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Secret Service settles lawsuit over discrimination against black people

A Secret Service agent stands guard while two other agents close a gate after a Secret Service vehicle arrived at the home of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in Washington, Saturday, July 2, 2016. AP Photo/Cliff Owen

The Department of Homeland Security and the Secret Service have agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging racial discrimination in promotion practices by the agency that protects the president.

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More than 100 black Secret Service agents alleged in the 2000 lawsuit that they were routinely passed over for promotions in favour of less-qualified white agents.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson says in a statement released Tuesday night that he is “pleased that we are able to finally put this chapter of Secret Service history behind us.”

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The Secret Service says that while it “denies any and all liability or damages … the agreement is a means of resolving this almost two-decades-old matter.”

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READ MORE: Angry New Yorkers refuse to pay $1M per day for Trump security

The Washington Post is reporting that the agency has agreed to pay $24 million to the plaintiffs.

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