92-year-old Holocaust survivor beaten ‘black and blue’ using public transport service

Fogelman says that the driver told her the other passenger was dangerous after picking her up. At the time, a woman was in the passenger seat and the man who would later go on to attack her was sitting in the back.

“The driver knew that he was aggressive … said not to talk to him. [He said] he’s aggressive. He’s a little dangerous,” Fogelman told Go Public, according to CBC.

She went on to say that it was mere minutes after getting into the vehicle that things turned ugly.

“He started hitting me. Punching me,” she recalled.

“The blood started coming out from my nose. I didn’t know what to do.”

No charges filed

As per CBC, when officers arrived they found a male passenger sitting quietly in the back of the cab working on a crossword puzzle. He appeared unaware of what he’d done.

Inspector André Durocher told Go Public that the man suffers from an intellectual disability and won’t be charged.

Fogelman, meanwhile, had to be taken to hospital as a result of her injuries.

“She had a broken nose. Lacerations on her face… Black and blue,” said daughter Debbie Rona, who flew to be by her mother’s side after the attack.

“I feel angry. I feel shocked.

“I look at my mother and she’s so mentally aware, but there’s physical vulnerability there. Why was he even in the taxi? Why would the taxi driver have sat my mother next to him and closed the door and started driving?”

An advocate for older Canadians, Laura Tamblyn Watts, also jumped to Fogelman’s defence, labelling the attack a “failure of the entire system.”

No person, vulnerable or otherwise, should live in fear of being attacked.

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