CLEVELAND (AP) " The city of Cleveland and a civil rights organization have reached a settlement in a lawsuit over the city's rules governing protests and marches during Republican National Convention next month, according to court documents Friday.
A judge Thursday said the city's protest regulations would unconstitutionally infringe on people's right to free expression, and he ordered both sides to negotiate a settlement with another federal judge acting as mediator.
The second judge filed an order Friday that said the two sides had come to an agreement and would be executing a settlement "expeditiously."
Steve David, a spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union, which brought the lawsuit, declined to release details of the settlement until it is finalized, which is likely to happen Monday. A message seeking comment was left with a city spokesman.
The ACLU sued the city this month on behalf of a homeless advocacy group and two groups planning to hold protests and rallies on July 18 " the first day of the four-day convention. The lawsuit said the city's designated parade route for protest marches was unreasonable because three-quarters of the route spans a long bridge over the Cuyahoga River valley and is limited to times when convention delegates wouldn't be at Quicken Loans Arena, the convention venue.