A New York woman is seeking $2 million in damages from the New York Mets after she claims that she was barred from entering Citi Field while wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat, the New York Post reported Saturday.
Aura Moody filed a lawsuit earlier this month after she told the outlet that she had been denied entry into Citi Field on August 14 after a staff member had said she was not allowed in with the hat which had the slogan of former President Donald Trump’s campaign.
“This country is supposed to be the beacon of freedom for all,” she told The Post.
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Moody said she had been attending the Mets’ home game against the Oakland Athletics with several members of the Queens Village Republican Club. She and another member were told the caps were “too political” and could not be brought into the stadium at all, despite her making her First Amendment pleas.
But Moody claimed that when she finally reached her seat after taking the hat back to the car, she saw that other White members of her group were inside wearing MAGA attire.
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She is accusing the baseball organization of “racial discrimination and political retaliation” and “reputational harm,” The Post reported, citing court documents.
The Mets did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment, but a spokesperson told The Post back in August that the employee had been “mistaken about our attire policy.”
The spokesperson added that the Mets were planning to reach out and apologize to Moody and invite her back to the stadium.
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Earlier this week, the Arizona Cardinals apologized to a woman who had been told she had to remove her MAGA hat before entering State Farm Stadium to attend Sunday’s game against the Los Angeles Rams.
“In an isolated incident at Sunday’s game, a stadium security member misunderstood a policy on prohibited items. Like most venues, ‘signage, posters, flags, or displays that are….political in nature’ are not permitted. However, that did not apply in this instance. Moving forward we will work to provide clarity to all stadium personnel in these situations. We have also reached out to the individual involved to communicate that their experience was not consistent with our policies and practices and to apologize for that,” the statement read.
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