U.S. Judge rejects BBC’s stay application in Trump defamation case

People walk outside the BBC Broadcasting House in London. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters

 A U.S. Judge has rejected the BBC’s application to stay ​discovery in the $10 billion lawsuit brought by U.S. President ‌Donald Trump over its editing of ​a speech that made it appear ⁠he directed supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol, court documents showed on Thursday (February 12, 2026).

Mr. Trump has accused Britain’s publicly ‌owned broadcaster of defaming him by splicing together parts of a January ‌6, 2021, speech, including one section where ‌he ⁠told supporters to march on the Capitol ⁠and another where he said “fight like hell”.

It omitted a lengthy section in which he called for peaceful protest.

Mr. Trump’s ​lawsuit alleges the ‌BBC defamed him and violated a Florida law that bars deceptive and unfair trade practices. He is seeking at least $5 billion in ‌damages for each of the lawsuit’s two ​counts.

U.S. District Judge Roy Altman on Wednesday (February 11, 2026) denied the British broadcaster’s application ⁠to stay the merits-based discovery phase, when both sides can obtain evidence from other parties in ‌the lawsuit, the documents showed.

The Judge said the BBC’s application was premature nor had it shown that it would be prejudiced if the stay was not granted. In a separate order, the Judge set a ‌two-week trial date for February 2027.

The BBC declined to ​comment.

The broadcaster has previously said it would defend the case and would seek ⁠to have the case dismissed, arguing that the court ⁠lacked jurisdiction because it did not broadcast the programme in Florida, and that ‌the president could not prove damages because he was re-elected after it aired.

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