Texas city settles lawsuit over police response to Trump supporters surrounding Biden bus in 2020

FILE - Then-Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis waves to supporters after making her concession speech, Nov. 4, 2014, in Fort Worth, Texas. In a settlement revealed Wednesday, Oct. 18, 2023, city of San Marcos, Texas, officials agreed to pay $175,000 to former Texas state Sen. Davis and three others who were harassed by supporters of former president Donald Trump while campaigning for President Joe Biden in 2020, according to a legal settlement. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, File)

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) 鈥 A Texas city on Wednesday agreed to a $175,000 settlement with passengers on one of President Joe Biden's campaign buses in 2020, including Democrat Wendy Davis, who accused police of ignoring their calls for help after a caravan of Donald Trump supporters surrounded them on a highway.

The episode took place days before the November election as the bus approached Austin. Video that circulated widely on social media at the time showed trucks with large Trump flags driving close to the bus, which had campaign surrogates and staffers on board but not the candidates.

, a former state senator who ran for Texas governor in 2014, and the other passengers accused San Marcos police of ignoring 鈥渁cts of violent political intimidation鈥 and abdicating their responsibility by not sending an escort despite multiple 911 calls made from the bus. Under the settlement, the City of San Marcos also agreed to give officers additional training that includes principles of giving 鈥渋ndividuals a voice" and being neutral in decision-making.

"The intimidation we experienced on the highway that day and the threat to our safety, simply for engaging in the political process and supporting the candidate of our choosing, should never happen in this country,鈥 Davis said in a statement.

San Marcos City Manager Stephanie Reyes said the city continues to deny many of the allegations in the lawsuit. However, she said the response by police that day did not reflect the department鈥檚 standards 鈥渇or conduct and attention to duty.鈥

鈥淐itizens and visitors to the City of San Marcos should have confidence in the San Marcos Police Department, and a review of this event has better positioned the Department to more fully meet the community鈥檚 needs and expectations," she said.

Filings in the lawsuit included text messages and transcripts of 911 calls. The lawsuit alleged that city officials and police violated an 1871 federal law often called the 鈥淜u Klux Klan Act,鈥 originally designed to stop political violence against Black people. The law has also been cited in lawsuits following .

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