Captain Marvin Taylor III was a committed father and husband, working overtime to provide for his growing family
Tragically, he died hours after his wife gave birth to their fifth child
His grieving family is still in “disbelief,” Fire Chief James Kubinski tells PEOPLE
A Texas fire captain died hours after welcoming his fifth baby and weeks after his death, his grieving family and coworkers are still grappling with their new reality.
“Your fifth child comes into the world and, a few hours later, you leave to go check on the other four kids and pick them up to bring them back to meet their new sibling.” Fire Chief James Kubinski, who worked with Captain Marvin Taylor III before the fatal accident on Mother’s Day, tells PEOPLE.
“He never came back,” adds Kubinski.
Taylor had just left a hospital in Austin after meeting his newborn when he was hit from behind in the early morning hours of Sunday, May 11.
“It was an intoxicated driver traveling at over a hundred miles per hour,” says Kubinski, 49. “That driver was immediately detained by police and arrested.”
Officials told CBS affiliate KWTX that 34-year-old Rodney Bremby was arrested in Taylor’s death. A spokesperson for the Travis County Jail confirms to PEOPLE that Bremby arrived on May 11 and was held on a $103,000 bond. He is charged with intoxication manslaughter and was released two days later on a personal recognizance bond.
The spokesperson says he will wear an ankle monitor until his court date. It is unclear if Bremby has retained representation.
An investigation is ongoing, the Austin Police Department confirms to PEOPLE. The City of Austin Municipal Court did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment.
In the weeks since Taylor’s death, his family is still in “disbelief,” says Kubinski.
Now Taylor’s wife is not only “adjusting to a newborn, but she’s adjusting to a newborn without her husband,” he remarks.
The fire department in Killeen — which consists of 264 sworn civil service personnel and about a dozen administrative staff — is also shaken by the sudden loss of one of its longstanding leaders.
Taylor joined the fire department in 2014, and recently started working in the training division 10 months ago. He quickly doubled the pool of new applicants from approximately 150 to 400 in that short period. Kubinski admired his passion and commitment to the job, adding that he couldn’t speak any higher of someone in Taylor’s position.
Last fall, as a heavy storm system ravaged parts of Texas, the captain was one of three service members deployed from the Killeen Fire Department. During that deployment, Taylor helped save a stranger from floodwaters, for which he received a Medal of Valor.
“That was part of the eulogy that was shared by one of his shift mates,” says Kubinski. “They talked about that incident with so much pride.”
The captain was the sole provider for his growing family, often taking extra shifts to support his wife and children. The kids, all boys, were named after Catholic saints.
In one of Kubinski’s last interactions with Taylor, they talked about the new baby.
“I said, ‘Which baby is this? Which number is this?’ He said, ‘This is my number five,’ ” recalls Kubinski, who joked that Taylor could have his own “engine company.”
“He laughed,” says Kubinski. “He was a family man.”
The fire chief says that navigating the news of Taylor’s death has been one of the hardest things he’s personally experienced, as it has been for many who knew Taylor.
Despite their collective pain, the department rallied around Taylor’s family.
A two-person honor guard stood over Taylor’s remains for 10 days, which was followed by a funeral service at a catholic church in Copperas Cove, a miles-long procession and final honors at the graveside. Separately, a fund that was created in Taylor’s memory has raised more than $145,000 as of Tuesday, June 3.
“We’re still grieving,” remarks Kubinski, who says there are still moments when they get teary-eyed when thinking about what the captain would have done or said. “We’re still hurting.”