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Waitress says she was fired for wearing political bracelet

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Danielle Rowe of Island Lake (left) talks to Megan Geller of Woodstock on Saturday. Gellar started a protest on Route 14 in Crystal Lake after, she says, she was fired from Outback Steakhouse for wearing a bracelet. (Lance Booth – lbooth@shawmedia.com)

CRYSTAL LAKE – Tea party members, conservative bloggers and radio hosts are rallying in support of a Woodstock waitress who says she was fired from the Crystal Lake Outback Steakhouse for wearing a political bracelet and admitting tea party sentiments.

Twenty-three-year-old Megan Geller of Woodstock said that a couple dining at the restaurant in early October took offense to her bright yellow bracelet with the words “Don’t Tread On Me” printed on it.

Outback’s Chief Legal Officer Joseph Kadow said Geller was fired for her inattention to customers that evening.

“Megan Geller was not let go because of her tea party bracelet,” Kadow said in a statement to the Northwest Herald. “On the night in question two separate tables complained about her lack of attention.”

When the manager spoke to Geller about these complaints, she responded by yelling at him with a hostile attitude, and that led to her termination, Kadow said.

Geller says she told the diners her mother, Tonya Franklin, gave her the bracelet after Franklin received it at a tea party event. Those last three words incensed the couple, who then asked for the manager, Geller said.

Holding signs and waving American flags and yellow “Don’t Tread On Me” banners, a weekend protest outside the restaurant was held against what demonstrators called a violation of Geller’s free speech rights.

Conservative bloggers and radio hosts also have spread Geller’s story.

“They stirred up the wrong hornet’s nest and messed with the wrong mama,” Franklin said at the protest Saturday. “When mamas get mad, mamas get to work.”

Megan said she feigned ignorance when the customers questioned the bracelet’s meaning.

“I didn’t want to talk politics at work,” she said.

Geller claims she wore the bracelet “for months” with no prior warning from restaurant management and was never asked to remove the bracelet.

“She was not fired because a customer complained about her bracelet,” Kadow said. “That would have simply been handled by asking her to take off the bracelet.”

Documents from the Illinois Department of Employment Security provided by Geller state that she was fired for misconduct, but she should not have been denied unemployment benefits.

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