President Donald Trump‘s legal team is pushing back against efforts by the British Broadcasting Corporation to obtain extensive January 6-related records in a $10 billion defamation lawsuit, arguing that the broadcaster is attempting to turn the case into a broad examination of the Capitol attack rather than a dispute over media editing.
The clash centers on Trump’s lawsuit over “Trump: A Second Chance,” a Panorama documentary that the BBC later acknowledged created a misleading impression by combining portions of Trump’s January 6, 2021 speech out of sequence. According to Trump, the editing falsely suggested he had directly called for violent action during the events leading up to the attack on the U.S. Capitol.
As the case moves through federal court, the BBC has sought access to a wide range of documents connected to January 6. The broadcaster argues that such evidence is relevant because Trump must prove the documentary’s portrayal was false. In court filings, the defendants contend that discovery could reveal information about Trump’s intent, knowledge, and mindset when he delivered his speech near the White House.
“[H]e cannot now prevent Defendants from seeking records that would shed light on his true knowledge, intent, and state of mind in delivering his speech at the Ellipse,” the defendants argued.
The BBC previously asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit entirely, maintaining that Trump failed to establish jurisdiction and did not adequately state a legal claim. The broadcaster has also issued 47 third-party subpoenas seeking records related to the events that followed the “Stop the Steal” rally on January 6, 2021. Trump’s attorneys say many of those materials overlap with evidence gathered during former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s now-dismissed federal prosecution concerning January 6.
In a recent filing, attorney Alejandro Brito criticized the scope of the broadcaster’s requests and said they go far beyond the issues raised in the complaint.
“Defendants have engaged in excessive and impermissibly broad discovery efforts in such a manner that it distracts from the core issues in dispute in this case,” the filing said, accusing the BBC of “attempting to distort the allegations in the Complaint in order to unnecessarily expand the scope of discovery into a sweeping inquiry into January 6th, post-election challenges, government investigations, congressional productions, call logs, calendars, and unrelated litigation, thereby needlessly increasing the cost of litigation.”
Trump’s lawyers argue that civil discovery rules are designed to prevent defendants from transforming a media-defamation dispute into a broader proceeding focused on the Capitol attack.
“As reflected by Plaintiff’s precise allegations in the Complaint, it is Defendants’ actions in splicing and distorting President Trump’s January 6, 2021, speech that is at issue in this case,” the reply went on.
A hearing addressing the discovery dispute has been rescheduled for July 21.
The disagreement comes as Trump faces discovery-related challenges in several other lawsuits.
Earlier the same day, attorneys representing members of the Pulitzer Prize Board expressed frustration during a hearing in a separate Florida defamation case brought by Trump. Defense counsel argued that Trump had not provided written discovery responses or documents while simultaneously requesting additional time.
During that hearing, Senior 19th Judicial Circuit Judge Robert Pegg emphasized that Trump’s position as president does not exempt him from standard court procedures.
“There’s no exemption just because he’s a president, even though obviously got important duties to do,” Senior 19th Judicial Circuit Judge Robert Pegg summed up.
The discovery dispute with the BBC also follows developments in another Trump-related legal battle. Last week, Trump’s attorneys announced a settlement in litigation involving his niece, Mary Trump. That case gained new momentum in May when a New York appellate court ruled that Mary Trump was entitled to seek documents she argued could support claims that she was fraudulently induced into a 2001 family settlement agreement following the death of Fred Trump Sr.
At the same time, another federal court is preparing to address discovery issues in a lawsuit filed by the American Bar Association against the Executive Office of the President. The organization alleges government actions were intended to “muzzle” attorneys through intimidation, adding yet another legal proceeding in which discovery obligations are expected to play a central role.
Read More: Trump Unveils $17.5B Nuclear Loan Program to Fast-Track 10 New Reactors
