Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery & Grill founder, CEO commits suicide in Bronx factory
BY
Adam Schrader Rocco Parascandola Ross Keith Rich Schapiro
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Saturday, December 2, 2017, 8:11 PM
Lowell Hawthorne, who started the Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery with a Bronx storefront, now manufactures his meat patties at a Bronx production facility at 3958 Park Ave.
(David Handschuh/New York Daily News)
The founder and CEO of Golden Krust Caribbean Bakery & Grill 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.”
Workers stand outside the Golden Krust's factory on Park Avenue after Hawthorne committed suicide inside.
(Angus Mordant/for New York Daily News)
Hawthorne opened the first Golden Krust store on E. Gun Hill Rd. in 1989.
He built the Jamaica beef patty purveyor into a national empire boasting more than 120 restaurants across the U.S.
It also produces more than 50 million patties a year for retail stores and supplies them to about 20,000 outlets, according to The New York Times.
“We believe in the power of the patty,” Hawthorne told The Times in May.
Some of Hawthorne's employees said they suspected something was amiss when they spotted his silver Tesla 85D parked oddly outside the factory. It was left straddling two lanes.
(Angus Mordant/for New York Daily News)
Some of his employees said they suspected something was amiss when they spotted his car, a silver Tesla 85D, parked oddly outside the factory. It was left straddling two lanes.
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 that long. He takes care of his employees.”
Woods said he was stunned to learn that Hawthorne had taken his life.
“I didn’t believe the news when I heard it at first,” Woods added. “I don’t know if the pressure of running the business was too much, but I’m shocked.”
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