The Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Scandal

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Toronto's embattled mayor on Wednesday rejected the advice of city council allies to take a temporary leave of absence, returning to work a day after acknowledging he had smoked crack.

Deepening the crisis, Rob Ford's long-time policy adviser resigned, continuing an exodus that started in May when news reports emerged of a video showing the mayor smoking what appears to be crack. Police announced last week they had a copy of the video, which has not been released publicly.

After months of evading the question, Ford acknowledged for the first time Tuesday that he smoked crack "probably a year ago" when he was in a "drunken stupor." But he has refused to step aside despite immense pressure.

Ford arrived at City Hall just past noon on Wednesday but took a back stairway to his office to avoid a crush of media.

The mayor later blew a kiss to members of the media as he gave a tour of his office to school children.

More than 200 people protested outside City Hall.

"Hey hey! Ho ho! Rob Ford has got to go!" they chanted.

City Councilor James Pasternak said the controversy consuming Canada's largest city cannot go on day after day. He said several city councilors asked Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly to approach Ford and "orchestrate a dignified exit from city hall."

Kelly met with Ford and suggested he take a temporary leave until later this year or early next year, but Ford rejected that idea. Councilor Frances Nunziata, also a Ford ally, said they are all frustrated Ford won't step aside temporarily.

"We're trying to give him sound advice as supporters," she said. "He needs to listen and he's not listening and I'm very disappointed."

Nunziata said Ford needs to get help but only he can make that decision.

Kelly earlier said Ford didn't tell anyone he would admit to smoking crack before he did so Tuesday.

"It came right out of the blue," said Kelly, who learned about it from a member of Ford's staff after the mayor stopped on his way to his office to tell reporters. "I was like, 'What? What have you been smoking?'"

There is no clear legal path for Ford's critics to force him out. Municipal law makes no provision for the mayor's forced removal from office unless he is convicted and jailed for a criminal offense. Police have not charged Ford.

"He has stubbornly refused to listen to everyone across the city to step down," Councilor Janet Davis said.

Nelson Wiseman, a professor at the University of Toronto, said the province of Ontario could conceivably step in and put Toronto under trusteeship because municipalities are under provincial jurisdiction. He said the chances of that happening are "slim to none," though it might be possible if Ford is charged with a crime and almost all the city councilors plead for Ford to step aside in a motion.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has said she's concerned that Ford's personal issues were making it difficult for the city to carry on normally. But she said it was up to police, the courts or the mayor to take action.

City Councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong, a member of Ford's executive committee, is putting forward a motion that would ask Ford to take a leave of absence, a measure that could be voted on next Wednesday.

Another councilor is putting forward a motion that could strip some of his powers.

"The right thing to do is for council to take a clear position," Minnan-Wong said. "I remain concerned that there's more information that's going to come out. I'm troubled by that and that it will hurt this city even further."

Voters may have the final word on Ford's future. He has said he plans to run in the October 2014 mayoral election.

Police said they obtained the video in the course of a drug investigation into Ford's friend and occasional driver, Alexander Lisi.

The mayor has called on police to release the tape, but police said they are prohibited from doing so because it is evidence before the courts. Police said the video will come out when Lisi goes to trial on drug and extortion charges. Lisi is accused of threatening two gang members who had been trying to sell the video to the media.

A judge is expected to make a decision early next week on whether to allow the release of remaining portions of a document that revealed Ford's ties and covert meetings with Lisi, an alleged drug dealer.

Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair has also said police have a second tape, but he has declined to discuss what's on it.

---

Follow Rob Gillies on Twitter at twitter.com/rgilliescanada


Source : Sapa-AP /mjs
Date : 07 Nov 2013 03:11
 
[video=youtube;VsjlNNsChZ4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsjlNNsChZ4[/video]
 
I saw this on the daily show last night. The balls on this guy! LOL!

Yeah I may have smoked crack, but it was while I was in a drunken stupor...
Priceless
 
He's trying to blame drinking too much alcohol as the reason for smoking crack. Politicians I tell you...

Edit: He must be the fattest crack smoker in history.
 
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How to tell if your mayor is smoking crack.

[video=youtube;0q_uLzEljo8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0q_uLzEljo8[/video]
 
New video emerges of Toronto Mayor

A new video has surfaced showing Toronto Mayor Rob Ford in a rage, using threatening words including "kill" and "murder."

Ford says he was "very, very inebriated" in the video, which appeared Thursday on the Toronto Star's website.

The context of the video is unknown and it's unclear who the target of Ford's wrath is.

The new video appears a week after police said they had obtained another video that appears to show Ford smoking a crack pipe.

Ford admitted to smoking crack Tuesday.


Source : Sapa-AP /aw
Date : 07 Nov 2013 19:46
 
With crude language Toronto mayor deepens scandal

Embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has dug himself further into scandal by using crude, graphic language to deny claims he asked to perform oral sex on an aide.

Ford, under fire for admitting using crack and allegedly abusing a prescription drug and other misconduct, drew gasps, giggles and at least one exclamation of "oh, my God" from reporters with his remarks Thursday outside his office.

He later apologized, but it did seem to do any good.

At a city council meeting, many councilors turned their backs on Ford when he stood to speak. One chided him for his "disgraceful language."

While speaking to reporters, Ford threatened to sue former staffers and others for telling police they witnessed him allegedly snorting cocaine, and partying with a possible prostitute.

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne hinted for the first time she was weighing solutions to the crisis gripping her province's capital, including legislation to possibly oust the mayor.

Ford -- who has admitted smoking crack cocaine -- angrily doubled down amid the latest allegations, which also suggest he abused the painkiller Oxycontin, drove while drunk and sent staffers to buy alcohol.

"It's unfortunate I have to take legal action," Ford told the reporters outside his office. He branded the latest allegations "outright lies" and vowed to begin litigation shortly.

The claims were revealed in months of police interviews released Wednesday that were used to obtain a search warrant in an investigation of Ford's friend Alessandro Lisi, who faces drug and extortion charges.

The leader of Canada's largest city and financial hub has seen his credibility plummet ever since admitting he once smoked crack while in a "drunken stupor." Ford also has a history of erratic public behavior.

But the latest claims in the police files have not been tested in court, and Ford does not himself face any criminal charges.

And despite seeing his radio show canceled last week over his scandalous behavior, Ford will host a new weekly television program with his brother Doug starting Monday, Sun News Network announced.

Ford named his former chief of staff and two subordinates as targets of his lawsuit, presumably for libel and defamation, for their vivid depictions of erratic behavior on St. Patrick's Day in 2012.

The three staffers were among revelers who joined Ford as he started the evening partying at City Hall.

One of them said he saw a petite blonde blue-eyed woman named Alana he believed was a sex worker.

The staffer told police that there had been rumors that Ford "had used escorts or prostitutes" and that Alana had previously been seen with Ford "at a stag party."

"It hurts my wife when they are calling a friend of mine a prostitute. Alana is not a prostitute. She's a friend and it makes me sick how people are saying this," said Ford.

"I'm very happily married at home," he said.

According to police documents, the party moved to a private room at a local bar, where a waiter claimed he saw the mayor and a woman bent over a table and "heard two sniffs from both of them."

Ford rejected this account and allegations that, over the course of the night, he made lewd suggestions to a female policy adviser and a female City Hall security guard.

In his denial, the mayor insisted his marriage is stable. But in doing so he again used graphic language about oral sex and this earned him further rebukes.

The Canadian Football League's Toronto Argonauts took issue with Ford wearing their team jersey when he made the offending comments.

Yet later, at a press conference with his wife by his side, Ford apologized for his earlier "graphic remarks." But he stopped short of retracting his threat of legal action.

"For the past six months, I have been under tremendous, tremendous stress. The stress is largely of my own making," he said. "I have apologized and I have tried to move forward."

The mea culpa failed to appease Ford's critics, who stepped up calls for his resignation, with one former ally on the council saying his apology was not accepted.

Wynne, the Ontario premier, said she would now consider legislation giving Toronto "new tools" to deal with the situation, but only with the unanimous support of opposition parties, and if Toronto's city council asked for help.

"The things that we are seeing and hearing about Mayor Rob Ford are truly disturbing," Wynne said, while stressing it was up to the municipal and not the provincial government to address the issue.


Source : Sapa-AFP /kd
Date : 15 Nov 2013 12:41
 
Toronto council strips mayor Rob of powers

Toronto's City Council voted overwhelmingly Friday to strip Mayor Rob Ford of some of his powers, trying to box in the brash leader who has rebuffed huge pressure to resign over his drinking and drug habits and erratic behavior.

The motion, approved in a 39-3 vote, suspends Ford's authority to appoint and dismiss the deputy mayor and his executive committee, which runs the budget process. In a separate vote, the council voted to give the deputy mayor authority to handle any civic emergency.

Most city councilors are frustrated by Ford's refusal to step aside since he admitted last week to smoking crack, but they lack the authority to force him out of office unless he is convicted of a crime.

An unusually subdued Ford vowed to fight the motion in court while also saying he understood why the council was taking the measures. Such comments mixing defiance and contriteness have been typical of the mayor throughout the scandal that has been escalating for months.

"If I would have had a mayor conducting themselves the way I have, I would have done exactly the same thing," Ford said.

The mayor and his brother voted against the motion.

"Folks here don't have the moral authority," Doug Ford said. "It's not up to you folks to make this decision, it will be up to the people."

The vote came a day after yet another series of antics from Ford that outraged city councilors, anti-drunk driving advocates and even Toronto's football team.

In the span of a few hours Thursday, Ford used obscene language to deny that he pressured a female employee for oral sex, admitted that he had driven while drinking and then apologized for his vulgarity and said he was seeking professional help, though he refused to give details. Although Ford has admitted to excessive drinking and using and buying illegal drugs, he and his family have insisted he is not an addict and does not need rehab.

"We need to take away his power for the good of the city," said Councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong, a former ally. "The tide has turned and there are very few people that are prepared to defend him given his vulgar comments and his admission that not only does he takes drugs but that he seems to be comfortable drinking and getting behind the wheel."

Ford's troubles began escalating in May when news reports first surface of a video showing him smoking crack. After month of evading the question, the mayor admitted to having smoked crack when Toronto police announced they had obtained the video during the course of a massive drug investigation that has ensnared a close friend of Ford.

Revelations have rapidly surfaced of other startling behavior, from former aides alleging that the mayor has been frequently drunk on the job, to a video showing the mayor threatening to kill someone in an incoherent rant.

It has been a stunning decline for the 44-year-old mayor who was elected three years ago with fervent support from Toronto's conservative-leaning outer suburbs, where many voters felt angry about they considered wasteful spending and elitist politics at City Hall.

John Filion, the councilor who introduced Friday's motion, has said the goal is to prevent Ford from firing executive committee members who speak out against him.

The effort will continue Monday when the council moves to strip the mayor of most of his remaining powers. A motion, already signed by 28 of the 44 council members, will take away his budget and appoint the deputy mayor as head of the executive committee.

Earlier this week, the council voted overwhelmingly to ask Ford to take a leave of absence, but the motion was non-binding.

Ford drew gasps from reporters Thursday morning when he used an obscenity as he denied telling a staffer he wanted to have oral sex. He also threatened to take legal action against his former chief of staff, two other aides and a waiter over interviews with police that were detailed in court documents released Wednesday.

The court documents are part of a drug case against Ford's friend and occasional driver. Police interviews with Ford's ex-staffers revealed their concerns about his drug use and drunk driving, with one staffer alleging another saw Ford "impaired, driving very fast," and frightening the female employee who was in the car with him.

In another incident, Ford was described by a former staff member as being "very inebriated, verbally abusive and inappropriate with" a female staff member on St. Patrick's Day. Another former staffer reported seeing the mayor drunk in his office about 15 to 20 times in the year he worked for him.

Ford later apologized for his vulgar language Thursday and announced at a news conference that he was seeking professional health care help. He explained he was pushed "over the line" by the allegations in the newly released court documents, much of which he allegations "100 per cent lies."

He provoked a written protest from the Toronto Argonauts football team because he was wearing a team jersey when he made his coarse remarks.

No matter what the council does, Ford seems intent to remain in the limelight. The tabloid Sun News Network announced that the mayor and his brother will do a current events television show called "Ford Nation" on Monday nights.

---

Follow Rob Gillies on Twitter at - twitter.com/rgilliescanada


Source : Sapa-AP /avb
Date : 15 Nov 2013 19:11
 
Council reins in mayor

After a tempestuous debate, Toronto's City Council has stripped Mayor Rob Ford of the last of his substantive powers because of multiple scandals, but further turmoil seems inevitable.

The mayor, defiant despite admissions of illegal drug use and heavy drinking, vowed "outright war" to take on his critics in next year's election.

"This is nothing more than a coup d'etat," Ford said just before a series of votes went against him on Monday. "What's happening here today is not a democratic process - it's a dictatorship process."

The council session was one of the stormiest in memory as the burly mayor argued with colleagues and members of the public and at one point knocked down a petite councilwoman as he charged toward one of his hecklers. Cries of "Shame, shame" came from the gallery.

The council voted overwhelmingly in favor of slashing Ford's office budget by 60 percent and allowing mayoral staff to join the deputy mayor, Norm Kelly. Ford now effectively has no legislative power, as he will no longer chair the executive committee, though he retains his title and ability to represent Toronto at official functions.

Kelly, 72, has been in politics since the 1970s, and is considered a low-key, non-ideological politician with a knack for working effectively across factional lines.

"The mayor wants to wage war. I want to wage peace," said Kelly after the council session in effect made him the city's most powerful leader.

Ford gave no indication he would cooperate in a tranquil transition, instead looking ahead to the October 2014 election.

"I'm going to do everything in my power to beat you guys," he said.

The debate became heated after Ford paced around the council chamber and traded barbs with onlookers. The speaker asked security to clear the gallery and a recess was called, but not before Ford had barreled toward his detractors, mowing into Councilor Pam McConnell, who is in her 60s.

Another councilor asked Ford to apologize. Ford said he was rushing to the defense of his brother, city Councilor Doug Ford, and accidentally knocked McConnell down.

"I picked her up," the 44-year-old mayor said. "I ran around because I thought my brother was getting into an altercation."

Visibly shaken after Ford ran her over, McConnell said she never expected such chaos.

"This is the seat of democracy, it is not a football field," she said. "I just wasn't ready."

The motion approved by the council was revised from an even tougher version to ward off potential legal challenges. The city's lawyer said the proposal does not render Ford "mayor in name only."

However, Ford asserted that he and his aides field tens of thousands of emails and phone calls yearly, and said the pared-down budget and staff would be inadequate.

The council does not have the power to remove Ford from office unless he is convicted of a crime. It pursued the strongest recourse available after recent revelations that Ford smoked crack cocaine and his repeated outbursts of erratic behavior.

"Mayor Ford has had many choices ... Would he change his behavior? Would he step aside and seek help?" said Councilor John Filion. "The mayor unfortunately has chosen the path of denial. Now it's time to take away the keys."

"The new allegations pile up faster than the old ones can be dealt with. If many Torontonians were initially fascinated by the drama, they are now fed up with it. They want it to end," Filion said.

The council rejected a motion proposing an early mayoral election, and also rejected a motion to give Ford another month to get expert medical opinion on whether he was capable of carrying out his duties.

Councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong, a former Ford ally, noted that organizers of Sunday's annual Santa Claus parade in Toronto had asked the mayor not to attend.

"Through your choices, your bad actions, you sir have lost the ability to lead this city," Minnan-Wong said.

Toronto, a city of 2.7 million people, has been abuzz with the Ford melodrama since May, when news outlets reported that he had been caught on video smoking crack cocaine.

Recently released court documents show the mayor became the subject of a police investigation after those reports surfaced. Ford, who denied there was any incriminating video, now acknowledges the reports were accurate. Police said they had obtained a copy of a video that appears to show Ford puffing on a crack pipe, but did not release its contents because it is evidence in the case against Ford associate Alexander Lisi, who faces trial on drug and extortion charges.

In interviews with police, former Ford staffers have made further accusations, saying the mayor drank heavily, sometimes drove while intoxicated and pressured a female staffer to engage in oral sex. Ford spouted an obscenity on live television last week while denying the sex allegation, saying he was "happily married" and using crude language to assert that he enjoys enough oral sex at home.

Last week, after admitting to excessive drinking and buying illegal drugs, Ford disclosed that he is seeking medical help. But he and his family insist he is not an addict and does not need rehab.

In a TV interview Monday night for the Canadian Broadcasting Corp., Ford said he had only smoked crack cocaine once, calling it "an isolated incident." He denied that he has driven while drunk, but admitted that he had bought marijuana since becoming mayor.

The mayor declared that he was "finished" with alcohol.

"I've had a come-to-Jesus moment if you want to call it that," Ford said. "Just the humiliation and the belittling and the people I've let down. And it's all because of alcohol. Excessive, stupid, immature behavior and that's it."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper - like Ford a Conservative - was in Toronto on Monday to meet with area Parliament members from his party. Harper's office issued a statement which said the latest allegations against Ford "are troubling."

"Our Government does not condone illegal drug use, especially by elected officials while in office," it said.

Ford and his brother Doug made their debut on a current events television show broadcast Monday night called "Ford Nation" on the conservative tabloid Sun News Network in Canada.

Rob Ford told viewers they would see a change in him over the next few months. "I'll take a urine sample right now," Ford said on the show, which was taped Sunday.

Ford was elected three years ago with overwhelming support from Toronto's conservative-leaning outer suburbs, where many voters felt angry about what they considered wasteful spending and elitist politics at City Hall. He campaigned on promises to "stop the gravy train" by curbing public spending and keeping taxes low.


Source : Sapa-AP /avb
Date : 19 Nov 2013 09:00
 
and people thought Anthony Weiner was crazy :wtf:
 
By ROB GILLIES

Associated Press

A new video of Mayor Rob Ford emerged Tuesday that shows him swearing and slurring his words while apparently trying to imitate a Jamaican accent.

In the video - one of two new ones that have been posted on YouTube -Ford is shown in a fast food restaurant rambling and talking about police surveillance and calling police chief Bill Blair a derogatory name.

Ford, who said in November that he quit drinking, said outside his office Tuesday that he drank on Monday night "a little bit" and acknowledged it was him in the video. When asked if he also did drugs, Ford said no.

"I was with some friends and what I do in my personal life with my personal friends, that's up to me," Ford said. "It really has nothing to do with you guys."

Ford said he did not think the language he used was offensive or discriminatory.

"It's how I speak with some of my friends," he said.

The video is titled "New Video of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford Drunk, Swearing in Jamaican Patois? Bumbaclot."

"Chase me around for five months," the mayor says in the video.

"Leave me alone . and then try and tell me, we're counter-surveilling the guy. He's hiding here, I'm hiding here. Oh, we don't know?" he says before rambling incoherently.

Mark Pugush, a spokesman for Police Chief Blair, said they don't respond to personal attacks.

A second video of Ford posted on YouTube and from inside the same restaurant appears to show Ford sitting with his friend and former driver Alexander Lisi, who faces trial on drug and extortion charges after police started an investigation into the mayor. It was not immediately clear if the video was also shot Monday night.

Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly, who assumed some of the mayor's powers after the City Council stripped Ford of many of his duties year, urged Ford to seek professional help.

"He's got to do a lot of soul-searching in the next few days," Kelly said.

Ford said in November that he was finished with drinking alcohol after having a "come to Jesus moment." He snapped at reporters and denied he was drinking after pictures emerged last week of him at a night club.

Ford vowed in November that the public would never see a tape of him intoxicated again. He said he was working out and the mayor noticeably lost weight. He put his name on the ballot to run for another term earlier this month.

Ford acknowledged last year that he smoked crack "in one of my drunken stupors" after police said they obtained a copy of a tape that appears to show him smoking crack. He refused to resign.

The City Council stripped Ford of most of his powers but lacked the authority to force him out because he wasn't convicted of a crime. The mayor was the subject of a police investigation but was never charged. According to police interviews, staffers accused Ford of frequently drinking.

City councilor Joe Mihevc said the latest tape appears to show that Ford has not stopped drinking and continues to be an embarrassment to the city of Toronto.

City Councilor Michael Thompson, who is black, said he was shocked. "Is that the mayor speaking Jamaican? Wow," Thompson said when reporters showed him the video. "I'm numb."

Thompson said the mayor's interpretation of "supposedly being Jamaican" was offensive. He called it a sad day and said the mayor needs to seek help.

"We've been fairly silent in just waiting for the next thing to occur," Thompson said. "I think we all had sort of concluded it was only a matter of time."

City councilor Denzil Minnan-Wong said Ford had been doing well lately but said this is clearly a setback for him. "It looks like he's fallen off the wagon," Minnan-Wong said.


Source : Sapa-AP /mm
Date : 22 Jan 2014 02:39
 
Last edited:
[video=youtube;HWnuz6QzRS8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWnuz6QzRS8[/video]
 
Easily the funniest thing to have come out of Canada. Rob Ford for mayor! Oh wait...

ladies-and-gentlemen-toronto-mayor-rob-ford-this-picture-made-my-day--63134.png
 
Toronto Mayor sued over alleged jailhouse assault

Embattled Toronto Mayor Rob Ford is being sued by his sister's ex-boyfriend for allegedly conspiring to have the man beaten in jail.

A lawsuit submitted by Scott MacIntyre alleges the mayor was behind an assault at a Toronto jail in March 2012 that was intended to keep MacIntrye quiet about Ford's abuse of alcohol and drugs.

The lawsuit alleges MacIntrye knew about Ford's alcohol and drug use and claims he was threatened with "dire consequences" if he did not remain quiet.

Ford's lawyer, Dennis Morris, said Wednesday the allegations are "without fact or foundation."

Ford offered no comment when reporters asked him about the lawsuit.

The mayor acknowledged last year that he had smoked crack, but he has rebuffed pressure to resign.


Source : Sapa-AP /lk
Date : 30 Jan 2014 00:27
 
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