New York Daily News

Sister of slain cafe owner asked fiend’s aid, sees him get 28 yrs.

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

The man who arranged the killing of a Brooklyn cafe owner was sentenced to 28 years in prison Thursday during an emotional proceeding that revealed the victim’s sister had asked him for help in the aftermath of the gruesome 2011 slaying.

Kevin Taylor is the last of three men sentenced in connection with the killing of Joshua Rubin on Oct. 31, 2011, in a pot deal gone bad. He lured Rubin to an apartment for a drug deal that ended with Rubin being fatally shot. Taylor and two accomplice­s dumped Rubin’s body in rural Pennsylvan­ia and set it on fire.

It took a month for authoritie­s to identify the body. During that time, Rubin’s sister, Hilarie Rubin, asked Taylor for help.

“Do you remember me?” Hilarie Rubin said to Taylor in Manhattan Federal Court before he was sentenced.

“As the last person on Joshua’s cell phone records, both calls and text messages, I came to see you for help a few days after he disappeare­d. Do you remember me? Do you recall the panic and desperatio­n I expressed to you? Do you remember the lies you told me? Do you remember the missing posters I printed, and, along with friends and family, hung them up all over Brooklyn? Did you tear them down?”

The shooter, Gary Robles, was previously sentenced to 28 years. Michael Mazur, the lookout, was already sentenced to 18 years.

Rubin ran Whisk Bakery Cafe, a popular hangout in Ditmas Park and sold weed to supplement his income. Taylor lured Rubin, 30, to a Kensington apartment under the pretense of buying pot, though the plan all along was to rob him.

When Rubin refused to surrender a pound of pot, Robles shot him in the chest. Authoritie­s say Rubin was still alive as Taylor and Mazur stayed with his body and Robles disposed of the gun.

When Rubin’s heart stopped beating, they bought plastic bags, latex gloves, and a trash can from Home Depot to dispose of his body, which they torched in a remote field in Lehigh County.

Taylor, 29, took Rubin’s wallet and credit cards before burning the body. He gave the cards to accomplice­s to go shopping at a mall in an apparent attempt to cover his tracks.

In 2019 and 2020, Taylor tried to buy the silence of those accomplice­s, offering them as much as $150,000 not to speak to law enforcemen­t.

Judge Jed Rakoff described Taylor’s witness tampering as “a devastatin­g crime” and said it factored heavily in his sentence.

“It goes a long way to erasing a lot of the sympathy I would otherwise feel for Mr. Taylor,” the judge said. “He wasn’t feeling the slightest remorse at that moment.”

In somber remarks, Taylor, who was 18 when he aided in Rubin’s murder, apologized to his victim’s family and said he wished he had made better decisions and that they could someday forgive him. He previously pleaded guilty to robbery, conspiracy and witness tampering.

In letters to the court, Taylor’s mother and friends wrote that he grew up in an abusive home where addiction was rampant. Taylor’s lawyer told the court that all of the male figures in his life were incarcerat­ed when he was growing up.

Hilarie Rubin described her brother as a gentle and loving human who moved through life with kindness and grace.

“Joshua saw the world through a different lens than I. He saw beauty everywhere in everything — music, literature, food, culture, art, nature. And most of all, people, family, friends, communitie­s,” she said.

“He made this world a better place. I miss Josh so very much every day. I think my greatest sadness is that there are little boys and girls in our family and that are close to use who will never know him.”

 ?? ?? Joshua Rubin, who owned Whisk Bakery Cafe in Brooklyn, was lured into a deadly drug deal in October 2011.
Joshua Rubin, who owned Whisk Bakery Cafe in Brooklyn, was lured into a deadly drug deal in October 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States