Read Crazy Town: The Rob Ford Story Online
Authors: Robyn Doolittle
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #General
CRAZY TOWN
For my parents
CONTENTS
1 Respect the Taxpayer
2 Dougie Loved Politics
3 The Canadian Kennedys
4 Councillor Ford to Speak
5 The Gravy Train
6 He Won’t Give Up the Blow
7 The Bier Markt
8 The Dirty Dozen
9 The Garrison Ball
TIMELINE
1956 | |
September 1 | Doug Ford Sr. and Diane Campbell are married. |
1962 | |
| Doug Ford Sr. and Ted Herriott start Deco Adhesive Products. |
1969 | |
May 28 | Robert Bruce Ford is born at Humber Memorial Hospital in Etobicoke. |
1983/1984 | |
| Rob Ford is a first-year student at Scarlett Heights Collegiate Institute. This is also his brother Doug Ford Jr.’s graduating year. |
1995 | |
June 8 | Doug Ford Sr. is elected in Etobicoke-Humber as a Progressive Conservative MPP in the Ontario government under Premier Mike Harris. |
1997 | |
November 10 | Rob Ford runs for Toronto City Council in Ward 3 Kingsway Humber. He finishes fourth with 9,366 votes. |
1998 | |
January 1 | The “megacity” is born. Seven municipal governments amalgamate to form the new City of Toronto. |
July 25 | Kathy Ford’s boyfriend, Michael Kiklas, dies after being gunned down by Kathy’s estranged husband, Ennio Stirpe. |
1999 | |
February 15 | Rob Ford is charged with drunk driving and possession of marijuana in Miami, Florida. (The drug charge would later be dropped.) |
May | Doug Ford Sr. finishes his term as an MPP. |
2000 | |
August 12 | Rob Ford marries Renata Brejniak at All Saints Roman Catholic Church in Etobicoke. |
November 13 | Rob Ford is elected to Toronto City Council in Ward 2 Etobicoke North with 5,750 votes. |
2001 | |
| Rob Ford is told he is no longer welcome to coach football at Newtonbrook Secondary School in North York after a heated altercation with a player. |
August | Rookie councillor Rob Ford makes headlines after it is revealed that he spent just ten dollars of his office budget after six months in office. By contrast, Giorgio Mammoliti, the biggest spender on council, spent $43,150. |
2002 | |
March 6 | Councillor Rob Ford allegedly calls Councillor Giorgio Mammoliti a “Gino boy.” |
2003 | |
November 10 | Rob Ford is re-elected in Ward 2 with 79 percent of the vote. |
2005 | |
| Rob and Renata Ford have a daughter, Stephanie. |
March 31 | Kathy Ford is accidentally shot in the head at her parents’ home by her boyfriend, Scott MacIntyre. |
July 19 | Councillor Rob Ford calls Councillor Gloria Lindsay Luby a “waste of skin.” She calls him a “jerk.” |
2006 | |
April 15 | Security removes Rob Ford from a Toronto Maple Leafs NHL game after he drunkenly berates a couple in the crowd. When news of the incident breaks, Ford initially lies and says he wasn’t at the game. He later admits to having been there and apologizes. |
June 28 | During a council debate on grants for AIDS programs, Rob Ford says, “If you’re not doing needles and you’re not gay, you won’t get AIDS, probably.” |
September 22 | Doug Ford Sr. dies of cancer at the age of seventy-three. |
November 13 | Rob Ford is re-elected in Ward 2 with 66 percent of the vote. |
2007 | |
March 7 | Rob Ford tells council that cycling in a bike lane is like swimming with sharks. “Roads are built for buses, cars, and trucks. Not for people on bikes. And, you know, my heart bleeds for them when I hear someone gets killed, but it’s their own fault at the end of the day.” |
2008 | |
| Rob and Renata Ford have their second child, a son named Douglas. |
March 5 | Rob Ford controversially suggests that “Oriental” people are “slowly taking over” because they work so hard. “Those Oriental people work like dogs,” he says. |
March 26 | Rob Ford is arrested and charged with domestic assault and threatening death against his wife, Renata. The charges are later dropped due to inconsistencies in Renata Ford’s testimony. |
2010 | |
March 25 | Rob Ford declares his candidacy for mayor. |
June 17 | News breaks that Rob Ford offered to help a man named Dieter Doneit-Henderson “score” OxyContin on the street. Doneit-Henderson secretly recorded their phone conversation. |
August 18 | The |
August 25 | City council orders Rob Ford to repay $3,150 he solicited from lobbyists for his private football foundation. |
October 25 | Rob Ford is elected mayor with 383,501 votes, or 47 percent of the total cast. |
December 7 | Hockey personality Don Cherry criticizes “pinkos” in a speech at Rob Ford’s inauguration ceremony. |
2011 | |
May 13 | Toronto’s audit committee votes to review Rob Ford’s campaign expenses. |
October 24 | The mayor calls 911 after a comedian from CBC’s |
December 30 | The |
2012 | |
January 11 | Kathy Ford’s estranged boyfriend, Scott MacIntyre, is arrested after walking into the mayor’s home, demanding Rob Ford pay back money MacIntyre says he is owed, and then threatening to kill him. |
January 17 | City council revolts against the mayor’s budget cuts in a 23–21 vote. |
February 7 | Mayor Rob Ford speaks, and then votes, on a motion to overturn the order requiring him to pay back $3,150 in football donations. |
March 12 | Lawyer Clayton Ruby announces he is filing a conflict-of-interest lawsuit against the mayor because of the February 7 vote. Ruby argues that Rob Ford broke the law when he spoke to, and then voted on, an item at council where he stood to benefit financially. |
March 17 | On St. Patrick’s Day, Rob Ford spends the night partying with friends, first at City Hall and then at a downtown bar called the Bier Markt. A waiter at the Bier Markt thinks he might have seen the mayor snort cocaine in a private room. A member of Ford’s staff later tells police he thought he saw Ford take an OxyContin pill. |
May 2 | Rob Ford confronts |
November 26 | A judge concludes that Rob Ford did violate the Municipal Conflict of Interest Act. He orders Ford out of office. |
2013 | |
January 25 | Rob Ford wins his conflict-of-interest appeal on a technicality. He remains as mayor. |
February 23 | The mayor shows up at a military ball impaired. He is asked to leave by a member of the organizing committee. |
March 7 | Former mayoral candidate Sarah Thomson accuses the mayor of groping her at an event. |
March 26 | The |
May 16 | The |
May 24 | After eight days, the mayor makes an official first statement about the video story: “I do not use crack cocaine, nor am I an addict of crack cocaine.” Rob Ford blames the |
May 25 | The Globe and Mail |
June 1 | An Ipsos Reid poll shows that half of Toronto residents don’t believe the video story. |
June 13 | Police across Ontario launch a series of pre-dawn raids as part of Project Traveller, a massive investigation into drug and gun smuggling. The dealer who tried to sell the |
August 16 | The |
October 1 | Sandro Lisi is arrested and charged with drug offences, including trafficking marijuana. His arrest is part of a covert police investigation dubbed Project Brazen 2, a probe aimed at the mayor’s activities. |
October 31 | On the day that hundreds of pages of search warrant documents connected to Project Brazen 2 are released—documents that show suspicious package handoffs between Sandro Lisi and Rob Ford—Police Chief Bill Blair reveals that Toronto police have recovered the “crack video.” Lisi is charged with extortion in connection with attempts to recover the video. |
November 5 | Rob Ford admits to having smoked crack while in “one of my drunken stupors.” He says he won’t resign or take health leave. |
November 7 | A second video of Rob Ford surfaces. The mayor appears impaired and in a rage, pacing around a room and punching the air, saying, “I’m gonna kill that fucking guy. I’m telling you, it’s first-degree murder.” The mayor maintains he will not resign. |
November 18 | Toronto City Council strips Mayor Rob Ford of most of his powers, reducing his budget, staff, and authority to develop policy. The mayor declares “war.” |