KING JESUS IS COMING FOR US ANY TIME NOW. THE RAPTURE. BE PREPARED TO GO.
ALL MY REPORTS ON THIS STORY SO FAR
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/ontario-mayorcanada-senate-scandals.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/now-doug-ford-drug-selling-allegations.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/rob-ford-no-answers-to-drug-alligations.html
WITH MAYOR ROB FORD KEEPING HIS MOUTH CLOSED ABOUT THE DRUG ALLEGATIONS.THE PRESSURE IS MOUNTING MORE AND MORE OF GUILT-WHICH WILL FORCE HIM TO RESIGN I AM AFRAID.YOU JUST GOTTA GET IT OUT IN THE OPEN AND ASK FOR FORGIVNESS-IF HE DONE IT.OR WE KNOW HIS POLITICAL CAREER IS OVER.IF THE QUESTIONS GET UN ANSWERED AND IGNORED.IN THIS CASE WHAT CAN'T GET SOLVED WILL BRING DOWN A RESIGNATION AND A END OF A POLITICAL CAREER-I CAN SEE IT COMING WITH ROB.DOUG GOT HIS ALLEGATIONS OUT QUICK.AND HE IS NOT AFFECTED ANYMORE.BUT WITH ROB REFUSING TO ANSWER.WE CAN PRETTY WELL 99% BE ASSURED THIS WILL END IN A RESIGNATION AND AN END OF A POLITICAL CAREER.
Mississauga News-ByCanadian Press
TORONTO - A Toronto city official says the
mayor's office didn't ask municipal staff to destroy any documents — the
latest allegation to surface in the ongoing crack cocaine scandal
surrounding Mayor Rob Ford.A report published in the Toronto Star said that telephone and email
records belonging to three former aides were ordered deleted. The report
did not specify where the alleged order came from.The newspaper cited anonymous sources, and said one of the people it
spoke to expressed concerns that evidence related to the drug
controversy could be wiped out.The Star and the U.S. website Gawker reported earlier this month that
Ford was captured on video smoking what appears to be crack cocaine,
though the Star itself has said it could not vouch for its authenticity.
The mayor has denied the accusation and the clip's existence.Ford wouldn't address the new allegations Wednesday, walking out of a
news conference when journalists flooded him with questions.A spokeswoman for the city issued a statement shortly afterward denying
anyone in the mayor's office requested that records be erased."The city has bylaws and policies in place to ensure that city records are not destroyed," Jackie DeSouza said in the statement.The mayor parted ways with his chief of staff last week and lost two of
his spokesmen this week, and the Star alleges their records are the ones
targeted for elimination.The newspaper has also reported that Ford's head of logistics, David
Price, discussed the possibility of seeking the video with other members
of the mayor's staff. Neither Ford nor Price have addressed those
allegations.Ontario's privacy commissioner said she sent Ford a letter Wednesday,
warning him that "any inappropriate destruction of records has the
potential to erode the public's trust."While documents related to personal, political or constituency matters
are exempt from municipal freedom of information laws, it can be tricky
to determine what falls under those categories, Ann Cavoukian said."There's often grey areas, and so we always say that the premature
destruction of records prevents the public and us from making a
determination," she said.She wouldn't, however, comment on whether documents linked to the alleged video would be exempt from the regulations.
ALL MY REPORTS ON THIS STORY SO FAR
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/ontario-mayorcanada-senate-scandals.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/now-doug-ford-drug-selling-allegations.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2013/05/rob-ford-no-answers-to-drug-alligations.html
WITH MAYOR ROB FORD KEEPING HIS MOUTH CLOSED ABOUT THE DRUG ALLEGATIONS.THE PRESSURE IS MOUNTING MORE AND MORE OF GUILT-WHICH WILL FORCE HIM TO RESIGN I AM AFRAID.YOU JUST GOTTA GET IT OUT IN THE OPEN AND ASK FOR FORGIVNESS-IF HE DONE IT.OR WE KNOW HIS POLITICAL CAREER IS OVER.IF THE QUESTIONS GET UN ANSWERED AND IGNORED.IN THIS CASE WHAT CAN'T GET SOLVED WILL BRING DOWN A RESIGNATION AND A END OF A POLITICAL CAREER-I CAN SEE IT COMING WITH ROB.DOUG GOT HIS ALLEGATIONS OUT QUICK.AND HE IS NOT AFFECTED ANYMORE.BUT WITH ROB REFUSING TO ANSWER.WE CAN PRETTY WELL 99% BE ASSURED THIS WILL END IN A RESIGNATION AND AN END OF A POLITICAL CAREER.
Toronto official says mayor didn't order records destroyed
Mayor Rob Ford ‘ought to resign,’ says former Ontario cabinet minister Dwight Duncan
Dwight Duncan says Mayor Rob Ford has
got to go. The former Ontario finance minister says Toronto's reputation
is being battered.
Dwight Duncan says
embattled Rob Ford should step aside immediately because the mayor’s
“gong show” is doing “irreparable harm” to Toronto’s reputation.The former Ontario
finance minister is first person of prominence outside city hall to call
on Ford to either resign or take a leave of absence in the wake of allegations of drug use.Speaking to the
Economic Club on Tuesday, the former Liberal cabinet minister turned
businessman said, “I think he ought to resign . . . this is doing
horrible damage to the reputation of this great metropolis.”For that reason,
Duncan said he is baffled by the fact that more city council members and
even officials at Queen’s Park aren’t doing more.“Why aren’t they
taking a resolution demanding that he step aside while these various
allegations be looked at. I don’t know why the province isn’t doing
something on that,” Duncan said in an onstage chat with TVOntario’s
Steve Paikin.Duncan, who left politics in February
to become a senior investment adviser at McMillan LLP, said the
“ongoing insanity” at city hall “in my view is going to do irreparable
harm to this community.”He explained that when
he was a cabinet minister he would often be advised on the financial
cost of good and bad news coverage and “I can’t imagine what the cost of
all of this is to the city and to the region’s reputation.”The former treasurer
argued the maelstrom surrounding Ford is also hurting Ontario because
Toronto is the provincial capital as well as the country’s banking
centre.
Duncan said it is
unlikely Queen’s Park could formally have Ford removed “but there has to
be a leadership role because Toronto is the engine of the Ontario
economy, of the Canadian economy arguably.”“Until people of good will start saying that (Ford should resign) this gong show is going to continue on,” he told the luncheon.“Can you imagine a
provincial politics or senior cabinet minister were in this position? We
have had ministers resign for viewing movies in hotel rooms. It’s just
gotten beyond the pale.”A spokesperson for Premier Kathleen Wynne
said later that there is virtually nothing the province can do to
intervene unless Ford is convicted of an offence and sentenced to jail
time.Another senior provincial official confirmed the government is closely monitoring the situation at city hall.Under Ontario’s City
of Toronto Act, the province could only order a mayoral and council
byelection if city councillors fail to obtain a quorum for 60 days and
are unable to hold meetings.In that case, the entire 45-member council would be forced to run in a byelection.The senior insider stressed no one is considering such drastic actions because the business of the city is continuing.
9 things we know — and don't know — about the Rob Ford controversy
Questions swirling after reports Toronto mayor was seen in a video allegedly using crack cocaine
CBC News Posted: May 29, 2013 5:28 AM ET Last Updated: May 29, 2013 10:05 AM ET
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has said a video
reportedly showing him smoking crack cocaine doesn't exist, but
questions remain in the controversy that has been swirling around City
Hall for nearly two weeks. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)
Since the initial reports nearly two weeks ago that Toronto Mayor Rob
Ford was seen in a cellphone video allegedly using crack cocaine,
questions have been swirling at city hall and beyond.Ford initially responded
by saying the allegations were "ridiculous," and then held a steadfast
silence — he says on the advice of a lawyer — until last Friday."I do not use crack cocaine," Ford told a news conference at City Hall that day. "Nor am I an addict of crack cocaine." Ford also said he doesn't believe the alleged video exists.The
next day, new allegations emerged around Ford's brother, Coun. Doug
Ford, with the Globe and Mail newspaper reporting that he had been
involved in selling hashish in the 1980s when he was in his teens and
early 20s.
The Globe story was the result of 18 months of research and legal review, its editor said. But it did rely heavily on unnamed sources, albeit sources that senior editors at the paper were said to verify themselves.
Doug Ford vigorously denied the allegations, but his denials and the statements from the mayor have done little to quell the controversy.So what do we know with any certainty about this controversy, and what questions remain?
The Toronto Star and the U.S. gossip website Gawker reported on May 16 that members of their staff saw a video of Ford smoking what appears to be crack cocaine.Two experienced Star reporters, Kevin Donovan and Robyn Doolittle, and Gawker editor John Cook saw the video on separate occasion on an iPhone and said it was being shopped around."The men were clear that they want the money for it. And we know that they have spoken with American outlets," Doolittle told CBC News on May 17. "They wanted six figures for it and we did not pay it."
Ford's chief of staff was fired
Mark Towhey, Mayor Rob Ford's chief of staff, leaves Toronto City Hall after he was fired from his post on May 23, 2013. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)Ford fired his chief of staff, Mark Towhey, on Thursday, May 23, one week after the first reports of the video surfaced and while pressure was mounting for the mayor to respond in some detail to the allegations.
As Towhey was being escorted out of city hall by security guards, he said: "I am no longer the chief of staff. I did not resign."(A source close to the mayor's office told CBC News that Towhey was fired because he told Ford to "go away and get help." Towhey has refused to make any public comment on the events.)
Two of Ford's communications staff quit
Another two members of Ford's staff left his office the following Monday, May 27. Ford said he found out that day that press secretary George Christopoulos and deputy press secretary Isaac Ransom had tendered their resignations and were leaving his office.Sources told CBC's city hall reporter, Jamie Strashin, that the two key staff members quit "on principle." But what that principle was has not been spelled out.
Relations between the Ford family and the media are tense
Ford has repeatedly criticized the Star's reporting on issues involving him for many months now. On May 26, the mayor and his brother used their weekly radio show to deny the allegations of drug use. Rob Ford also called the media a "bunch of maggots." The following day, Ford apologized for the remark.
"I'm sure you understand this has been a very stressful week for myself and my family," Ford said. He added that the stress "doesn't justify using the terminology I did describing the media."
Rob Ford was fired as high school football coach
Toronto City Mayor Rob Ford reacts as the Don Bosco Eagles, the high school team he coached, trailed in their 28-14 defeat to Huron Heights Warriors in the Metro Cup in Toronto on Nov. 27, 2012. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)The Toronto Catholic District School Board dumped Ford from his position as head coach of the Don Bosco Eagles senior football team on May 22.A board spokesman told CBC News the decision was "in no way related to the current allegations. It is due to the review of his March 1 Sun News Network interview."
In the Sun interview, John Yan said, Ford painted the Don Bosco community negatively when he referred to it as "crime ridden," and the youth as "gang bangers."During his media statement on May 24, Ford commented on his “long relationship” with Don Bosco.“I will continue to support Don Bosco in spirit and I wish them great success for their upcoming season. These kids are phenomenal kids who have bright futures and can do anything if they put their minds to it,” he said.
For all the controversy that has been swirling, one crucial question remains: Where is the video?
The Star and Gawker have stood by their reports about the video. Ford has said it doesn't exist.
The Star's Doolittle has said she and Donovan were told there was more than one copy of the video. Gawker has said it has raised the $200,000 asking price, through crowd-sourcing, but has not been able to make contact with those who have the alleged video. It said Tuesday that it will give the sellers about a month to respond before it decides what else to do with the money; donating it to charities was the alternative.According to published reports on May 28, someone on Ford's staff was told days ago about the potential location of the video, and passed that information along to police.
Has Rob Ford ever smoked crack cocaine?
Ford said on May 17 that he does not "use crack cocaine” and that he is not a crack cocaine addict. Questions remain as to whether he has used drugs in the past. Ford has yet to provide additional clarification.
What is the connection to Anthony Smith?
The people shopping the alleged Ford video would not provide a screen grab of what they had. But the alleged go-between did give the Toronto Star and Gawker a photo of the mayor with his arm around someone said to be Anthony Smith, a 21-year-old who was shot and killed outside a downtown nightclub in March.CBC News has spoken to people who know the men in the picture, and confirmed they believe that the men in the photo are Smith and Muhammad Khattak, who was injured in that same shooting and whose face was pixellated in the original photo.The mayor, who has a practice of coaching and working with young people, has simply said he gets his picture taken with many people.The Toronto Star is now suggesting the cellphone with the alleged video may have belonged to Smith. Police haven't confirmed that is the case.
Just how are things going at city hall?
Ford has said it is business as usual at city hall, and city council's executive committee said in a letter May 24 that city business is continuing "without interruption."
Still, the media presence at city hall is not the usual contingent, and three staff members in Ford's office have left abruptly in the past week, meaning there is, at the very least, a different staff dynamic in his office.
The Globe story was the result of 18 months of research and legal review, its editor said. But it did rely heavily on unnamed sources, albeit sources that senior editors at the paper were said to verify themselves.
Doug Ford vigorously denied the allegations, but his denials and the statements from the mayor have done little to quell the controversy.So what do we know with any certainty about this controversy, and what questions remain?
What we know
Two media outlets report that they saw the videoThe Toronto Star and the U.S. gossip website Gawker reported on May 16 that members of their staff saw a video of Ford smoking what appears to be crack cocaine.Two experienced Star reporters, Kevin Donovan and Robyn Doolittle, and Gawker editor John Cook saw the video on separate occasion on an iPhone and said it was being shopped around."The men were clear that they want the money for it. And we know that they have spoken with American outlets," Doolittle told CBC News on May 17. "They wanted six figures for it and we did not pay it."
Ford's chief of staff was fired
Mark Towhey, Mayor Rob Ford's chief of staff, leaves Toronto City Hall after he was fired from his post on May 23, 2013. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)Ford fired his chief of staff, Mark Towhey, on Thursday, May 23, one week after the first reports of the video surfaced and while pressure was mounting for the mayor to respond in some detail to the allegations.
As Towhey was being escorted out of city hall by security guards, he said: "I am no longer the chief of staff. I did not resign."(A source close to the mayor's office told CBC News that Towhey was fired because he told Ford to "go away and get help." Towhey has refused to make any public comment on the events.)
Two of Ford's communications staff quit
Another two members of Ford's staff left his office the following Monday, May 27. Ford said he found out that day that press secretary George Christopoulos and deputy press secretary Isaac Ransom had tendered their resignations and were leaving his office.Sources told CBC's city hall reporter, Jamie Strashin, that the two key staff members quit "on principle." But what that principle was has not been spelled out.
Relations between the Ford family and the media are tense
Ford has repeatedly criticized the Star's reporting on issues involving him for many months now. On May 26, the mayor and his brother used their weekly radio show to deny the allegations of drug use. Rob Ford also called the media a "bunch of maggots." The following day, Ford apologized for the remark.
"I'm sure you understand this has been a very stressful week for myself and my family," Ford said. He added that the stress "doesn't justify using the terminology I did describing the media."
Rob Ford was fired as high school football coach
Toronto City Mayor Rob Ford reacts as the Don Bosco Eagles, the high school team he coached, trailed in their 28-14 defeat to Huron Heights Warriors in the Metro Cup in Toronto on Nov. 27, 2012. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)The Toronto Catholic District School Board dumped Ford from his position as head coach of the Don Bosco Eagles senior football team on May 22.A board spokesman told CBC News the decision was "in no way related to the current allegations. It is due to the review of his March 1 Sun News Network interview."
In the Sun interview, John Yan said, Ford painted the Don Bosco community negatively when he referred to it as "crime ridden," and the youth as "gang bangers."During his media statement on May 24, Ford commented on his “long relationship” with Don Bosco.“I will continue to support Don Bosco in spirit and I wish them great success for their upcoming season. These kids are phenomenal kids who have bright futures and can do anything if they put their minds to it,” he said.
What questions remain
Where is the video?For all the controversy that has been swirling, one crucial question remains: Where is the video?
The Star and Gawker have stood by their reports about the video. Ford has said it doesn't exist.
The Star's Doolittle has said she and Donovan were told there was more than one copy of the video. Gawker has said it has raised the $200,000 asking price, through crowd-sourcing, but has not been able to make contact with those who have the alleged video. It said Tuesday that it will give the sellers about a month to respond before it decides what else to do with the money; donating it to charities was the alternative.According to published reports on May 28, someone on Ford's staff was told days ago about the potential location of the video, and passed that information along to police.
Has Rob Ford ever smoked crack cocaine?
Ford said on May 17 that he does not "use crack cocaine” and that he is not a crack cocaine addict. Questions remain as to whether he has used drugs in the past. Ford has yet to provide additional clarification.
What is the connection to Anthony Smith?
The people shopping the alleged Ford video would not provide a screen grab of what they had. But the alleged go-between did give the Toronto Star and Gawker a photo of the mayor with his arm around someone said to be Anthony Smith, a 21-year-old who was shot and killed outside a downtown nightclub in March.CBC News has spoken to people who know the men in the picture, and confirmed they believe that the men in the photo are Smith and Muhammad Khattak, who was injured in that same shooting and whose face was pixellated in the original photo.The mayor, who has a practice of coaching and working with young people, has simply said he gets his picture taken with many people.The Toronto Star is now suggesting the cellphone with the alleged video may have belonged to Smith. Police haven't confirmed that is the case.
Just how are things going at city hall?
Ford has said it is business as usual at city hall, and city council's executive committee said in a letter May 24 that city business is continuing "without interruption."
Still, the media presence at city hall is not the usual contingent, and three staff members in Ford's office have left abruptly in the past week, meaning there is, at the very least, a different staff dynamic in his office.