The primary case was about whether Trump defamed her. Which was found to be true in this second case of its kind (which added actual 'physical' claims, too) through due process. The silly idiot, of course, could not help himself from compounding offence by not merely trying to publically deny it but simultaneously doing some more of the actual (legally proven) defamation. At the very least, it opens him to another appearance, but it sounds like this is already being covered by the current judgement to save time (and probably compounding the compounding).
When you're actually being prosecuted for something, you (should[1]) get your time in court to make your actual denials[2], as he did. I really don't know how Contempt Of Court works in a US context, but that's very much the kind of territory he stumbled[3] into here...
(I hope he actually pays his lawyers. They deserve reparation for all the nervous stress he has been piling upon them. If it's not the best-rewarded job in his organisation then it surely is instead the worst.)
[1] The worst exceotions to this are the poor people who don't even get that recourse. Or, from the perspective of others, those rich/powerful people who end up not needing to for other more self-serving reasons.
[2] Ideally, refutations; less ideally, repudiations. But when you're sunk by actual rebuttals then denials is all you're left with.
[3] Or ran!