Authorities Catch Up To Criminal From Famous Documentary: ‘Pee Pee Poo Poo Man’
A homeless man who allegedly committed a series of poop bucket attacks in Toronto in 2019 was arrested May 12 on unrelated charges, according to authorities.
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Authorities charged Samuel Opoku, 30, with two counts of sexual assault and indecent exposure, according to multiple reports. The charges stem from two incidents May 9 and May 10 in different parts of Toronto.
On May 9, Opoku allegedly approached a group of women and made sexual advances toward one of them, grabbing her forearm before assaulting her and fleeing the scene.
On May 10, the suspect allegedly followed a woman into a commercial office building, assaulted her and then fled. Neither victim knew the suspect, police said.
Court records confirm Opoku is the same man who was arrested for allegedly throwing “liquified fecal matter” at five people on three separate occasions in 2019, according to Toronto Today. The suspect used a bucket to allegedly throw the feces at the University of Toronto’s John P. Robarts Research Library, York University’s Scott Library, and the area of College and McCaul Streets. He was charged with five counts of assault with a weapon and five counts of mischief interfering with property as a result of the incidents. (RELATED: Possible Terror Attack Injures Nearly A Dozen In Major European Country)
The series of fecal attacks became the focus of a film titled, “The Pee Pee Poo Poo Man,” which premiered in Toronto at the Hot Docs theatre in November 2024, according to Toronto Today.
Toronto Police Const. David Hopkinson reacted to the series of 2019 fecal attacks while speaking with the Toronto Star.
“A young girl had a bucket of waste, feces, dumped on her. I don’t know what to say, I’m at a loss, this is absolutely disgusting.”
Although all the victims of the attack were Asian, police did not believe the series of incidents was racially motivated.
“We don’t know if that’s the connection, because we have different parts of Asia in there. Some (of the victims) were from the west side, some from the east side — so it’s not like they were all Chinese, per se,” Toronto Police spokesperson Victor Kwong told the Toronto Star.
Opoku was released on $1,000 bail after spending three weeks in prison in connection with the series of 2019 incidents, according to the New York Post. His lawyer claimed he was suffering from mental health issues at the time.
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