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Louisville coffee shop faces complaint over religious discrimination


March 26, 2026, 1:08 p.m. ET

A Heine Brothers Coffee location in front of Mid City Mall.
  • A former Heine Brothers Coffee employee filed a federal discrimination complaint, claiming she was fired for discussing her Christian beliefs.
  • The employee, Paige Rogers, alleges she was questioned by co-workers about her faith before sharing her views on sin and same-sex relationships.
  • Heine Brothers Coffee initially cited violation of its respectful workplace policy for the termination, then later cited other performance issues.

A former Heine Brothers Coffee employee claims she was fired for talking about her Christian beliefs at work after being asked about them by two co-workers, according to a federal discrimination complaint filed March 24.

The complaint comes as other allegations of religious discrimination receive national attention, including accusations against an instructor at the University of Oklahoma who was removed after she gave a failing grade to a student who cited her religious beliefs in an essay about gender rights, according to USA TODAY.

Mike Mays, co-founder of Heine Brothers Coffee, did not immediately respond to requests to comment.

First Liberty Institute, a nonprofit legal organization focused on religious freedom, and the law firm Sturgill Turner filed the charge of discrimination with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on behalf of Paige Rogers, a sophomore at Boyce College in Louisville. In the complaint, Rogers alleges she was fired from Heine Brothers in October 2025 after sharing her views on marriage and same-sex relationships with her fellow employees during a shift on Oct. 1.

“I worked a 4-hour closing shift with two coworkers who I had not worked with before,” Rogers wrote. “During this shift, my co-workers asked me about my religious beliefs, and I answered respectfully and honestly.”

Paige Rogers, a sophomore at Boyce College, alleges she was fired from Heine Brothers Coffee after expressing her religious beliefs at work.

After disclosing she attended the Christian college, Rogers said someone asked if she was waiting until marriage to have sex, which made her uncomfortable. She said her co-workers continued to ask her questions about her religious beliefs throughout the shift, which prompted her to share “how God had saved me and changed my life.” In response, a co-worker asked Rogers if she would have to stop loving her two romantic partners if she became a Christian, the complaint states.



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