Gregorys Coffee CEO accused of ‘overt' discrimination against Black employees and women
The eponymous founder of a successful chain of coffee shops denigrated and mocked Black employees, paid them thousands less than their white colleagues, and in one instance, fired an assistant manager for no reason other than the color of her skin, the company's former human resources director alleges in a new lawsuit.
Jessica Day, the onetime VP of People at Gregorys Coffee, contends she witnessed numerous racist outbursts by CEO Gregory Zamfotis, and claims she warned the 43-year-old father of three that he was going to eventually land himself in serious legal trouble. But when he ignored Day's advice, her complaint says she had no choice but to resign, telling Zamfotis, 'point blank, in writing,' that she was leaving because of the 'overt bias, favoritism and discrimination within the organization as a direct result of you, your conduct, your words, and your actions.'
On one occasion, Zamfotis 'went on a tirade' about a Black team member, telling Day that he 'was incensed… [the woman] had been hired because she was missing a tooth,' according to the suit, which was filed Tuesday in New York State Supreme Court and obtained by The Independent.
It says Zamfotis then 'stood up in the meeting and engaged in an offensive caricature of 'Black' behavior,' only cutting short his rant when Day intervened.
In an email on Tuesday, Day's attorney Seth Rafkin told The Independent that he does 'not discuss details of cases out of respect for the judicial process.' However, Rafkin said, 'We recognize that when an individual takes legal action against an employer it requires a great deal of grit and courage. Our client and our firm are hopeful that this case will address not only her claims but also help others dealing with similar circumstances.'
Zamfotis, who dubs loyal customers 'Gregulars,' did not respond to a request for comment.
Gregorys, a New York City-based chain, has 50 locations across multiple states. The stylish Zamfotis went to law school but chose coffee instead, and has appeared in the pages of Esquire, GQ, The New York Times, and, most recently, on the CBS Evening News. The chain opened its first store in 2006, and now has shops as far afield as Texas and Minnesota.
Day, who had previously been an executive at Starbucks, began her tenure at Gregorys in June 2022, and soon observed 'blatant violations' by Zamfotis of labor and discrimination laws, according to her lawsuit.
Among the first issues she confronted was Zamfotis's refusal to allow a Black assistant manager to return to work following what Day's suit describes as a 'lawful leave of absence.'
'Zamfotis' reasoning was that she was a 'bad' employee,' the complaint states. 'When [Day] pushed Zamfotis for actual information demonstrating poor performance, the most he could muster was that he did not think she smiled enough. Yet, an actual store manager that this employee worked under ranked her as a top employee and described her as 'amazing.' And indeed, there was not a shred of documentation of any performance issues.'
Day pushed back, telling Zamfotis that the company had a legal obligation to reinstate the manager, according to the complaint.
'Begrudgingly, the most Zamfotis would allow was for the employee to be sent to a different location under the pretense of her having to be 'retrained,'' it says.
Zamfotis later 'became fixated' on the chain's only Black executive after she took medical leave for a condition that required a hospital stay, Day's complaint continues. He described her 'as another 'bad' employee,' the complaint goes on, and says Zamfotis 'even wanted to ensure that the employee would not receive any compensation while she was on leave, despite the fact that she was entitled to use paid leave.'
Black employees were also subject to significant pay disparities, according to Day, whose complaint points to a white, male barista whose $75,000 salary — which was authorized specially by Zamfotis — was $20,000 more than that of the barista's manager, a Black woman who held that store's top position. As before, Day informed Zamfotis that this almost certainly constituted a legal violation, but, her complaint states, he 'would not relent.'
The white barista was later handpicked by Zamfotis to work as a trainer, denying other employees from competing for a chance at the position, which came with a pay bump, according to Day's complaint.
'By this point, this white male barista was being paid more than the black employee in charge of Gregorys entire coffee roasting operation and who had been with the company for more than nine years,' the complaint alleges.
Zamfotis also treated women like second-class citizens, ignoring disturbing reports of workplace harassment while protecting the harassers, according to Day. Her complaint says a Gregorys district manager had been the subject of repeated sexual harassment allegations by multiple women, but 'took no action' and stepped in to ensure no documentation about it was placed in the employee's file. In another, similar case involving a different male manager, instead of reprimanding the alleged harasser, Zamfotis had him fire the employee who said she had been harassed, according to Day's complaint.
By mid-December 2023, Day had seen enough, her complaint states. It says she 'repeatedly' told Zamfotis that 'he was engaging in 'textbook examples of what is against the law,'' and that he was 'going to get the sh*t sued out [of] you.' But, as before, Zamfotis didn't listen, according to the complaint.
'Day decided that she could no longer work at a company where her protests were ignored, her department was being used or bypassed to effect unlawful conduct, and where discrimination and sexism permeated the environment,' the complaint says.
Roughly 18 months after Day took the job at Gregorys, she resigned.
Day's suit says she has suffered emotional distress, humiliation, and mental anguish, and demands lost back wages and benefits, lost future earnings and benefits, and compensatory damages to be determined by a jury, plus attorneys' fees.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Musk was Trump's tweeter-in-chief. Now he's using X against him
Elon Musk's X profile is like a window into his psyche: an inescapable stream of consciousness where impulsive tweets reveal his unfiltered thoughts and shifting moods. Musk harnessed his social media platform to propel Donald Trump to the White House, feeding anti-Democrat content and election conspiracy theories to his followers. Now Musk is turning that same platform – home to nearly 600 million monthly users – against him. After posting earlier in the week that Trump's signature budget policy was a 'disgusting abomination' that will 'drive America into debt slavery', the billionaire is openly taunting Trump on X, even calling for his impeachment. An analysis of Musk's tweets by The Independent shows that Musk has undergone a dramatic shift in both the tone and volume of his posts since his initial support of Trump in mid-2024 to when he began distancing himself from his governmental duties earlier this year – weeks before the White House announced his Washington tenure had finished. And now the platform has chronicled the rise and fall of the world's most powerful bromance. Musk began tweeting incessantly after he publicly endorsed Trump in July last year following the first attempt on the president's life in Butler, Pennsylvania. Then, once Musk was tapped in November to lead the Department of Government Efficiency, he emerged as Trump's tweeter-in-chief. Despite his new White House commitments, not to mention running six companies – including SpaceX, Tesla, and X itself – Musk appeared more glued to his keyboard than ever, using the platform as his primary news source, and place to share his views and stir up controversy. The first 50 days of the Trump administration arguably marked Musk's most fervent display of support for the president, both in terms of tweet content and frequency. On February 7, he mused that, 'I love @realDonaldTrump as much as a straight man can love another man.' Take President's Day, February 17, his most prolific 24-hour posting spell to date. Musk posted 262 times, according to The Independent's analysis, with messages ranging from single emojis to lengthy missives attacking Democrats. All told, the posting spree equated to one message every five-and-a-half minutes, with no breaks. Musk had a busy Q1 — between January 20 and March 10, he posted 6,778 times – averaging more than 135 X posts per day. And he stayed on message, tweeting about his government-slashing force DOGE more than any other topic in that period, quickly followed by 'Trump' and 'president.' Social media analytics firms like Social Blade were forced to stop tracking tweets after X said these businesses had to pay for an Enterprise subscription, at $42,000 to $210,000 a month. The resulting gap has made transparency on X murkier than ever; and is also why The Independent could only analyze Musk's posts until mid-March. In early spring, Musk's public pledges of MAGA allegiance and trollish squibs began to slow down, and the subjects of his posts moved from Trump administration duties to his own commercial interests. Buyers of his electric vehicles protested against his shift to right-wing politics and efforts to dismantle federal departments, with Tesla's stock price plummeting, and a Rome dealership set ablaze. In April, Musk announced plans to significantly reduce his involvement with DOGE, opting to work remotely and allocate more time to Tesla. A month later, Musk's X daily posts at points reached single figures. In hindsight, it might be considered the calm before the storm. By the end of May, Musk came off the platform to deliver a gut punch to the Trump administration. He told NBC News that Trump's showpiece tax bill 'undermines' the work done by DOGE, without directly mentioning the president. Musk landed a heavy blow on Tuesday, blasting the president's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' as an 'outrageous, pork-filled, disgusting abomination.' But it was after a press conference with the German Chancellor where Trump said he was 'disappointed' with Musk's comments, that Musk went on his most destructive X rampage yet — calling Trump ungrateful, calling for his impeachment and saying he's linked to Jeffrey Epstein. And these claims get read and spread by a wide audience: his Thursday post declaring 'Trump would have lost the election' if it weren't for his support garnered nearly 15 million views in a single day. This is more than just a playground spat between the two rich powerful men, because Musk's ownership of X allows him to reach a vast audience, some of whom are skeptical of mainstream media, and control a narrative — and his posts have been known to set off market reactions, media cycles, and political waves. Those who have stuck with X, whether they are one of Musk's 220 million followers or not, have been inundated with his musings and attacks morning, noon, and night. Musk is believed to selectively issue suspensions and use algorithms to throttle foes that are critical of both him and his ventures. According to the tech news site Platformer, the self-styled 'free speech absolutist' directed a team of 80 engineers to amplify his own tweets over others, ensuring they reach vast audiences (he allegedly did the same for Trump in November). Musk has subsequently blurred the line between platform owner, political provocateur and propagandist. How will he next use X to punish the social media-reliant, legacy media-averse president?
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
UBS faces $26B in capital requirements from Swiss bank reforms, Bloomberg says
UBS (UBS) is facing as much as $26B in capital requirements to be phased over the next decade under banking reform proposals from the Swiss government, Bastian Benrath-Wright and Noele Illien of Bloomberg reports. The largest hit to the bank is set to come from a proposal that would require the company to increase the capital held at home against its stakes in foreign units to 100% from the current 60%. The government estimates this will force UBS to add as much as $23B in capital to its Swiss-based main unit. Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter Published first on TheFly – the ultimate source for real-time, market-moving breaking financial news. Try Now>> See Insiders' Hot Stocks on TipRanks >> Read More on UBS: Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue UBS Lowers Price Target on Berkshire Hathaway Stock (BRK.B) as 'Buffett Premium' Ends UBS Group AG Faces Sell Rating Amid Regulatory Uncertainty and Capital Challenges UBS call volume above normal and directionally bullish UBS upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies Unusually active option classes on open May 27th Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why Pan American Silver Corp. (PAAS) Soared On Thursday
We recently published a list of . In this article, we are going to take a look at where Pan American Silver Corp. (NYSE:PAAS) stands against other best-performing stocks on Thursday. Pan American Silver rallied for a fifth consecutive day on Thursday, jumping 7.56 percent to close at $28.60 apiece, in line with silver prices hitting a new all-time high. Silver futures rose to as high as $36.27 per troy ounce at intra-day trading on Thursday, its highest since 2012, before closing lower to $35.81 per troy ounce. Silver prices grew alongside gold, as investors' funds flocked to safer assets anew to mitigate the risks from the ongoing trade tensions between the US and China. A large drill in operation deep in a mine, surrounded by the machinery of a modern extraction site. Pan American Silver Corp. (NYSE:PAAS) is a Canada-based silver and gold miner with operations throughout the Americas. In the first quarter of the year, Pan American Silver Corp. (NYSE:PAAS) swung to a net income of $169.3 million from a $30.8 million net loss in the same period last year. Revenues increased by 28 percent to $773.2 million from $601.4 million year-on-year. Overall, PAAS ranks 9th on our list of best-performing stocks on Thursday. While we acknowledge the potential of PAAS as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns and have limited downside risk. If you are looking for an extremely cheap AI stock that is also a major beneficiary of Trump tariffs and onshoring, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data