FORT WORTH, Texas — A video showing pro-Trump supporters at a polling location has gone viral on Twitter, prompting the Fort Worth Police Department to address community concerns. In a statement released on Nov. 3, the department says officers responded to the scene to “prevent any escalation between the two groups.”

“A group of President Trump supporters in vehicles began driving up and down in front of the location while honking their horns and displaying pro-Trump flags from their vehicles,” said Fort Worth Police in a statement.

The incident took place Oct. 28, around 3 p.m. in the 3200 block of Miller Ave. at the Griffin-Poly Sub-Courthouse, a designated polling location. David Kimball, the man who posted the video, described the area as one highly populated by Black people.  The video has been viewed more than four million times receiving at least 53,000 retweets.

“Yesterday, a pro-Trump caravan escorted by Fort Worth Police tried to intimidate voters by driving through a polling station in a predominantly Black neighborhood,” Kimball wrote on Twitter. “But, the community wasn’t having it.”

In a separate incident on Oct. 30, officers, along with Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office deputies, responded to the intersection of East Berry and Miller Ave. where a truck driver bearing pro-Trump flags attempting to turn was met with several people on foot. Video surveillance of the interaction was caught on a traffic cam and posted to YouTube by the department.

“The truck continued southbound on Miller Ave. until being stopped again by a larger group of individuals,” said Fort Worth Police in a statement. “In an effort to de-escalate the situation, officers entered the crowd to allow the surrounded vehicle to exit the area without further altercation. At no time were Fort Worth police officers escorting vehicles into any areas to allow voter intimidation.”

The nearly five-minute-long video shows the pickup truck enter the intersection where authorities say the driver was blocked by unknown people on foot including those who were armed.

“The Fort Worth Police Department is prepared to respond quickly to issues at any polling sites and will continue to ensure all of our residents’ free speech and voting rights are upheld without fear or intimidation,” said the department in a press release.