Fraternity Accuses Restaurant Of Canceling Event Because Members Are Black

“This is 2018, and this is just not acceptable,” an attorney representing the Alabama fraternity chapter said.

A predominantly black fraternity in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, is suing a local restaurant it says refused  to rent an event space to members because, they were told, “we’ve had problems with your kind before.”

The Tuscaloosa Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi filed a racial discrimination lawsuit in U.S. District Court on June 27 accusing the Cypress Inn of two counts of racial discrimination stemming from February, when the group attempted to rent a pavilion, according to Al.com.

The complaint accuses the restaurant of not offering the same services to the predominantly black organization that it would provide to white customers.

The suit claims the alumni group planned a social event and fundraiser at the Inn for Feb. 23 and paid a $1,500 reservation fee, according to the Tuscaloosa News.

However, the Cypress Inn canceled the event on Feb. 6 and refunded the deposit after meeting with chapter President Clifton Warren.

He said he went to the restaurant to make final arrangements only to have a staff member tell him that, due to security concerns, the inn would no longer host the event, according to CNN.

The lawsuit says the staff member, a white woman, told Warren she hadn’t known his organization was an “all black” group.

Warren said he explained that the fraternity’s membership consisted of “African-American professionals and business leaders,” and he offered to pay for additional security and to assume liability.

Despite that, the restaurant still refused, and Warren told CNN that the restaurant’s owner, Renea Henson, told him, “We’ve had problems with your kind before.”

The group ended up holding its event at another location, but the change of venue caused the fraternity to lose money from the event, which was supposed to raise funds for local mentoring programs, according to the lawsuit.

The restaurant insists the allegations of discrimination “are completely untrue,” and released a statement to The Associated Press on Tuesday:

“Our outside security firm recommended against hosting the party because the fraternity was proposing to sell tickets to the public and our security firm strongly recommended against hosting that type party out of concern for public safety.

“We look forward to presenting the complete facts to the Court. We are confident we will prevail.”

The fraternity chapter seeks monetary damages as well as an injunction barring the restaurant from discriminating in the future.

“This is 2018, and this is just not acceptable,” Roderick T. Cooks, an attorney representing the chapter, told CNN. “There’s no place for it, especially here in this state, where sensitivity should be heightened to this kind of thing.”

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Before You Go

18 Famous Historically Black College and University Alumni
Common(01 of18)
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Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr. (aka "Common," and formerly "Common Sense") attended Florida A&M University earning a degree in business administration before some recognition by The Source magazine propelled his career into rap and acting. (credit:Getty)
Toni Morrison(02 of18)
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This Nobel Prize-winning author of such esteemed classics as Song of Solomon and Beloved graduated from Howard University with a degree in English in 1953. (credit:Getty)
Rev. Jesse Jackson(03 of18)
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The civil rights activist often regarded as among the most important of black leaders got his start at the University of Illinois, but not before transferring to and graduating from North Carolina A&T in 1964. Add to that, Jackson earned an honorary theological doctorate from the Chicago Theological Seminary and a Master of Divinity Degree years after dropping out thanks to his prior credits and life experience. (credit:AP)
Sean Combs(04 of18)
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While Sean "Puffy/P. Diddy/Diddy" Combs was attending Howard, he also interned at Uptown records, commuting on the weekends from Washington D.C. to New York City. Not officially graduated, he dropped out of school to pursue music full-time, but that's OK: According to Forbes, he's estimated at $550 million in net worth as of 2012. (credit:Getty)
Samuel L. Jackson(05 of18)
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Jackson was originally a marine biology major at Morehouse College before switching his focus to acting. (credit:AP)
Colbert I. King(06 of18)
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A Howard graduate in government studies, King used his writing prowess to earn a Pulitzer Prize during his tenure as columnist for the Washington Post, of which he served as deputy editor for its editorial page until 2007. King is now a frequent panelist on ABC's Inside Washington. (credit:washingtonpost.com)
Jerry Rice(07 of18)
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The Mississippi Valley State graduate has since become recognized as not only the greatest wide receiver in NFL history, but among the greatest at any position--winning three Super Bowls with the San Francisco 49ers, as well as an AFC Championship with the Oakland Raiders. (credit:Getty)
Keshia Knight Pulliam(08 of18)
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Pulliam, who played Rudy Huxtable on The Cosby Show, graduated Spelman in 2001. While in college, she was a member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. (credit:Getty)
Taraji P. Henson(09 of18)
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As a theatre arts major at Howard University, Academy Award-nominated actress Taraji P. Henson worked as a secretary at the Pentagon to pay the bills. (credit:AP)
Evelynn H. Hammonds(10 of18)
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Earning her first degree in physics from Spelman in 1976, Hammonds went on to accumulate degrees from Georgia Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Harvard, ultimately returning to the latter alma mater to head the college in 2008 as Dean. Through her work for equal rights for blacks and women, Hammonds' writing on science with regard to gender and race is often cited in greater academic circles. (credit:Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff)
Herman Cain(11 of18)
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Cain, who threw his hat in the ring for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination, graduated Morehouse in 1967. He studied mathematics. (credit:AP)
Pam Oliver(12 of18)
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Seen on the sidelines of many NBA and NFL games, the ESPN, Fox Sports and TNT reporter first got her feet wet graduating with a degree in broadcast journalism from Florida A&M University in 1984. (credit:Getty)
Spike Lee(13 of18)
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Shelton "Spike" Lee got his BA in Mass Communication from Morehouse in 1979, where he also lensed his first student film, Last Hustle in Brooklyn. (credit:AP)
Alice Walker(14 of18)
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Pulitzer Prize-winner Walker entered Spelman College in 1961. After two years there, she transferred to Sarah Lawrence in New York to finish her education. (credit:AP)
Wanda Sykes(15 of18)
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Sykes attended Hampton University. After graduating in 1986, she worked at the National Security Agency for five years. (credit:Getty)
Leon Dash(16 of18)
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Dash, a Howard graduate, is a former reporter of the Washington Post and won a Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism for his eight-part story on a woman and her family's struggle in the projects of Washington, D.C.—a piece also recognized as one of the best 100 in 20th century American journalism by NYU's journalism department.Dash is also a founder of the National Association of Black Journalists. (credit:illinois.edu)
Erykah Badu(17 of18)
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Erica Abi Wright (better known as the First Lady of Neo-Soul, Erykah Badu) studied theatre at Grambling State University and was even as campus queen before she dropped out. (credit:AP)
Oprah Winfrey(18 of18)
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Winfrey's broadcasting career got a major boost while she was still a student at Tennessee State University. While in college, she was offered a job as an anchor at the local CBS affiliate. She took the position after a teacher told her broadcasting jobs were "the reason people go to college." (credit:Getty)