A parolee with 7 previous arrests was busted for allegedly throwing a stranger onto the subway tracks in the Bronx last week, police said.
Navar Douglas, 33, was picked up after his parole hearing Thursday and charged with attempted murder in connection to the April 28 evening attack on the 39-year-old victim at the 149th Street station, cops and sources said.
Douglas, a stranger to the victim, exchanged words with him before picking him up and throwing him onto the No. 6 train roadbed around 8:30 p.m., authorities said.
When the victim tried to get back up, the brute kicked him back onto the tracks, cops said.

The banged-up straphanger ultimately found his way back up and was hospitalized with only minor injuries, police said.
The unhinged shover fled the scene and police released footage the next day of him wildly gesturing near a subway turnstile in a black sweatshirt, black sweats, and black sneakers.
Douglas, who was also charged with assault, reckless endangerment and harassment, was awaiting arraignment Friday.
He served about two years in state prison on a reckless endangerment conviction before he was released in March, State Corrections records show.

His parole will expire in March of 2027.
Douglas has seven previous arrests in total, with the most recent in the Bronx from 2023 on domestic violence cases involving two different ex-girlfriends, cops and sources said.
In one case, he allegedly brandished a gun in front of his 53-year-old ex and fired a shot, but she was not hit, according to law enforcement sources.
In the other, he was accused of punching another former flame, 32, causing bruising and swelling, the sources said.


