SAN ANTONIO – The San Antonio City Council on Thursday is expected to settle a federal lawsuit filed by a senior citizen who said he was beaten by two officers of the San Antonio Police Department while he was suffering from a diabetic episode.

The federal lawsuit, filed by Thomas Mathieu, 73, was settled during mediation in August, according to court records obtained by the KSAT 12 Defenders.

An ordinance approving the settlement amount of $225,000 is on the council agenda Thursday.

Diabetic man, 73, nears settlement with city in SAPD beating lawsuit https://t.co/qVTFa5367z — Dillon Collier (@dilloncollier) October 3, 2017

According to the lawsuit, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas in June 2015, Mathieu was suffering a diabetic episode on Jan. 13, 2014, when he pulled over at Loop 410 and Evers Road.

Officers Juan Campacos and Patrick Thomas, named as co-defendants in the lawsuit, arrived on the scene and attempted to pull Mathieu out of the vehicle, the lawsuit said.

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A "scared and confused" Mathieu pulled away from Campacos, who repeatedly punched Mathieu in the face, the lawsuit said.

Campacos and Thomas then took Mathieu and "threw him face down on the ground," the lawsuit said.

Mathieu then turned over on his back, and Campacos "once again began striking Mr. Mathieu numerous times," the lawsuit said.

Campacos repeatedly told Mathieu, "I don't want to hit you no more," the lawsuit said.

The officers were then able to determine that Mathieu was diabetic and that EMS should respond to the scene, the lawsuit said.

Mathieu suffered trauma to the chest, abdomen and shoulder, the lawsuit said. He also suffered from swelling and numerous bruises and lacerations to his head, back, chest, abdomen and extremities and two fractured ribs, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit accused both officers of violating Mathieu's civil rights, using excessive force and claimed the city inadequately trained the officers.

The Defenders, which has tracked all SAPD officer suspensions since November 2013, has no record of either officer being suspended for the incident.

The city's Human Resources Department confirmed Tuesday afternoon that both officers remain employed by SAPD and are assigned to downtown bike patrol.

"He's happy to see this, that he doesn't have to relive this again," said Mathieu's attorney Christopher Gale via telephone Tuesday.

Gale said SAPD has recently instituted new policies for how officers should handle people who are possibly suffering from diabetic episodes.

Gale declined to release other details of the settlement until after it is finalized.