NEW ROCHELLE, NY (July 16, 2026) — Annas Playhouse LLC, doing business as Anna’s Treehouse, saw a warrant filed against it on June 27, 2017, seeking $1,032.29 in unpaid contributions — evidence, notably, that the business had payroll obligations during that period.
The warrant, filed under Index No. 469-17 with the Westchester County Clerk, named Annas Playhouse LLC and Annas Treehouse at 3 Kensington Oval, New Rochelle — the same address where Robert Paul Rubicco’s family daycare business has been previously documented as operating.
Once filed with the county clerk, a Department of Labor warrant is docketed as a judgment, giving the state the legal authority to collect the debt from the business’s assets — including bank accounts, property, or other holdings — the same as any other judgment creditor. The debt continues to accrue interest until it is paid. When it is paid in full, the state files a document called a Satisfaction of Judgment, or “satisfaction piece,” which is entered into the public record and formally closes out the debt.
Records show this warrant was satisfied on February 21, 2018.
New York requires employers to pay quarterly unemployment insurance contributions on their payroll — money that funds benefits for workers who are laid off. When a business falls behind, the state Department of Labor can file a warrant with the county clerk, which functions as a legal judgment against the employer.
Editor’s note: On July 9, 2026, Robert Cox was served with four plenary summonses issued by the Irish High Court (Record Nos. 3331, 3337, 3338, and 3339/2026P) by Sheehan & Partners LLP on behalf of Rubicco-associated LLCs. Talk of the Sound continues reporting on matters of public record.
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This article was prepared with the assistance of AI tools under the direction and editing of Robert Cox.
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