KKK Act lawsuit over police non-response to ‘Trump Train’ convoy surrounding Biden-Harris campaign bus ends with training for whole department

Trump Train exhibit

Trump Train convoy pictured on Oct. 30, 2020 (exhibit from court documents).

A federal judge has now unsealed a lengthy opinion explaining why “Trump Train” participants are heading towards trial in a Ku Klux Klan Act lawsuit filed over the October 2020 surrounding of a Biden-Harris bus on I-35 in Texas, writing that a “reasonable jury” could find “force, intimidation, or threat[s]” were used to “interfere with Plaintiffs’ rights to support or advocate for their candidates for President and Vice President” and that the claim can survive without a “showing of racial or class-based animus.”

U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman last week denied summary judgment motions that were filed by defendants Eliazar Cisneros, Joeylynn Mesaros, Robert Mesaros, and Dolores Park, siding with KKK Act, civil conspiracy, and civil assault plaintiffs Wendy Davis — a Democratic former member of the Texas Senate — former Biden-Harris campaign staffer David Gins, and bus driver Tim Holloway, and setting the stage for a September trial, nearly four years after the incident that gave rise to the case.

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