Dustin Paxton's victim says brain damage kept him from fleeing - Action News
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Dustin Paxton's victim says brain damage kept him from fleeing

The man who was physically and sexually abused and starved for 18 months by Dustin Paxton says he never fled from his abuser because he had suffered brain damage from the beatings and couldn't make rational decisions.

Victim speaks to The Current about his ordeal in exclusive interview

The man who was physically and sexuallyabused and starved for 18 months by Dustin Paxtonsays he never fled from his abuser because he had suffered brain damage from the beatings and couldn't make rational decisions.

A Calgary judge ruled Thursday that Dustin Paxton, who starved and savagely beat his business parter and roommate, is a dangerous offender. (Calgary Police Service)

"I think I received brain injury really early, and I think that one of the decision-making sensors in my brain was damaged," said the man, who spokeout about his ordeal inan exclusive interview withCBC's The Current with Anna Maria Tremonti.He cannotbe identified because of a publication ban.

"Once that was all damaged, I wasn't making rational choices."

The man, who was Paxton's former business partner and roommate,was dropped off at a Regina hospital in April 2010. He was beaten and emaciated,weighing 87 pounds, a dramatic dropfrom his normal 200 to 250 pound weight,and suffering from several broken bones and a mutilated face.

"It was horrible," said theman's mother, who also spoke to The Current."The doctors that contacted us from Regina Hospital said that he wasnt goingto make it and that we should expect to come and pull the plug."

"The personthat was laying thereon life supportfailing rapidly did not resemble my son at all," his mother said. "He looked like an Auschwitz survivor that had been brutally beaten and mutilated."

The man said Paxtonused a cane, leash or extension cord to administer regularbeatings and that he was chocked and punched every day.

He hadtold court that thedaily beatings and choking at the hands of Paxton began on Oct. 31, 2008, when he moved to Calgary from Winnipeg.

"It was horrible right from the very first day," the man told Tremonti. He said Paxtongot mad when he accidentally backed his chair over an extension cord and started hitting him on the head with a steel-toed boot.The abuse he said escalated from there.

In 2009, the man said Paxton beat him with a two-by-four which landed him in the hospital with a broken back, brokenribs, a rupturedbowel and apuncturedlung.

The man's mother said the family was told he had been in a work-related accident, that he had only broken his collarbone and that he was on workers compensation.

Victim wants torture definition expanded

Paxton was convicted last year in a Calgary courtroom of aggravated and sexual assault. A judge is expected to rule next month onwhetherPaxtonshould be declared a dangerous offender.

The man's family believe the man was tortured, a crime Paxton could not have been charged with under the Criminal Code.Only government officials like police and military officers can be charged with torture.

But the man andhis mother are seeking to have the federal government recognize non-state torture as a separate crime.

"Aggravated assault is not enough.What happened tomy sonwas torture," his mother said. "It was sustained. It wasover a long period of time and it was ritualized."