Toronto police told BBC Brasil that Anton Pilipa is charged with attempted armed assault and appeared in court last Monday, the same day he arrived in the country from Brazil.
He has been released on bail and his next hearing will take place on the 13th. The police refused to provide further details about the case.
The attack is believed to have taken place on January 29, 2011. He was summoned to court but disappeared before his scheduled court appearance.
Anton Pilipa, 39, was “discovered” by a traffic police officer at the end of November while he was wandering along the BR 364 in Rondônia. He had no papers or money and was unable to provide his identity.
He was taken to Porto Velho hospital and fled the scene while authorities attempted to identify him. He was found earlier this year walking on a road at the entrance to Manaus.
The second time, it was already known that he was a Canadian citizen who disappeared in March 2012 after starting treatment for schizophrenia.
Before beginning treatment for his mental illness, he worked in Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto as an employee of humanitarian organizations helping people in need.
Anton has traveled to cities and towns in at least nine countries from Canada, including the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela and Brazil. Just by walking, he has come more than 10,000 kilometres from his home country.
He says that most of the time he searched for food and clothes in garbage cans and sometimes he received food from some people. But he also says he met some “bad people” along the way. “But (I’ve) received more generosity, especially lately.”
Anton was brought home by his brother Stefan, who learned just before Christmas that Anton had been found in Brazil.
According to him, the contact was made thanks to the initiative of the traffic policewoman Helenice Campos, who approached Anton on the road to Rondônia, when he looked like a beggar; he had been wearing the same blue shorts and t-shirt for months, swearing and saying disjointed words.
Helenice took him to the hospital in Porto Velho and found Anton’s brother on Twitter.
The family began mobilizing to raise funds to find him, even creating an online crowdfunding account to help cover expenses, such as plane tickets.
“Prone to fits of apathy. Beer evangelist. Incurable coffeeaholic. Internet expert.”