Man considered a high-risk offender released and re-arrested within 2 hours: Guelph police | Page 878 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Chris Knight
Publication Date: February 3, 2026 - 11:42

Stay informed

Man considered a high-risk offender released and re-arrested within 2 hours: Guelph police

February 3, 2026

Police in Guelph, Ont., announced on Monday that they had re-arrested a man they consider to be a high-risk offender, just hours after informing the public that he had been released from custody.

On Monday at 2:24 p.m., Guelph Police Service posted to X that Medhani Yohans, 36, had been released from custody in Guelph Provincial Court after pleading guilty to a charge of breaching his probation order.

Referring to Yohans as “a high-risk offender,” police noted: “He has a history of violence that includes two stranger sexual assaults.”

They added: “The Guelph Police Service believes that Yohans poses a risk to the community, particularly to women, and is concerned that he may commit similar offences in the future.” They requested anyone who saw Yohans to not approach him but rather notify police, “in order to ensure he is abiding by his conditions.”

However, less than two hours after Yohans’ release, police arrested him, and then issued a press release stating that he was back in custody.

Yohans “was arrested downtown at 2:35 p.m. after he was observed breaching a condition of his latest probation order,” police said in the release. “He had been ordered to stay away from a particular address.”

They added: “He is now facing another count of breaching a probation order as a result of Monday’s arrest. He will appear in bail court Tuesday.”

This is not the first time Guelph police have warned the public about the man.

In August of 2024 they noted that Yohans had recently been released from a custodial facility in Toronto, and that his whereabouts at the time were unknown.

One of the conditions of his release was to show up at the Guelph Police station within seven days. When he failed to appear, a warrant was issued, and he was arrested later that month by another southern Ontario police service, and charged with two counts of failing to comply with release conditions.

Then, a year ago, Guelph Police made two warnings to the public, first that Yohans was being released from custody on March 1, and then that he had been seen sleeping on the University of Guelph campus at midnight on March 10. School officials at the time said that he was immediately removed by Campus Safety Officers.

Then, last July, police once again noted that Yohans had been released from custody in Guelph. This time he was re-arrested within 24 hours and charged with four counts of breach of probation, disobeying a court order, and criminal harassment.

“The Guelph Police Service extends its thanks to the community for their vigilance and assistance in this matter,” police said at the time.

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
A British Columbia judge has knocked a year off the prison sentence for a Métis-Cree woman who sexually assaulted a teen less than half her age after sending the boy “sexualized photographs” of herself “in states of undress, as well as pictures of her breasts and vagina.” Matraca Lynn Dodding has pleaded guilty in B.C. Provincial court to sexually assaulting a 15-year-old in the spring of 2024 when she was 32 years old. She also pleaded guilty to communicating with the young man, whose identity is protected by a publication ban, for the purpose of facilitating the sexual assault. “...
February 10, 2026 - 07:00 | Chris Lambie | National Post
Some young people in a stolen vehicle with a 16-year-old First Nations girl who was shot and killed by police are expected to testify today at an inquest into the death.
February 10, 2026 - 06:34 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
Recently, I reported for The Walrus on how Alberta lost the plot on measles in 2025. First, a reminder of the timeline. Canada’s recent trouble with measles began late in October 2024, when an infected traveller brought it to New Brunswick. By November 1, public health officials declared an outbreak in the Fredericton area, and soon, more than forty people—mostly unvaccinated children—contracted the virus. By March 2025, measles had made it to northern Alberta, and by the summer, the province reported more measles cases than the entire United States. (The population of Alberta is 5...
February 10, 2026 - 06:30 | Monica Kidd | Walrus