Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

'It Was Getting Terrifying:' Students Attend Hearing For Alleged Feces-Thrower

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2019 08:26 PM

    TORONTO - Dozens of university students have showed up at the first court appearance for a man accused of dumping feces on strangers in Toronto.

     

    Samuel Opoku is charged with five counts each of assault with a weapon and mischief related to three alleged attacks — two at campus libraries and a third at a downtown intersection near the University of Toronto.

     

    The 23-year-old was arrested Tuesday night and has yet to appear before a judge as administrative matters are dealt with.

     

    His case had to be moved to a larger courtroom to accommodate throngs of would-be onlookers, many of them students from U of T and elsewhere.

     

    First-year student Tina Yang says curiosity drove her to the courtroom — and led her to wait several hours for the accused to appear.

     

    She says she wants to get a sense of the reasons behind his alleged actions.

     

    "During the first incident, we thought it was a joke," Yang said outside the courtroom. "We thought it was funny and disgusting. But then there was the second and the third one, so we thought it was getting terrifying."

     

    Police allege a man threw liquefied fecal matter on a woman and a young person on Friday at U of T's John P. Robarts Research Library.

     

    The same suspect is believed to have attacked a man and a woman at York University's Scott Library on Sunday, and a woman at a downtown intersection Monday night.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Still Enjoys Old NAFTA Benefits As New Deal Awaits Ratification: Freeland

    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canada has kept its privileged access to the U.S. market even as the new North American trade deal hangs in the balance.    

    Canada Still Enjoys Old NAFTA Benefits As New Deal Awaits Ratification: Freeland

    Woman Pleads Guilty To Causing The Deaths Of Two Infants In P.E.I.

    Woman Pleads Guilty To Causing The Deaths Of Two Infants In P.E.I.
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A P.E.I. woman has admitted in court to causing the deaths of two infants, placing their bodies in bags and dumping them in a waste bin.    

    Woman Pleads Guilty To Causing The Deaths Of Two Infants In P.E.I.

    B.C. Fights Ticket Scalpers With Consumer Protection Law, Eliminates Bots

    B.C. Fights Ticket Scalpers With Consumer Protection Law, Eliminates Bots
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's government has introduced legislation that seeks to offer more protections for people who buy live-event tickets online or at the box office.

    B.C. Fights Ticket Scalpers With Consumer Protection Law, Eliminates Bots

    Metro Vancouver Mayors Call For Countrywide Annual Funding For Transit

    Mayors from across Metro Vancouver gathered at a busy rapid transit station in Vancouver to demand stable, secure transit funding for all municipalities in Canada.

    Metro Vancouver Mayors Call For Countrywide Annual Funding For Transit

    Snowfall Warnings: Maritime Region Bracing For Nasty Wintry Blast

    Snowfall Warnings: Maritime Region Bracing For Nasty Wintry Blast
    HALIFAX — Residents of a wide swath of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia are bracing for a spring snowstorm.    

    Snowfall Warnings: Maritime Region Bracing For Nasty Wintry Blast

    Scheer Urges PM To Follow Through On Libel Threat Over SNC, Testify In Court

    The Conservative leader revealed Sunday that he received a letter on March 31 from Trudeau's lawyer, Julian Porter, threatening a libel suit.

    Scheer Urges PM To Follow Through On Libel Threat Over SNC, Testify In Court