A New York state judge lifted a stay on Monday that had temporarily blocked Donald Trump's niece from publishing a book offering an unflattering look at the U.S. president and his family.
Justice Hal Greenwald of the state Supreme Court in Poughkeepsie, New York, denied the request to stop publication and canceled the temporary restraining order he issued on June 30 against Mary Trump and her publisher, Simon & Schuster, at the request of Robert Trump, the brother of the president.
Simon & Schuster was due to release the book on Tuesday.
Robert Trump said previously that the release of "Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man" would violate a confidentiality agreement tied to the estate of his father, Fred Trump Sr., who died in 1999. Mary Trump, a trained psychologist, is Fred Trump's granddaughter.
"Notwithstanding that the Book has been published and distributed in great quantities, to enjoin Mary L. Trump at this juncture would be incorrect and serve no purpose," Greenwald said in his decision.
"It would be moot. ... To quote United States v. Bolton, 2020, 'By the looks of it the horse is not just out of the barn, it is out of the country,'" he wrote.
Mary Trump's attorney, Theodore Boutrous, said in a statement: "The court got it right in rejecting the Trump family's effort to squelch Mary Trump's core political speech on important issues of public concern."
Lawyers for Robert Trump could not immediately be reached for comment. The book's publication comes as the Republican president seeks a second term in the Nov. 3 election. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany has described it as a "book of falsehoods."
Mary Trump applies her training in psychology to conclude in the book that the president likely suffers from narcissism and other clinical disorders - and was boosted to success by a father who fueled those traits.
She writes of a “malignantly dysfunctional family” dominated by a patriarch, Fred Trump, who showed little interest in his five children other than grooming an heir for his real-estate business.
Ultimately, he settled on Donald, she wrote, deciding that his second son’s “arrogance and bullying” would come in handy at the office, and encouraged it.