New York Daily News

Krust king’s tax woe

Patty mogul who killed self faced wage-theft suit

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN and REUVEN BLAU With Rocco Parascando­la, John Annese and Leonard Greene

THE OWNER of the Golden Krust restaurant chain who committed suicide in his Bronx factory was deep in tax debt and was being sued by a former staffer for thousands in lost wages, court records show.

Lowell Hawthorne was “worried” about the liens, which included more than $150,000 in city taxes on the company’s buildings, a police source said.

Authoritie­s also said they discovered a note that Hawthorne left before he shot himself in the head Saturday afternoon. They did not disclose what he wrote.

In addition to Hawthorne’s state tax issues, a former maintenanc­e staffer was suing him in Manhattan Federal Court. Onetime employee Robert Wray said he was never paid for the overtime he worked during his 11-year tenure.

Wray’s May 8 lawsuit contends more than 100 other Golden Krust staffers were similarly stiffed on OT. The case — which seeks class-action status — is pending.

Hawthorne’s popular restaurant chain did not outwardly appear to be struggling while allegedly cutting corners as it served up meat patties, jerk treats and pastries.

In fact, he boasted about expanding the “McDonald’s of the Caribbean” during an episode of CBS’ “Undercover Boss” in May 2016.

“By 2020, all Americans we expect to be eating Golden Krust patties,” he said.

Hawthorne, 57, shot himself inside the firm’s Claremont factory at about 5:30 p.m., police sources said.

Some of his staffers said they suspected something was wrong when they saw his silver Tesla 85D parked oddly outside the factory, straddling two lanes.

On Sunday, friends and relatives were struggling to understand the suicide.

“Does not make any sense whatsoever,” said Pat Russo, who worked with Hawthorne and his brother since the 1990s. “The one thing I learned a long time ago: You just don’t know what you think you know.”

Hawthorne’s death hit the city hard.

“We are shocked and saddened by the death of Lowell Hawthorne,” tweeted Mayor de Blasio. “Our prayers are with his family and his loved ones.”

“The legacy of Lowell Hawthorne will live on,” tweeted Brooklyn Congresswo­man Yvette Clarke. “I admire him greatly for bringing our shared love for Jamaican culture to life on a larger scale through food and fellowship.”

Hawthorne came to the U.S. from Jamaica when he was 21. With the financial help of family, he opened his first Golden Krust store on E. Gun Hill Road in 1989.

There are now 120 stores in nine states, supplying more than 18,000 dollar stores and supermarke­ts.

 ??  ?? Lowell Hawthorne
Lowell Hawthorne
 ??  ?? Lowell Hawthorne, who made fortune with Golden Krust chain and even wrote a book (inset) about it, faced $150,000 tax bill and a suit by worker for unpaid wages when he shot himself at his Bronx factory (main and bottom) on Saturday.
Lowell Hawthorne, who made fortune with Golden Krust chain and even wrote a book (inset) about it, faced $150,000 tax bill and a suit by worker for unpaid wages when he shot himself at his Bronx factory (main and bottom) on Saturday.
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