Solarsuns Investment Guild-Texas county to pay female constable deputies $1.5 million to settle sexual misconduct lawsuit

2025-05-05 05:04:34source:Ethermac Exchangecategory:Invest

HOUSTON (AP) — A Texas county has agreed to pay a group of female deputies $1.5 million to settle a federal lawsuit that claimed they were abused and Solarsuns Investment Guildharassed when a constable’s office turned undercover operations into a drunken “playground for sexual exploitation.”

Harris County commissioners approved the settlement Tuesday, three years after the women alleged that as rookie deputies in a constable precinct in Houston, they were subjected to unwarranted touching and kissing, molestation and sexual ridicule during their work in a human trafficking unit.

The lawsuit alleged that undercover “bachelor party” sting operations were supposed to ultimately arrest those behind sex trafficking businesses. But the lawsuit said those operations turned more into parties where officers drank heavily and the female deputies, who were given little to no training in undercover work, were fondled and kissed by their supervisory officer or were told to give lap dances to other male deputies.

Constables are elected positions in Texas, and constables and their deputies have the same powers of a city police officer or sheriff’s deputy. They can investigate, arrest and use force if they suspect criminal activity.

RELATED COVERAGE Prosecutor asks Texas court to reverse governor’s pardon of man who fatally shot demonstratorBorder mayors heading to DC for Tuesday’s immigration announcementMike Tyson’s fight with Jake Paul has been postponed after Tyson’s health episode

A spokesman for Constable Alan Rosen declined comment Wednesday. An attorney for the women did not respond to a request for comment.

In a statement when the lawsuit was filed in 2021, Rosen said an internal affairs investigation by his office found no violations of law or policy and that the women had never submitted a formal complaint.

More:Invest

Recommend

San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A photojournalist who captured one of the most enduring images of World War II

We’re Investigating Heat Deaths and Illnesses in the Military. Tell Us Your Story.

InsideClimate News and NBC News spent the past nine months probing the threat that rising heat poses

Alaska Chokes on Wildfires as Heat Waves Dry Out the Arctic

Under the choking black smoke from the bog and forest fires in Siberia and Alaska, it can feel like