Buried in the files of Ontario District Court is R v. Anguei Pal-Deng, an unsettling case. The accused, a Sudanese man, 25, already on probation for common assault, was charged with savagely pushing an 82-year old grandmother down a flight of stairs at Toronto’s Dufferin Mall on March 6, 2014. Two eyewitnesses saw everything: The vicious attack, the bleeding victim, the thin blue line of criminal justice that separates civilized society from public disorder. “He grabbed my arm and threw me down the stairs,” the woman said. The suspect spent seven months in jail awaiting trial. The case was assigned to Judge Melvyn Green, former co-president of the Association in Defence of the Wrongfully Convicted. Judge Green took an uncommon interest in the case. He pulled mall security tapes and examined them frame by frame. “I feel compelled to note that absent the closed-circuit television evidence, the result may have been tragically different,” he wrote. READ MORE



