The federal judge overseeing former Trump adviser Roger Stone's criminal trial signaled Tuesday that she might revoke his bail, criticizing him and his lawyers for failing to tell her when she issued a gag order that his latest book – which includes slashing commentary about Special Counsel Robert Mueller – was already on sale.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson also wrote in a signed order that she believes Stone's lawyers misled her last week about the timing of the book's release as a means to generate publicity for it.

And regardless of when the book first went on sale, she wrote Tuesday, Stone 'may no longer share his views on these particular subjects with the world.'

Jackson ruled on February 21 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 or the special counsel probe that led to his criminal charges of lying to investigators, witness tampering and obstruction of justice.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller wrote Jackson on Monday to alert her that a new introduction Stone wrote to accompany his book, titled 'The Myth of Russia Collusion,' was available to the public on Amazon com.

In it, Stone complains 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 could be headed to jail next Monday after the federal judge overseeing his seven-count criminal trial said sales of a new book in which Stone calls Special Counsel Robert Mueller 'crooked' likely violate the gag order she imposed on him on February 21

Judge Amy Berman Jackson lashed out at Stone's lawyers for only telling her about Stone's new book after her gag order had been in effect for more than a week – and suggested they only notified her in order to generate more book sales

Stone's new book is a re-issue of his 2017 release with a new introduction that's available for free on Amazon and Google Books; in it Stone claims he might be 'framed' by Mueller, and clals him 'crooked'

'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.

The book is a reissue of 'The Making of the President 2016,' which Stone released in 2017, with the new introduction.

Stone's book has been for sale at Amazon since February 19, but his lawyers never told Judge Jackson about it until March 1 – more than a week after she issued her gag order

Jackson on Tuesday gave Stone until March 11 to show 'his efforts to come into compliance' with her gag order.

She told him in February that while he may continue to write and speak about other issues, he was strictly forbidden to address his criminal case in public.

'Not this case, not the people in it. Not while you’re under my supervision,' Jackson lectured Stone.

She added that she would jail him until his trial if he defied her.

'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.'

The new book was released February 19, according to Amazon. if Jackson finds Stone at fault for continuing to sell it after she issued her gag order two days later, she could order him jailed until his trial.

Stone's attorneys never told the court about the book until they asked Jackson on March 1 to 'clarify' whether her order applied to its release, saying they were asking 'in an abundance of caution.'

The books were printed before February 21, they told her, adding that '[t]he Publisher received the draft on January 14, 2019; edits were made and approved on January 15, 2019.'

They also mentioned 'the imminent general relase of the book’s contents,' a line that Jackson found misleading since the book had already been on sale for ten days.

She concluded that asking her to clarify her gag order was pointless, and may have been a public-relations stunt.

The motion, she wrote, 'was actually filed after publication [of the book] was a fait accompli.' – leaving her with the 'impression' that it 'was intended to serve as a means to generate additional publicity for the book.'

Judge Jackson warned Stone in February that she would jail him until his trial if he spoke publicly about his case, including on social media, beyond making appeals for money and proclaiming his innocence; he posted this on Sunday

She suggested that leaving the book on sale after she ordered him to remain silent about his case was disobedient.

'It does not matter when the defendant may have first formulated the opinions expressed, or when he first put them into words: he may no longer share his views on these particular subjects with the world.'

Mueller also told Jackson on Monday about an image Stone posted to Instagram that suggested Mueller 'framed' him.

'Who Framed Roger Stone,' it read, mimicking the film poster from the 1988 comedy 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit?'

Stone's version, like the WhoFramedRogerStone.com website, was a solicitation for his legal defense fund. The website went offline Monday night but can still be viewed through the Internet Archive.

Mueller told Judge Jackson on Monday about the Instagram posting, which mirrored the language in Stone's new writing.

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 ordered Stone to stop communicating publicly about his criminal case after he posted an image of her (right) with rifle crosshairs next to her head; now Stone may lose his freedom for writing that Special Counsel Robert Mueller (left) is 'crooked' and may have 'framed' him

Mueller and the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia alerted Judge Jackson on Monday about the Instagram post, and attached a copy of a new introduction Stone wrote to accompany a re-release of his 2017 book

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 rifle crosshairs pictured 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.

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