After six months of questions about the force’s handling of the Ford crack video investigation, the police chief breaks his silence
The press release was vague, saying only that Police Chief Bill Blair had an announcement to make about the Project Brazen 2, an investigation flowing from Project Traveller, the police raids that took the city by storm back in June. And may or may not have been related to the Rob Ford crack video scandal.
He entered the media gallery at police headquarters a little earlier than the prescribed 11:30 start time, which meant he had to wait a minute before taking the podium and his tech folks could give the assembled news cameras the cue to begin the live stream. He stood waiting with his hands folded in front of him, head cocked slightly up, eyes shut as if in prayer.
Call it Bill Blair’s Halloween Eve surprise.
While most of the city was expecting to find a few juicy tidbits in those court documents released yesterday into the last month’s arrest of the mayor’s alleged drug dealer Alexander Lisi, no one was prepared for the treat the chief of police was about to deliver – or was it a trick?
That being the news that the cops had retrieved the infamous video allegedly showing the mayor smoking crack from computers and other digital material seized in Project Traveller. That information had only been brought to the chief’s attention on Tuesday, October 29. What took so long? Apparently the file containing the video had been deleted.
There was more big news. The chief also announced that Lisi had been picked up that morning, arrested on an additional charge of extortion.
We won’t know the particulars of that until later this morning when Lisi is scheduled to appear in bail court. Could the charge be related to efforts by the mayor’s office to retrieve the crack video and the May home invasion at the Windsor Road home of the mayor’s high school bud Fabio Basso, where the video was allegedly shot? The chief wasn’t saying.
But the news of Lisi’s arrest seemed to catch the police department’s corporate communications staff flatfooted. They were unaware of it until the chief had announced it and so couldn’t tell reporters when Lisi would be appearing in court.
The clouds that have been hanging over the police handling of the Ford matter and his connection to known gang members since the Traveller raids only slightly parted.
Given the competing police leaks throughout this whole affair it was easy to read a little too much into the timing of Lisi’s arrest and the chief’s video revelation, coincidentally or not coming on the morning the 400-pages of documents related to Lisi’s earlier arrest on marijuana possession and trafficking charges. Is the chief toying with our mayor? Drip, drip, drip.
Perhaps it was merely happenstance, too, that the day before Lisi’s arrest, the chief gave an eyebrow-raising address to the Canadian Club of Toronto which caught many observers by surprise because of the length of time he spent talking about Traveller. And pains he took to stress that Toronto police pursue investigations, regardless of the individuals who may be involved, “without fear or favour.”
Well, there have been question about that. Blair has had to walk a fine line. The chief has heard the criticisms. People were beginning to wonder if the mayor was receiving preferential treatment. Some in the media are still wondering, even after yesterday’s events.
Indeed, he was asked if the mayor had been brought in for questioning. He said no. And why not? The chief wasn’t going to get into that, but suggested that there may have been attempts to question the mayor. Did the mayor’s lawyer get in the way?
It’s unclear, but Ford’s legal counsel Dennis Morris, whose name hasn’t been seen nor heard since the crack allegations first exploded back in the spring, emerged yesterday to declare the chief had overstepped his authority and should resign for telling the world that the video of the mayor smoking something does indeed exist. The fight is not over yet folks. It may be just beginning.
All that’s left for Ford to do is resign. Certainly, that’s what it looks like. There’s enough information in documents related to Lisi’s drug arrest that’ll keep the city’s media chasing leads for weeks, if not months. To say nothing of the pages of redacted information that lawyers will be in court fighting to have released.
The 400-pages released so far paint a disturbing portrait of the mayor. Not for some of those in the media who’ve been following this story mind you, and have been made privy to some of the crazier details not yet published.
But the shots of the mayor from surveillance cameras in the sky making what look like drug buys from Lisi may have finally woken up a lot of Ford Nationalists who have been wilfully blind to the mayor’s madness. It’s too late now for the mayor to do what his advisers were telling him months ago and check himself into rehab. Everybody likes a redemption story right? It may be the only choice left Ford.
Ford emerged from his office to state there is “no reason” for him to go. The mayor is a stubborn man. Foolish, too. Or is it hubris?
He lost the moral authority to be mayor a long time ago. He might do well to take Blair’s comments as fatherly advice, or a warning, and make a break now before more damaging disclosures become public.
But he won’t leave willingly. There’s nothing in law compelling him to, short of being incarcerated. He hasn’t been charged with anything – yet.
Indeed, some of the usual apologists of the mayor’s over at Newstalk 1010 still can’t see their willful blindness, despite the photographic evidence. John Tory, who wants to replace Ford as mayor, called the Ford revelations “a tragedy.”
Well, turns out the crack story was not a conspiracy led by the Toronto Star, after all. If he’s smart, Ford would start thinking about how to orchestrate some semblance of a graceful exit. It can only get uglier from here on in.
enzom@nowtoronto.com | @enzodimatteo
• Nov 1, 2013 at 10:16 AM
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