BBC Seeks Dismissal of Trump’s USD10B Lawsuit
The documentary, aired shortly before the U.S. election in November 2024, spliced excerpts from Trump’s speech to suggest he was encouraging supporters to “fight like hell” at the Capitol on January 6. The BBC contended that the film did not harm Trump’s reputation significantly, noting that he was reelected.
The U.S. president “cannot plausibly claim that the documentary harmed his reputation” since he won the election after it aired, the broadcaster’s lawyers stated in a 34-page filing submitted to the federal court for the Southern District of Florida. They further argued the case should be dismissed because the documentary was never broadcast in the U.S. by the BBC.
“In fact, no third-party distributor aired the documentary in the US,” the submission said. Blue Ant Media, which acquired North American licensing rights, confirmed its version omitted the edited speech because it was “cut down.”
The BBC also maintained that Trump’s team failed to demonstrate it “knowingly intended to create a false impression,” meaning the case does not meet the high standard of actual malice.
Trump filed the lawsuit in December 2025, seeking $5 billion in defamation damages and another $5 billion under Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act. His lawyers argued that the selective editing “could never have occurred by accident.”
The controversy surrounding the documentary prompted the resignations of two senior BBC executives, Director General Tim Davie and Head of News Deborah Turness, amid concerns about the corporation’s impartiality. The broadcaster issued an apology to Trump in November.
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