Video shows Toronto mayor swearing, insulting police chief
TORONTO -- 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.
"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.
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. Lisi 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 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.