After a judge ordered more censored information on a police investigation of Mayor Rob Ford released Wednesday, more than 30 pages of information still remain secret.

Superior Court Justice Ian Nordheimer ruled that information related to so-called “innocent third parties” — those not arrested as part of a massive police investigation that led to the arrest of Alexander “Sandro” Lisi — should be made public.

In that order, Nordheimer said several things would still be censored, including personal identifiers such as phone numbers and information about Ford’s wife.

Two categories of blacked-out information in the document remain subject to a legal battle set to continue Nov. 18.

Nordheimer said Wednesday that information Ford friend Lisi’s lawyer, Seth Weinstein, has identified as being of concern to Lisi’s fair trial rights would remain censored.

Lisi was arrested on several drug charges as a result of the police probe, called Project Brazen 2, detailed in the police document.

On Oct. 31, he was arrested a second time and charged with extortion on allegations that he threatened two alleged gang members in an attempt to recover a video of Ford smoking what appears to be crack cocaine. On that charge, Lisi could face a jury trial.

The items at issue are part of 13 numbered paragraphs in the police document, according to a court document submitted by his lawyer.

The other category of information that will be argued in court next week is what police learned from wiretaps during Project Traveller — a guns and gang probe focused on the Dixon Rd. community in the city’s northwest end that has links to Ford.

A two-page section headed “Project Traveller and the Rob Ford connection” is currently censored because the information contained in it came from the wiretaps.

The Star and other media outlets have also been fighting to have wiretap information in a search warrant document related to Project Traveller made public.

Nordheimer earlier overruled a lower court decision that that information should be kept secret. His decision allows media lawyers to continue to seek the release of wiretap information in both police documents.