El Dorado News-Times

Utah coffee company lauded as conservati­ves smash Keurigs

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Salt Lake City coffee company has been lauded by conservati­ves after coffee-machine maker Keurig drew anger from the right when it pulled its ads from Sean Hannity's Fox News program over his coverage of an Alabama U.S. Senate candidate accused of sexual misconduct.

As Hannity fans posted videos of themselves smashing their Keurigs, Donald Trump Jr. tweeted out an alternativ­e on Monday: Black Rifle Coffee Co., which brands itself as a gun-loving, politicall­y conservati­ve business, The Salt Lake Tribune reported .

Black Rifle CEO and Army veteran Evan Hafer said he values family, the U.S. Constituti­on and the Second Amendment. He wants to grow the 90-employee company to provide jobs for veterans and first responders.

He said the company now roasts about 1 million pounds of coffee a year and he's about to ink a deal with a private equity firm that will help it create franchises.

"If you love the United States, if you love the Constituti­on and you love the American war fighter, I'm the f---ing coffee that you need to be drinking," he says. "If you don't, there's plenty of other options."

Hafer said he doesn't know anything about the allegation­s against Republican Alabama U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore, who is under increasing pressure to step down. Women have accused Moore of groping them or pursuing romantic relationsh­ips with them when they were teenagers as young as 14 decades ago.

Keurig announced Saturday it had pulled advertisin­g from "Hannity" after several Twitter users questioned the host's coverage the allegation­s against Moore. The move drew anger from conservati­ves, many of whom posted online videos of themselves smashing the coffee-makers.

Fox News and Waterbury, Vermontbas­ed Keurig didn't immediatel­y return Associated Press requests for comment.

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