Bikers have rights, too.

That’s the case being made by twenty members of the Bandidos motorcycle gang — who are suing local and state law enforcement agencies in Texas for wrongfully arresting them following the wild shootout in Waco in 2015.

The federal lawsuit, filed nearly two years to the day of the restaurant bloodbath, claims the Waco Police Department and the Texas Department of Public Safety violated their civil rights by taking them into custody without any actual evidence that they were involved.

The case is one of at least a dozen that bikers have brought on since the broad daylight free-for-all, which left 9 dead and 20 injured.

“They’re effectively arresting them and charging them with participating in organized crime on the basis of nothing more than their membership in the Bandidos,” attorney Don Tittle, who is representing the twenty plaintiffs, told the Austin American-Statesman.

“Regardless of one’s opinion of the Bandidos, police do not have the right to arrest someone because they are a member of that club,” he said.

The bikers who filed the suit on Monday were among the 177 arrested and charged with engaging in organized crime with intent to murder following the shootout at Twin Peaks, the American-Statesman reports.

The incident on May 17, 2015 ultimately stemmed from a turf war between the Bandidos and the Cossacks Motorcycle Club, which had been waging for quite some time.

Tittle claims his clients were arrested solely because they were club members, and not because there was evidence that they took part in the clash.

“There’s not one shred of evidence of pre-planning,” he said. “There is nothing to support the narrative the police have been telling that would suggest this was a pre-planned shoot out.”

The suit asks for unspecified damages and names a number of Waco police officials.