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Toronto police say they have mayor drug video

TORONTO — Toronto’s police chief said Thursday they have recovered a video deleted from a computer that appears to show Mayor Rob Ford smoking from a crack pipe.

Police Chief Bill Blair said he was “disappointed” after viewing the video, but that there was nothing in the video that would provide grounds to press charges.

Blair said the video will come out in court and declined to say who the computer belonged to or provide other details.

He said the video, recovered from a computer hard drive, “depicts images that are consistent with those previously reported in the press.”

Ford faced allegations in May that he had been caught on video puffing from a glass crack pipe. Two reporters with the Toronto Star said they saw the video, but it has not been released publicly. The Associated Press has not seen it and Ford maintains he does not smoke crack and that the video does not exist.

Ford angrily yelled at reporters on Thursday to get off his property before he left his house in the morning. He didn’t respond to questions shouted at him.

Earlier Thursday, police released showing they had rummaged through Ford’s garbage in search of evidence of drug use and that they conducted a massive surveillance operation monitoring the mayor and a close friend following drug use allegations.

In documents, released Thursday, police said reports of the video triggered an investigation that led to several arrests.

The documents detail evidence that led to the arrest of Ford’s friend and sometimes driver Alexander Lisi, charged with marijuana trafficking and possession.

Blair said Lisi has since been charged with extortion, but declined to elaborate on the new charge.

The police documents, ordered released by a judge, show Ford receiving suspicious packages from Lisi on several occasions.

“Lisi approached the driver’s side of the Mayor’s vehicle with a small white gift bag in hand; he then walked around to the passenger side and got on board,” reads one document dated July 30, 2013. “After a few minutes Lisi exited the Escalade empty handed and walked back to his Range Range Rover. “

Another dated July 28 says Lisi “constantly used counter surveillance techniques” when he met with Ford that day.

On August 13 documents say Lisi and Ford met and “made their way into a secluded area of the adjacent woods where they were obscured from surveillance efforts and stayed for approximately one hour.”

Ford recently vouched for Lisi in a separate criminal case, praising his leadership skills in a letter filed with the court. The letter was part of a report prepared by a probation officer after Lisi was convicted of threatening to kill a woman.

Ford angrily yelled at reporters on Thursday to get off his property before he left his house in the morning. He didn’t respond to questions shouted at him.

Ford said previously that he was shocked when Lisi was arrested earlier this month, calling him a “good guy” and saying he doesn’t abandon his friends.

The documents also say that Payman Aboodowleh, a volunteer football coach at Don Bosco Catholic Secondary School, where Ford coached the team, told police that Lisi met Ford through him. He told police he was “mad at Lisi because he was fuelling the mayor’s drug abuse,” the document says.

Ford former staffer, Chris Fickel, told police he didn’t know where Ford got marijuana from, but “has heard that `Sandro’, Lisi’s nickname, may be the person who provides the mayor with marijuana and possibly cocaine,” the document alleges. However, Fickel added, he has never seen Lisi provide the mayor with drugs. The mayor would call Fickle and tell him to tell “Sandro” that “I need to see him,” Fickle told police.

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