Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery & Grill founder, CEO commits suicide in Bronx factory

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER, ROCCO PARASCANDOLA, ROSS KEITH and RICH SCHAPIRO
Published in the New York Daily News on Dec. 2, 2017

The founder and CEO of Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery & Grill who once appeared on “Undercover Boss” killed himself inside his Bronx factory Saturday, police sources said.

Lowell Hawthorne, 57, shot himself inside the Park Ave. building near E. 173rd St. in Claremont about 5:30 p.m., sources said.

More than a dozen current and former employees stood in disbelief outside the factory hours later. Some had tears rolling down their cheeks.

“He was a good boss, humble and a good businessman,” said Pete Tee, 27, a former employee. “He never seemed sad. This is just terrible news right now.”

Hawthorne opened the first Golden Krust store on E. Gun Hill Rd. in 1989.

The Jamaica-born owner went on to build the beef-patty purveyor into a national empire with more than 120 restaurants in nine states.

In May of last year, Hawthorne starred in an episode of CBS’ “Undercover Boss,” and discovered some of his chefs “aren’t on the same cookbook page,” according to the CBS website.

Pat Russo, who has worked with Hawthorne since the 1990s, was confounded by the news that his fellow businessman had taken his own life.

“It doesn’t make any sense. He had everything to live for,” said Russo, who is the president of Chef’s Choice food company. “He was a brilliant business guy. The perfect American success story.”

Hawthorne’s death sent shockwaves from the streets of the Bronx to government offices in Jamaica, where Prime Minister Andrew Holness fired off a tweet offering his condolences.

Some of Hawthorne’s employees said they suspected something was amiss when they spotted his car, a silver Tesla 85D (below), parked oddly outside the factory. The luxury ride was left in the road blocking a lane of traffic.

Longtime employee Everald Woods said he loved working under Hawthorne.

“He was a nice boss, a wonderful guy,” said Woods, an employee since 2003. “He’s the kind of guy you want to work for for that long. He takes care of his employees.”

Family friend Wayne Muschamb said Hawthorne was an inspiration to his countrymen in Jamaica. “Look how far he reached. He’s known from here to Jamaica,” Muschamb said. “I’m kind of lost for words, man. This has got me shocked.”

Hawthorne’s rags-to-riches story was set in motion in 1981 when he followed several relatives to the U.S. from Jamaica in search of opportunity.

He briefly worked as an accountant for the NYPD before deciding to build a business inspired by his father’s bakery back home.

Golden Krust became the first Caribbean-owned business in the U.S. to be granted a franchise license, according to its website. The company produces more than 50 million patties a year that are sold in retail stores.

In 2012, he published a memoir, “The Baker’s Son.”

“It’s a very humbling experience to know that the concept that began in Jamaica with our parents was able to come here,” Hawthorne told the Daily News at the time.

Ex-Sen. Al D’Amato weeps as he recalls wife’s mental breakdown, says it prompted custody battle

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER and STEPHEN REX BROWN
Published in the New York Daily News on Dec. 4, 2017

Former Sen. Al D’Amato cried Monday recalling his wife’s mental breakdown, saying it forced him to seek custody of their kids in their subsequent divorce proceedings.

Police took Katuria D’Amato, 51, to the hospital after receiving a bizarre 911 call from her on Sept. 30. She whispered that people were shining green lasers into the home in Lido Beach, L.I., she shares with the former GOP senator.

Cops determined there were no lasers, intruders or cloaking devices in the home, as Katuria suspected, according to testimony.

Police also secured a shotgun she kept in the home — to her husband’s surprise.

“I didn’t want them to take her away. It’s a heartache. They didn’t take her in because I urged them. I said, ‘Do you have to do this?’ ” Al D’Amato told reporters outside court, beginning to cry. “They said, ‘Yes, we have to.’ ”

He said that evening wasn’t the first time Katuria had such a hallucination.

“This thing with the lasers had been going on for a while,” D’Amato, 80, said. “For years now, she’s been saying that people are shooting lasers from the dunes. There is a small road between us, the dunes and the ocean — nobody is shooting lasers.”

He said that night his wife took pictures for an hour and a half of the green beams, which were only in her imagination.

D’Amato wants to continue the current arrangement in which his kids Alfonso, 9, and Luciana, 7, live with him. His spouse wants the children to relocate and stay with her.

During testimony in Nassau County Supreme Court, Officer Jimmy Lee said his main concern that night was securing the shotgun Katuria revealed she had in a closet. “She made a beeline for that room. I cautioned her, ‘I don’t want you to handle the weapon before I can contain it,’” Lee said, recalling that Katuria’s arm was in a sling at the time.

“She said that if she could have loaded the weapon she would have used it against the invading threat . . . that upon reviewing the videotape wasn’t there.”

Katuria — who had a piece of yellow paper taped over the camera of her laptop during the court hearing — was not eager to go to a hospital that night.

“She wasn’t comfortable going to the hospital. She didn’t voluntarily go into the ambulance. She walked into it herself but didn’t want to go,” Lee testified.

The cop added that Katuria did not make any threats during the process and that the gun remained secure that evening.

D’Amato said he was stunned to learn his wife kept a shotgun in the home.

“I didn’t even know there was a gun. They told me there was a gun, but I’ve never owned a gun in my life,” D’Amato said.

After the incident, Katuria filed for divorce in Manhattan Supreme Court, arguing it was the appropriate forum due to D’Amato’s status in Nassau County.

A judge in Manhattan disagreed and the case is mainly being resolved in Mineola.

D’Amato lost his Senate reelection bid in 1998. He went on to found the lobbying firm Park Strategies.

Two Palestinians killed amid violent protests over Trump’s Jerusalem decision

Uncategorized
By RICH SCHAPIRO, JESSICA SCHLADEBECK, ADAM SCHRADER and ANDREW KESHNER
Published in the New York Daily News on Dec. 8, 2017

Two Palestinians were killed in clashes with Israeli forces Friday amid violent demonstrations sparked by President Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of the Holy Land.

The bloodshed came as thousands took to the streets across the Middle East and elsewhere on what Hamas had labeled a “day of rage.”

Demonstrators poured into Times Square Friday evening to express their opposition.

They lost their voices chanting “Free Palestine!” and Uber drivers held out their cell phones displaying the flags of Muslim-majority countries.

The mass moving up Midtown was so big — anywhere between 2,000 and 4,000 — it split in different directions.

Most bystanders supported the demonstration. One car drove by with a Palestinian flag draped over the hood.

The Manhattan protests were peaceful. Police were restrained and kept the crowd marching.

“Walk away from my boys,” one police officer was heard saying as protesters approached cops controlling the crowd.

“A decision like this without understanding the history, without understanding the intricacies of the impact of this decision is very bad,” said demonstrator Al Suqi, of New Jersey.

“It’s a very touchy subject and this is will more than likely lead to a religious war, which we hope is not going to happen,” said Suqi, 53, who was born in Palestine.

In the Middle East, the most violent clashes broke out in the West Bank and Gaza where Israeli soldiers shot dead 30-year-old Mohammed Al-Masri, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.

A second Palestinian was killed along the Gaza Strip, authorities said.

Dozens of Palestinian protesters were injured in the skirmishes that erupted after Friday prayers.

The Israeli military said hundreds of Palestinians were rolling burning tires and throwing rocks across the border at soldiers.

“During the riots, Israel Defense Forces soldiers fired selectively towards two main instigators and hits were confirmed,” the country’s military said in a statement.

Later Friday, Israeli warplanes bombed Hamas military targets, injuring at least 25, after militants fired rockets into Israel.The wounded included six children, the Palestinian Health Ministry said.

The Israeli military said it intercepted one of at least two projectiles fired from Gaza.

One rocket struck the town of Sderot but no casualties were reported.

More demonstrations were held all across the Middle East, as well as places like Somalia, Malaysia, Indonesia, London and Chicago.

With News Wire Services.

Father of 3 shot to death outside Times Square bar after holiday party

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER, MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN, ROCCO PARASCANDOLA and NICOLE HENSLEY
Published in the New York Daily News on Dec. 19, 2017

Three girls were rendered fatherless early Tuesday after a gunman fatally shot their dad in the head outside a bar in Times Square.

Persues Salichs, 32, had just left a holiday party at Tonic, a popular bar on Seventh Ave. at 48th St., as the bar was closing at about 4 a.m. He was hanging out with colleagues from a Harlem Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant.

Police officials said they were still investigating what led to the shooting. But a law enforcement source told the Daily News that Salichs was arguing with a woman who was outside the bar with two men. One of the men pushed him and the other shot Salichs, police sources said.

Investigators are combing through video from Times Square — an area that likely has more surveillance cameras than any other place in the city.

One of the two men was wearing a black skull cap and black jacket. He was still being sought late Tuesday.

The victim’s family was devastated.

“This is awful,” said the victim’s aunt, Marisol Salichs, 46. “He’s a father of three. His kids are 12, 5 and 3 — three daughters. He is not one to have a problem.”

The victim was rushed to Bellevue Hospital, where he died at 4:12 a.m.

Salichs lived on the Upper West side with his mom and an elderly uncle.

He was carrying an ID he borrowed from a friend who lives in his building when he was shot.

“(The cops) called me thinking that I was with him,” said the friend, Edwin Lopez, 27. “Everybody was just scrambling trying to find out what actually happened to him.”

Co-workers at the wings joint where Salichs worked as a cook grieved and sang his praises.

“He was a very humble guy,” one co-worker said. “I last saw him like two days ago. We’re like family here, so it hurts. This hits close to home.

“It’s a very sad thing, especially when nobody knows what happened,” he added. “It sucks to lose someone around the holidays.”

Shocked Tonic patrons dropped their belongings, including a purse, to escape the deadly chaos. A bloodied white faux fur was still on the ground hours later.

Witnesses described a woman checking for a pulse, finding Salichs barely alive before emergency workers arrived.

“I walked out into a crime scene without even realizing,” said John Keen, 65, who works nearby. “There’s like blood smeared on the other side of that newsstand. I’ve never seen anything quite like it.”

A portion of Seventh Ave. was closed off to pedestrians for several hours as investigators took pictures of the crime scene.

Masked gunman shoots Brooklyn deli worker in the foot

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER, JOHN ANNESSE and ROCCO PARASCANDOLA
Published in the New York Daily News on Dec. 20, 2017

A masked gunman shot a Brooklyn deli worker in the foot during a robbery Tuesday.

The gunman burst into the bodega on Fulton St. near Fort Greene Place in Fort Greene about 12:45 p.m., police said.

Shop worker Hussain Shahadat, 23, was tending to a customer. “He yelled ‘Give me everything!’” Shahadat told the Daily News from his hospital room.

“I only had my phone and I try to give him my phone. Then he shoots at the floor. He said, ‘I don’t want your phone. Give me money, m—–f—–!”

The gunman fired a second round into the ground, and Shahadat opened the register, begging not to be shot.

“He shoot me anyway! He shoot me in the right foot and I’m bleeding everywhere,” Shahadat explained. “The customer didn’t say anything but he put his hands up. I put my hands up too.”

The crook knocked over the register, took the cash and ran. Shahadat called 911, and his boss.

Doctors at Methodist Hospital removed the bullet from his foot, he said.

“It broke bone and I can feel it in there,” he said. “I ask the doctor if I can walk again and he won’t tell me. He said I need a surgery first, and then he’ll tell me.”

The suspect, clad in a black mask and gray and black clothes, was being sought by cops.

Woman fatally struck outside Long Island church on Christmas Eve

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER, LAURA DIMON and GRAHAM RAYMAN
Published in The New York Daily News on Dec. 25, 2017

A 70-year-old woman about to step into Christmas Eve midnight mass was fatally struck by a car outside her Long Island church, police said.

Barbara Rizzi was crossing North Ocean Ave. to enter Our Lady Of Mount Carmel Church in North Patchogue when a 2016 Nissan sedan slammed into her moments after midnight Monday.

Rizzi, who lived about a mile from the church, was rushed to Brookhaven Memorial Hospital in East Patchogue but could not be saved.

Driver Samantha Reyes, 20, remained at the scene and faced no immediate charges.

Reyes was unhurt in the crash. Her car was impounded pending the investigation.

Appearing upset, Reyes left her home with a young man and a woman and said, “Merry Christmas” to a reporter, declining to discuss the crash, Monday afternoon. She told the reporter to call her mother but the mother did not pick up the phone.

Rizzi’s daughter-in-law was too distraught to speak to a reporter as devastated relatives gathered at her home in Shoreham Christmas afternoon.

Anyone with information on the crash can call the Suffolk County Police Department’s 5th Precinct at (631) 854-8552.

barbecue, police, lewisville

Badgers BBQ closes shop

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER
Published in The Denton Record-Chronicle on May 20, 2015

Badgers BBQ, a Lewisville restaurant, opened last August–with a grand opening on Saturday, Oct. 4. However, the family-owned restaurant recently closed its doors, according to a post on the BBQ joint’s Facebook page.

Badgers, owned by Emilee and Erich Klein, served family-style barbecue, but they also want to use their restaurant to honor “the badge”: law enforcement, firefighters and soldiers in the community. Hence the name Badgers.

The restaurant has received mixed reviews on the Facebook groups Flower Mound Cares and Lewisville, TX-Community Blabber.

“Badgers is decent, nothing spectacular. Definitely try Fat Cow next time, best BBQ in Denton County last 2 years running,” one user wrote in the latter Facebook group.

Lisa Strickler, another user of the group, wrote that the Kleins were struggling to stay open because the landlord for the property left a plumbing problem for two months, killing their business.

“He just recently fixed it and they have put everything they had into this business,” she wrote. “Pray for them to overcome a bad landlord and people not understanding, for all the good work they have done not to go away. Good people, excellent food in mass quantity.”

Erich Klein only said the building was incompatible with their needs. So he is looking for a new location.

Until the Kleins reopen elsewhere, send them a message on Facebook for ordering barbecue.

lewisville, beer garden, bar, square one

Square One reopens in Lewisville

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER
Published in The Denton Record-Chronicle on Aug. 21, 2015

Square One Café, 136 W. Main St. in Lewisville, has been closed for two weeks but reopens at 2 p.m. today.

Karbach Brewing Co., a Houston-based craft brewery, will host a pint night tonight to celebrate the reopening. The pint night will include Karbach beers El Hopadillo Negro, Love Street, Three Legged Lab, and Karbachoberfest. Local musician Justin Pickard will also perform starting at 7:30 p.m.

Square One will also be rebranding into The Local Beer Garden by the end of September.

After the rebranding, the restaurant will also offer more beers, wines and dinner options including a small bite menu.

Travis Holladay, owner and operator of the restaurant, wrote in a Facebook post that he has experienced personal and family issues over the last year and often thought about giving up.

“But with the success of the restaurant and even more the great enthusiasm from you, our loyal guests, we choose not to,” he wrote. “We thank you for patronage and most of all for your help and patience during this time in our transition, after all that is what a community and friends are all about.”

 

tacos, lewisville, los alisos, barbacoa

Los Alisos offers authentic street tacos at affordable price

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER
Published in The Lewisville Texan Journal on Feb. 17, 2016

Los Alisos Restaurant is an unlikely spot for some of the most delicious “street tacos” I’ve ever tasted.

The Mexican restaurant sits at the end of a strip center occupied by an Exxon gas station and a tire shop at the corner of Holfords Prairie Road and Business 121 in Lewisville.

On Wednesday, Steve Southwell and I stopped for a bite before shooting photos at the Coyote Drive In site just down the road. There was no line and only two other customers sat at their tables eating.

Inside, the menu and TV stations were displayed in Spanish language but the cashier spoke English and helped us with our order. We ordered at the counter and received our food at our table within five minutes.

First, we each ordered half-liter bottles of “Mexican coke” at $2.50 apiece instead of choosing popular Hispanic drinks like Juaritos or Topo Chico.

Steve ordered the Durango plate with three gorditas: chicharron, or pork skin; rajas, with green poblanos and cheese; and desebrada, with shredded beef and a spicy red sauce.

He opted to not help write the review, but said “The rajas could have used more cheese. The chicharron tasted fine, but pork skin had an odd texture, like eating fat. The desebrada was delicious and I’ll definitely order it again.”

The $7.50 plate came with rice and beans, “which were nothing special” and looked mediocre in quality.

I ordered three, two-bite tacos made with flour tortillas. They looked small in the fast-food basket with the burn marks that signify home-style tortillas. They never fell apart.

The meat in my tasty barbacoa taco was portioned well in the fluffy tortillas. It was moist and not too chewy.

The fajita taco, my least favorite, had grilled onions which added to the quality of the taco. The meat texturally felt more like ground taco meat than true fajita-quality beef, but tasted at the much higher price point.

On each taco’s last bite, I drizzled a little of the provided lime; but each time, I preferred it without the citrus addition.

None of the tacos had toppings other than meat, cilantro and onions. The barbacoa and pastor were more flavorful and less overpowered by the cilantro and onions.

The pastor taco had moderate heat. Neither of the others were spicy. I would have liked the opportunity to add jalapeños or otherwise spice up the dish—though I recognize spice isn’t in true street taco spirit.

The three tacos, at $1.40 each, were filling enough for a light lunch bit a larger dish is recommended if you’re really hungry.

The Mexican restaurant doesn’t market itself as a taco joint and its menu is dominated by other dishes. And, the menu had fewer options and toppings than Denton taco joints like Flatlanders and Rusty Taco.

But, when looking for a true “street taco”, Los Alisos fits the bill. They were much cheaper and more authentic—as if actually purchased off Mexican streets.

Coyote Drive-In adds sixth screen in Lewisville

Uncategorized
By ADAM SCHRADER
Published in The Dallas Morning News on Sept. 18, 2015

Flooding in the spring slowed construction on a new drive-in theater complex in Lewisville, but it also paved the way for an added benefit.

Fort Worth-based Coyote Drive-In plans to have new screens open for business in Lewisville in time for summer blockbuster season in 2016.

The bad weather in the spring set back many construction projects in Lewisville, but particularly outdoor projects, Mayor Pro Tem R. Neil Ferguson said.

If there’s good news about the delay, the heavy rain created an opening to add a sixth screen to what was originally planned as a five-screen experience, Ferguson said.

In January, neighborsgo reported that Coyote Drive-In was making plans for a Denton County location. Coyote Drive-In planned to open its second location on 35 acres in eastern Lewisville near U.S. Highway 121 Business, Sam Rayburn Tollway and Fish Hatchery Road.

It marks the return of a drive-in theater to Lewisville since a two-screen theater on Business 121 closed in the early 1970s. Coyote Drive-In opened its first theater in Fort Worth in 2013.

“This one’s gonna be even better,” said Glenn Solomon, a partner of Coyote Drive-In.

At the time of the original plans, officials hoped to open by the end of the 2015. However, plans have changed and construction should begin next month, ending just in time for 2016’s blockbuster season sometime in the spring, Solomon said.

“Right now, we are still fighting an uphill battle with construction costs,” he said. “We have not pulled the trigger even though our plan was, and is, to start in October.”

On Sept. 14, the Lewisville City Council unanimously approved an amended special-use permit for the theater, upgrading the theater from a five-screen venue to a six-screen venue.

“It has been great to work with all of the staff and elected officials in the city of Lewisville,” Solomon said. “They have been really first-class people to work with.”

Last month, Solomon made a presentation to the Lewisville Planning and Zoning Commission. He explained that, at the time of the original application, he was not aware that they had land available where they could add the sixth screen, according to a report in The Lewisville Texan-Journal.

“But [the new screen] isn’t the biggest change,” Solomon said. “It’s really the entrance that has changed.”

The entrance has moved down more into the middle of the property, further east on Midway Road, to improve traffic flow. The new plans also add an exit on Holford’s Prairie Road to ease traffic after movies end.

“Parkway Contractors had been working all summer preparing the site,” Solomon said at the council meeting. They hoped to start construction in early October to start next year.

Ferguson said he has seen “an avalanche of local interest” in the drive-in.

“The plans for the whole complex is just dynamite,” he said. “It has so much to offer, like entertainment that goes beyond movies such as live music.”

The best part of the drive-in, he said, is that the interest in the venue is far-reaching.

“I expect folks from several counties and, over time, more than a few states, to come sample Coyote, and many will return over and over,” he said. “It is like the roller coaster aficionados: Some will want to come just to say they have been to this drive-in. But I believe there is a solid long-term return crowd that will keep Coyote Drive-In thriving for decades.”

Ferguson, who has worked in retail site planning, said the drive-in could be a draw for other businesses to move into the area. But, he has not seen any specific plans for other developments yet, he said.

“It is fair to say that savvy developers constantly look at opportunities around the country, and their radar attuned particularly to emerging regional draws,” he said. “I can tell you successful retailers are already noticing the future potential of this location.”

Coyote representatives expect about 250,000 annual visitors to the Lewisville location, according to the Texan-Journal. The company expects 140 cars each weeknight and 750 cars each weekend night during summer months.

The Lewisville City Council unanimously approved the original special-use permit on Jan. 5 for a drive-in theater that would fit 1,500 cars on the property. The new plans show the theater can accommodate 1,711 cars.

The company plans to keep admission prices the same across locations: $8 for adults, $6 for children ages 4 to 10 and free for kids 3 and younger.

The theater will also have an open-air pavilion, a kids play area and a 10,000-square-foot restaurant. Beer and wine will be available in the restaurant.

The main difference between the Lewisville and Fort Worth locations will be that Lewisville will have an indoor, air-conditioned and heated space for the restaurant in addition to outdoor beer garden seating, Solomon said in January.

Jenna Duncan contributed to this report.