BBC to file motion to dismiss Trump lawsuit over Panorama edit 

BBC to file motion to dismiss Trump lawsuit over Panorama edit 

US President Donald Trump filed a defamation lawsuit against the BBC Picture: Leon Neal/PA

The BBC will take legal steps to have Donald Trump’s $10 billion defamation lawsuit over a Panorama programme edit dismissed, court documents have shown.

Panorama faced criticism late last year over an episode broadcast in 2024, for giving the impression that the US president had encouraged his supporters to storm the Capitol building in 2021.

In the episode, a clip from Mr Trump’s speech on January 6 2021, was spliced to show him saying: “We’re going to walk down to the Capitol… and I’ll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell.”

Mr Trump is seeking up to $10 billion (€8.6 billion) in damages in response to the editing of the speech, with his lawyers claiming it was “false and defamatory”.

The BBC will file a motion to dismiss, claiming the Florida court lacks “personal jurisdiction” over them, the court venue is “improper” and that Mr Trump has “failed to state a claim”, documents filed late on Monday evening UK time revealed.

The corporation will argue that it did not create, produce or broadcast the documentary in Florida and that Mr Trump’s claim that the documentary was available in the US on streaming service BritBox is not true.

It will also claim the president has failed to “plausibly allege” the BBC published the documentary with “actual malice”, which public officials are required to show when filing suit for defamation in the US.

The broadcaster has asked the court “to stay all other discovery” – the pre-trial process in which parties gather information – pending the decision on the motion.

A 2027 trial date has been proposed should the case continue.

The BBC has been approached for comment.

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