
Bus driver forces Black men to sit in the back or he'll call cops, MN suit says
Her refusal helped bring an end to legalized segregation on buses, among other Jim Crow-era laws.
But, on July 13, 2023, two Black men were told to sit in the back of a bus, according to a Minnesota lawsuit filed on July 7.
Two Black men boarded a Jefferson Lines bus in Fargo, North Dakota, and were instructed by the driver to sit in the back of the bus despite the company having a 'first come, first serve' policy for seats, the lawsuit said.
The two men started to argue with the driver, but he threatened to call police if the passengers did not comply, the lawsuit said.
One of the two men forced to sit in the back is now suing Jefferson Lines and the unnamed bus driver, accusing them of racial discrimination.
'Rosa Parks took a stand in 1955, refused to give up her seat, and we're not going back, not now, not ever, not in 2023, not in 2025,' the man's attorney, Samuel Savage, told McClatchy News in a phone interview.
The attorney representing Jefferson Lines did not immediately respond to McClatchy News' request for comment on July 11. A spokesperson told KARE that the company doesn't comment on active legal matters.
The plaintiff, who is seeking $50,000 in damages, sat in the back of the bus during his ride from Fargo to Crookston, Minnesota, rather than continue to argue with the driver, according to the lawsuit.
'I think in the moment, it was more of a 'I just want to get to my destination and be about my business,'' Savage said.
The two men were the only Black people on the bus on July 13, the complaint said. Other passengers were allowed to choose their seats, according to the suit.
Four days after the man's bus ride, Jefferson Lines asked the bus driver to create an incident report. The driver wrote that he asked the two Black men to sit in the back of the bus because they smelled like marijuana, the lawsuit said.
The driver was given a verbal warning for 'deviating from the policy' the next month, according to the lawsuit.
In January, the Minnesota Department of Human Rights said there was probable cause that discrimination occurred during the 2023 bus ride.
A similar incident on a Jefferson Lines bus in Minneapolis occurred in 2009 when a driver told a mother and her 3-year-old daughter to sit in the back of the bus, which she said was because they were Black, the Minnesota Star Tribune reported.
Crookston, Minnesota, is about a 70-mile drive northeast from Fargo, North Dakota.
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