One college-level football coachâs claim of a clandestine plot to fire him might sound like the beginning of a movie, but, for Nick Rolovich, it was allegedly his lived experience.
In fact, the purported internal plan was so inculcated at Washington State University, it was dubbed the âRolo strategy,â according to Becket attorney Joe Davis, who is representing Rolovich in his legal quest against university officials he believes violated his constitutional rights to religious freedom.
âThey were implementing something that they called internally the âRolo strategy,'â Davis told CBN News of high-level executives at WSU. â[T]hey questioned [Rolovichâs] character because of his religious beliefs, they used words that arenât appropriate on family programming to describe his religious beliefs. This is really shocking stuff that should never happen in this country.â
At the center of the case, Rolovich argues, is the almighty dollar. The coach â alongside his attorneys at Becket â is appealing to the Ninth Circuit after a federal district court ruled in WSUâs favor in January.
The Catholic coach led the WSU Cougars for nearly two full seasons before he ran into what proved to be an insurmountable hurdle â one reportedly placed in front of him by college higher-ups who feared financially painful retaliation from hefty donors if Rolovich was granted an exemption to the then-nascent COVID-19 shots.
In the early days of vaccination mandates, WSU established a blind review committee, a group of people tasked with determining the sincerity of employeesâ requests for religious exemptions to the jabs.
Initially, Rolovich was purportedly granted a waiver.
âItâs no surprise [he was given an exemption], because he submitted a detailed explanation of his religious beliefs, the theological basis for it ⌠he cited Catholic catechism teaching documents ⌠and he noted that his priest and then his bishop had both supported him,â said Davis. âThe review committee said, âYes, heâs sincere.'â
That exemption, though, was short-lived. Not long after the blind board granted it, Rolovich submitted to the court, WSU executives intervened, pressuring the committee to flip its ruling.
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It was around the same time, in early August 2021, that Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D)Â issued Proclamation 21-14, a mandate requiring state employees, educational staff, and healthcare workers to be fully vaccinated by Oct. 18, 2021.
According to court documents filed by Rolovich and his lawyers, WSU executives â as part of their alleged âRolo strategyâ â âworked closelyâ with Inslee on crafting the mandate, which was allegedly part of a larger ââgame plan in dealing with Rolovichâ that would allow it to compel him to be vaccinated.â
All of this, Davis said, stemmed from the media and donors who were âreally upsetâ about Rolovich potentially being exempted from the COVID shots, so the university âyielded to that pressure.â
âInternally,â the attorney said, â[the university was] quite clear with Coach Rolovich, [telling him], âItâs because of the pressure from the donors, itâs because of the pressure from the media.â They said, âWe need you to be a leader and take this vaccine, regardless of your religious beliefs.'â
Itâs only now, in retrospect, Davis argued, WSU is claiming the pressure on Rolovich to vaccinate was due to âsafety concerns,â suggesting the coachâs close contact with athletes put him at great risk of spreading the virus. That argument underpinned the universityâs legal win at the beginning of the year.
In the years after the height of the pandemic, it became apparent the shots were not a guarantee against the continued spread of COVID-19. Nevertheless, internal data from WSU found 94% of employees at the college were vaccinated and only 4% were granted religious or medical exemptions.
âItâs quite clear they thought that it tarnished Washington Stateâs âbrandâ â thatâs their word â to have a devoted Christian that stood by his beliefs and didnât take the COVID-19 vaccine,â Davis said. âThe only thing that tarnished their brand really was their refusal to live up to religious liberty, which is what this country is all about.â
For Rolovich, thatâs what this fight boils down to: religious liberty.
Davis argued the plot against his client is nothing short of âcoercionâ that flies in the face of the coachâs rights as outlined in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
The attorney explained that, while there have been other cases along these lines, Rolovichâs is one of the first to reach the appellate level. The decision in this case, which could come later this year or early in 2026, will âset precedentâ for other objectors nationwide, Davis said.
âItâs an important case,â he noted. â[C]oach Rolovich never wanted this fight to happen, but the fight came to him. ⌠Thatâs an injustice that needs to be corrected.â
CBN News reached out to WSU for a statement but did not receive a response.
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News Source : https://cmsedit.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2025/june/shock-claim-college-devised-secret-vaccine-plot-to-force-out-christian-coach