New York Daily News

H’WEEN 2011 SLAY RAPS

B’klyn cafe owner shot, body burned, dumped

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

Three men were charged Tuesday with shooting a Brooklyn cafe owner and dumping his burned body in rural Pennsylvan­ia following a drug deal for a pound of pot, ending a heartbreak­ing eight-year mystery.

Kevin Taylor, Gary Robles and Michael Mazur allegedly ambushed Joshua Rubin in an apartment on McDonald Ave. on Halloween in 2011, prosecutor­s said. All three were charged in Manhattan Federal Court with shooting Rubin during the robbery. During a telephonic hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Dominic Gentile identified Robles, 37, as the triggerman.

Taylor, 27, had previously attempted to rob Rubin, 30, and hatched the plan to take the reefer from the cafe owner, Gentile said. Mazur, 26, acted as a lookout on the street while Taylor and Robles allegedly waited in the apartment.

Rubin resisted and Robles shot him once in the chest, Gentile said.

“He didn’t die right away, Mr. Rubin was alive for a while after that,” Gentile said. “Instead of seeking aid, instead of rendering aid, instead of calling 911, the defendants hatched a plan to dispose of his body.”

The feds said they had surveillan­ce video and cell phone location data showing the three suspects went to a Home Depot and purchased plastic bags, a plastic garbage can and latex gloves. By the time they allegedly returned to the apartment, Rubin was dead.

“They wrapped him up, drove him to Pennsylvan­ia,” Gentile said.

“They placed him in a plastic garbage can, poured an accelerant over his body and lit him on fire.”

Rubin’s smoldering body was found outside Allentown, Pa., the day after Halloween, on Nov. 1. But it took more than a month to identify the body, which was burned beyond recognitio­n.

“After years of wondering what led to Mr. Rubin disappeari­ng from his Brooklyn neighborho­od, and his body being found in rural Pennsylvan­ia, his family and the community may finally get some answers. The passage of time makes cold cases difficult, but the people who committed the crimes are still out there, and they will be held accountabl­e,” FBI Assistant Director in Charge William Sweeney said.

The feds indicated Mazur and Taylor were major marijuana dealers. Authoritie­s seized more than 200 pounds of reefer and $200,000 cash Tuesday morning from a home they share, according to Gentile.

Rubin’s disappeara­nce baffled customers at his popular Whisk Bakery Cafe in Ditmas Park. The cafe was a popular hangout for music and art lovers at a time when the neighborho­od was beginning to gentrify.

Lehigh County District Attorney James Martin said the local homicide task force never stopped investigat­ing the murder, which was complicate­d by the fact the killing occurred in Brooklyn and the body dumped in South Whitehall Township, Pa.

One detective, Thomas McAndrew, poured his “heart and soul” into the case, Martin said.

The top prosecutor said the suspects burned the body in an attempt to cover their tracks. But that decision yielded a crucial break in the investigat­ion, he said.

“We were able to secure some things that occurred in the transporta­tion of the body from New York to Lehigh County,” Martin said, declining to go into detail. “We were able to uncover some things they did along the way.”

The killing, he said, was “a drug deal gone bad.”

“They thought the victim was dealing drugs and had either drugs and or money in his possession,” Martin said. “A robbery was attempted and unfortunat­ely it ended up in a homicide.”

Taylor, Robles and Mazur are each charged with murder through the use of a firearm, which carries a maximum penalty of death or life in prison. They pleaded not guilty and were held without bail.

Eric Lopez, a private investigat­or hired by the Rubin family, said he’d suspected marijuana had something to do with the killing. Rubin was bipolar and had faced financial trouble due to the cafe.

The private investigat­or speculated Rubin used weed money to fund the cafe, though he cautioned that was unconfirme­d. Rubin’s still-grieving family in Rhode Island was brokenhear­ted by his disappeara­nce.

“He was very well loved. It was very devastatin­g to them when they found out he was no longer with us,” Lopez said.

“He was a good kid. He didn’t deserve to go out like this.”

The Rubin family thanked many law enforcemen­t agencies in a short statement to the Daily News, specifical­ly acknowledg­ing Detective McAndrew.

“There are no words to describe the tremendous loss we have endured. We are pleased to have some closure to this terrible chapter and would appreciate privacy at this time,” the family said.

 ??  ?? Body of Joshua Rubin, owner of popular Whisk Bakery Cafe, was found in Pennsylvan­ia.
Body of Joshua Rubin, owner of popular Whisk Bakery Cafe, was found in Pennsylvan­ia.

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