They are pictured together here in October 1999 The Instagram posts come just two days after the judge questioned Stone's lawyers about his book (left) which was due out on March 1 and a possible violation of his gag order. Stone has posted the Who Framed Roger Rabbit image in the past Stone was taken into custody in January, as seen in here in this surveillance camera image Stone is currently out on a $250,000 bond after pleading not guilty to seven charges Stone's gag order was ordered after he posted this image of judge Amy Berman Jackson with a rifle crosshair next to her head 'I’m not giving you another chance,' Jackson said after Stone delivered a string of apologies. 'I have serious doubts about whether you have learned any lesson at all.' 'The defendant may not speak publicly about the case. Period,' she ruled. 'He may not comment about the case indirectly.' 'Defendant may not speak publicly about the investigation or the case or anyone participating in the investigation or case, period. You apparently need clear boundaries so here they are.' The judge also prohibited him from talking about Special Counsel Robert Mueller's larger Russia investigation, and blocked him from using 'surrogates, family members, spokespersons, representatives, or volunteers' to speak publicly on his behalf. Jackson said she would jail Stone until his trial on charges of obstruction of justice, lying to Congress and witness tampering if she defies her new gag order. 'Violation of this order will be a basis for revoking your bond and detaining you pending trial,' she scolded. 'This is not baseball. There will be no third chance. If you cannot abide by this, I will be forced to change your surroundings so you have no temptations.' Jackson questioned Stone's lawyers on Friday about why they failed to tell her about Stone's book release, suggesting it could constitute a violation of her order. Stone was arrested on January 25 at his home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, during a pre-dawn FBI raid. He has pleaded not guilty, and posted a $250,000 bond in January. The case surrounds conversations he may have had during the 2016 election season about WikiLeaks and emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman. Neither representatives for Mueller nor Stone have commented about the Instagram post yet. All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility