Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

New Jersey Applebee's Fires Supervisor For Forcing Islamophobic Customer To Leave, Lawsuit Alleges

New Jersey Applebee's Fires Supervisor For Forcing Islamophobic Customer To Leave, Lawsuit Alleges
SOPA Images / Getty Images; McOmber and McOmber Law Firm
Make us preferred on Google

If you have someone making bigoted comments very loudly in a private establishment, the best thing to do is leave them alone, right?

That's the advice a former supervisor claims Applebee's wanted followed, after alleging she was fired for asking a bar patron to leave for making derogatory comments about Muslims.


Amanda Breaud filed a lawsuit over the incident.

In the lawsuit filed last week, Breaud claimed she was temporarily transferred to an Applebee's location with a "hostile work environment."

The lawsuit alleges that a senior manager of the restaurant "routinely directed racist and discriminatory language" at employees.

At one point, after an employee's uncle passed away, Breaud alleges the manager said:

"Well, this is one less black guy we have to worry about."




However that is in addition to the incident at the center of her lawsuit. On May 13, several customers complained to Breaud about a bar patron loudly making derogatory comments about Muslims.

The customer is alleged to have said things such as:

"Muslim people are disgusting,"
"Most of them are terrorists,"

...and:

"If it were up to me, none of those motherf***ers would be allowed in the country."

Breaud's lawsuit claims the bartender serving the customer participated in the conversation and did nothing to stop it.

After two other customers complained, Breaud asked the customer to leave. He was angry and yelled, but did leave the restaurant.

Breaud said several customers thanked her for removing him, with one even leaving a note on their receipt.

McOmber and McOmber Law Firm

However, after this, Breaud experienced retaliation from management and the bartender.

While the bartender only complained to other staff about losing tips from the regular customer, management from the restaurant was more active.

The general manager called Breaud to berate her for asking the customer to leave. He suggested that she should have had the customers who complained move to a different part of the restaurant.

He also claimed she couldn't stop bar patrons from "discussing religion."





Breaud couldn't take the work environment anymore, and requested to be sent back to her original restaurant. The request was denied and she was scheduled to work at the "hostile" Applebee's.

She refused the schedule and was fired, as the lawsuits states:

"...due to a false and retaliatory accusation that she had not appeared for one of her shifts."

After being fired, Breaud wrote a letter to the restaurant criticizing the work environment and her manager's coaching about the interaction.

Breaud said:

"That is not the message I want to send my guests. I want them to feel safe and leave WOWed."
"I would leave there in tears a lot of the time, honestly. I had severe anxiety. I was losing sleep...It wore me down mentally and physically the entire thing."

Ed Doherty, chairman and CEO of Doherty Enterprises, which operates the Applebee's in question, claims Breaud's allegations had nothing to do with her separation.

He instead points to Breaud missing a shift.

"We are proud that our Applebee's restaurants serve the community as an inclusive place where neighbors can come together, and that extends to both our guests and our dedicated team members."
"The allegations made are in direct contrast with the values we and our franchisees uphold every day."




Breaud's lawsuit seeks to get her job back, along with back pay and benefits. She is also calling for the defendants to have anti-discrimination and anti-retaliation training.

She said she hopes her actions encourage others to stand up to this kind of behavior.

"I'm a gay woman and I've been at the bar before or out in public and had people say things about me. A lot of my life I wish that someone would have stood up for me."
"Now that I'm able to stand up for myself, I want to stand up for other people."

More from Trending

Amy Adams
Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/Apple TV/Getty Images

Amy Adams Reveals She Saved Stabbing Victim's Life Thanks To Skills She Learned On Short-Lived TV Medical Drama

We've all heard how important it is to be a lifelong learner and to try to learn something new every single day. And if you're Amy Adams, what you learn might save someone's life someday.

While on the SmartLess podcast, Adams reflected on some of her biggest roles, like Arrival, and that one time she was on a limited series on CBS, only for the channel to cancel the medical drama after five episodes, even though it was only set to run for ten. The remaining five episodes were never released.

Keep Reading Show less
Bill Burr on The Big Podcast; Shaquille O'Neal on The Big Podcast
The Big Podcast with Shaq/YouTube

Bill Burr Epically Roasts Shaq For Claiming That The Earth Is Flat Due To His Experience On Planes

There is arguably no conspiracy theory more notorious than the idea that the Earth is flat rather than round.

Despite hard scientific evidence to prove otherwise, "flat Earthers" seem to be growing at a surprising rate.

Keep Reading Show less
Lionel Messi
Kaz Photography/Getty Images

An Accidentally NSFW Statue Of Lionel Messi Was Just Erected In Argentina—And Hoo Boy, It's A Big Yikes

Well, they don't call it "erecting a statue" for nothing, it seems!

A new statue of soccer superstar Lionel Messi has been, yes, erected in the Patagonia region of Messi's native Argentina, and with all due respect to everyone involved, it really needed a few more rounds of quality control.

Keep Reading Show less
Dwayne Johnson
VCG/VCG via Getty Images

Dwayne Johnson Sparks Debate After His Comments About Why He Stays Out Of Politics Rub Some Fans The Wrong Way

Former football player turned professional wrestler turned actor Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson is facing fan backlash over recent comments he's made about remaining an apolitical public figure when most of his fellow performers have chosen to either speak out against injustice in fascism or wholly embrace it.

In an interview with Esquire, Johnson criticized his colleagues for sharing their political views with the public.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Elizabeth Warren
CNBC

CNBC Includes Hilarious Typo In Chyron During Elizabeth Warren Interview About AI—And We're Obsessed

After Massachusetts Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren appeared on CNBC to decry the lack of AI regulations in the United States, the network misquoted her in a chyron with a typo when she discussed AI's "funky, hinky bookkeeping."

Warren, who has been working with Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal, a fellow Democrat, on legislation to address this deficit, also pointed out that the Trump administration has no regulators to speak of.

Keep Reading Show less