Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 22
DOJ Probes Brooklyn Coffee Shop Over Refund to Rep. Dan Goldman, Citing Anti-Bias Law
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 22

DOJ Probes Brooklyn Coffee Shop Over Refund to Rep. Dan Goldman, Citing Anti-Bias Law

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 22

Summary

  • Harmeet Dhillon said the Justice Department has opened a civil-rights investigation into Brooklyn’s Poetica Coffee after the shop refunded Rep. Dan Goldman and said it would have turned him away over his support for Israel.
  • The now-deleted Facebook post told Goldman never to return, called him a “genocide enabler,” and said the shop does not serve “racists, fascists, homophobes” or people like him—language DOJ says could signal illegal discrimination in a public accommodation.
  • Goldman said the barista had been kind to him and his 7-year-old daughter, and he hoped the worker kept the tip; the shop later said the refund was the barista’s idea and told the New York Post, “We stand against genocide.”
  • Mark Treyger of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York said the episode should be reviewed under city and state human-rights laws, arguing it turned a coffee purchase into a test tied to Jewish identity and Middle East politics.
  • The dispute lands as Goldman faces a Democratic primary challenge from former city Comptroller Brad Lander and has intensified scrutiny of whether anti-Israel activism can cross into unlawful religious or national-origin discrimination.

Insights

When a coffee shop denies service over politics, where does free speech end and a federal crime begin?
Can a customer's political support for a country be legally separated from their religious or ethnic identity?