In May 2013, the American website Gawker and the Toronto Star reported that they had viewed a cellphone video that showed then-Mayor of Toronto Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine and commenting on political issues. Gawker raised money to buy the video, but were unable to acquire it when the seller broke off contact. On October 31, 2013, the Toronto Police Service announced that they were in possession of the video, "and at least one other". [1] [2] The video was retrieved in the course of an investigation of drug gangs, entitled "Project Traveller". Ford's associate Alexander "Sandro" Lisi was charged with extortion for attempting to retrieve the video, in exchange for marijuana.
Reporters from the Toronto Star and Gawker were sent a photo still of Ford standing with three men filmed outside an Etobicoke residence garage door on Windsor Road, later revealed to be the residence of a Ford colleague. The individuals standing with Ford were later identified as Anthony Smith, Muhammad Khattak and Monir Kassim, allegedly affiliated with the Dixon City Bloods criminal gang. Khattak and Kassim were both arrested in a sweep of an apartment complex near the home in June 2013. Smith was killed in a shooting on the streets of downtown Toronto in March 2013. [3] The home was attacked in a home invasion days after Gawker and the Toronto Star published the video story. [3]
Ford initially denied both the existence of the video and using crack cocaine. Though several members of Toronto City Council, as well as the editorial boards of the Star, the National Post , and the Toronto Sun , called for him to step down, he refused to do so. [4] [5] [6] On November 5, 2013, Ford admitted to smoking crack cocaine "probably in one of my drunken stupors" [7] and to hiding his drug abuse from his family, his staff and the people of Toronto, but pledged to continue on as Mayor. [8] In a series of votes later that month and in an ensuing media circus, Ford was then promptly relieved by the Municipal Council of virtually all of his recognized mayoral acting authority affects, but still left in the mayoral position office and attending council meetings (notably with his brother Doug) with then-Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly instated as the de facto Acting Mayor. [9]
On April 30, 2014, a second video showing Ford smoking crack emerged. [10] Ford took a leave of absence to enter drug rehabilitation from May 1 through June 30, 2014, during which time Kelly officially served as Acting Mayor. [11] [12] [13] Ford did not run for re-election in 2014, instead running for, and winning, his former City Council seat; he continued to serve on the City Council until his death from cancer on March 22, 2016. In August 2016, the Toronto Police Service released the original video of Ford smoking crack, and the remaining charges against Lisi were dropped. [14]
Twenty office staff reported to Rob Ford on May 16, 2013. In the months following the report of the video, eleven staff left his office and were replaced. On November 19, eleven of the current staff were transferred to the deputy mayor's office.
He pleaded guilty the following year to threatening, assault and criminal harassment of a young woman whom he punched in the eye. He was sentenced to 90 days in jail, on top of 45 days he had spent in pretrial custody. Election rules do not prevent candidates with criminal records from running for office.