A woman from Surrey, B.C., expresses profound relief after the arrest of Andy Kyungho Yun, the man accused of stalking her since 2024 through thousands of videos and messages posted online. “I can finally breathe,” she stated, having lived in fear for two years. S.K., whose identity is protected, described her terror: “I don’t know what he is capable of doing and I think that’s what scares me most of all.”
From Colleague to Stalker
S.K. and Yun worked together over 20 years ago at a Burnaby health insurance provider. She remembered him as a great co-worker with a good sense of humor. In April 2024, Yun reached out via LinkedIn, sparking initial excitement for a catch-up. However, a brief phone call raised red flags with his coded language and conspiracy theories. S.K. politely ended contact and blocked him, but that marked the start of relentless harassment.
Yun allegedly called and texted repeatedly, harassed her on social media, and impersonated others to evade blocks. He even messaged her daughter on LinkedIn, prompting S.K. to contact police. “That was when I drew the line,” she said.
Peace Bond, Violations, and Workplace Intrusion
In August 2025, a peace bond required Yun to stay 200 meters away and have no contact. Months later, he appeared at S.K.’s workplace on November 13, claiming to be a federal agent seeking to speak with her. “One of the places I felt safe was no longer safe,” S.K. recalled.
Police arrested Yun that day, charging him with criminal harassment and breaching an undertaking by coming within 100 meters. Released on $500 bail November 17 with stricter conditions—including avoiding Surrey, removing social media posts about S.K., and posting no new ones—he allegedly violated the order multiple times. Between January 31 and March 3, breaches included social media references to S.K., missing a Forensic Psychiatric Services appointment, and new posts. At one point, four arrest warrants targeted the 48-year-old.
Police Pursuit and Capture
Surrey Police Service Staff Sgt. Lindsey Houghton noted that RCMP officers across jurisdictions checked addresses and consulted the behavioral sciences group for risk assessments. “RCMP officers in several jurisdictions have been following up,” Houghton stated on April 23.
S.K. explained police attempts to serve warrants at Yun’s Chilliwack home failed without a Feeney warrant, due to protections against unreasonable search and seizure. Criminal lawyer Rob Dhanu, K.C., a former Crown prosecutor, confirmed: “They can’t break in your door without that Feeney warrant.”
After two months at large, RCMP arrested Yun in Chilliwack on Sunday night. He remains in custody ahead of a bail hearing on April 30.
Impact on Victim and Calls for Reform
The ordeal cost S.K. her job: “I couldn’t focus… I ultimately lost my job.” She praised police support and VictimLinkBC but criticized slow justice system responses. “He’s still posting these disturbing videos and he even talks directly to me,” she said recently. “It’s terrifying.” Her greatest fear: “that I won’t be here.” She limited outings to therapy and monthly self-defense classes.
Dhanu highlighted a gap between victims’ fear and police prioritization: “What they see is this is a criminal harassment case, there’s no actual violence.” S.K. urges overhaul of stalking laws for faster action, especially with warrants, and encourages victims: “Don’t think it’s trivial… report it. People need to understand that stalking is a very serious crime.”

