TORONTO

The man who filmed the crack video was warned Mayor Rob Ford “knows a few dirty cops and other people,” while the woman whose house where the video was allegedly filmed calls the mayor a “f---ing idiot,” according to newly uncensored police documents.

Lawyers representing the Toronto Sun and other media outlets won the release Thursday of all remaining portions of the Project Brazen 2 search warrant request -- filed back in January -- that were still under a publication ban.

The document chronicles the flurry of phone traffic after news broke last May about the video that appears to show Ford smoking crack cocaine among key players including Alexander “Sandro” Lisi, Elena Basso, Liban Siyad and Mohamed Siad - the man who allegedly filmed the crack video and tried to sell it.

Lisi is Ford’s friend and occasional driver who has been charged with extortion in connection with the crack video. None of the police allegations in the document have been proven in court.

In one phone conversation intercepted by police on May 17 at 12:20 p.m., Siad is advised by an unknown male “not to play with his life.”

“Siad advises he will stay with family,” the document states. “Unknown male also advises Siad to be careful of the guy (Mayor Ford) because he knows a few dirty cops and other people.”

Documents released last week revealed the video was recorded on the evening of Feb. 17, 2013 - the Sunday of Family Day weekend - at Basso’s home with her present along with alleged gang members Siad and Siyad.

Later on May 20, Siyad is caught by a police intercept telling Basso he had “nothing to do” with news of the video being made public. He calls Siad a “goof.”

“(Basso) said the thing was that the ‘f...g goof did it at my house,’” the document states.

“She advises that now she has Rob’s people and cops coming every day.”

“(Basso) advises that (Siad) brought down heat on the whole area. E. Basso advised ‘he only f...d your business up, he fucked my business up, he f...d everybody, the whole area is going to go down because of G.”

Siyad asks Basso what the cops are saying and she says they aren’t saying anything.

“They aren’t stupid. E. Basso says ‘They say nothin’, it’s, it’s, you know it’s going to go down, he’s the f...n’ Mayor of Toronto,” the document states.

Basso goes on to say: “We’re going to feel the heat everywhere … not just in f...n’ uh Dixon Park, we’re, we’re going to feel it, people at Weston Road’s going to feel it, people on Jane Street gonna feel it, everywhere.”

Then Basso goes on to slam Ford.

“To be fair, Rob Ford, I told you guys is a big f...g idiot anyways,” she said.

“I told you guys from the beginning, he’s a big f...g idiot.”

Siyad agreed.

Another intercept on May 17 at 11:23 a.m. captured a conversation between Siyad and an unknown male.

“Siyad advises that Rob Ford’s driver is calling Juiceman and saying that ‘you’re f...g dead and everybody on your block is dead,’” the document states.

“The unknown male advises that the hood is going to get raided.”

“Siyad advises ‘he’s literally telling Juiceman you’re dead’”

The document goes on to say that a man - who police believe is Lisi - warned what would happen if the video gets released.

“I’m gonna, I’m gonna run through all your houses, me and all the, all the Toronto Police, we’re gonna, we’re gonna, we’re gonna done, all you done, we say I’m gonna done you guys,” the document states.

Another unknown male on the call says he’s trying to “get off” and warns the “hood’s going to get raided because Rob Ford ‘is going mad.’”

The documents also chronicle how intercepts - in place for Project Traveller (a separate police investigation) - show Lisi allegedly placing “several threatening/extorting phone calls” to Siyad and Siad “who he felt may be in possession of the video recording.”

“Lisi threatened Siyad that Dixon will get heated up all summer until the phone (video) gets back,” the document states.

“Between May 16th, 2013 and May 18th, 2013 as Lisi was trying to retrieve the video he made several calls to people including numbers associated to Elena Basso, Liban Siyad, Mohamed Siad, Mayor Ford’s cellphone, Mayor Ford residential number, Mayor Ford’s OnStar number and Thomas Beyer.”

Beyer was a former employee in the mayor’s office who has since left his job at City Hall.

Peter Jacobsen, the lawyer representing the Toronto Sun and other media, lauded the lift of the publication ban on the documents.

“Transparency and public oversight are essential to ensure those who exert power on behalf of the state are held to account.” he said. “Here, the justification for issuing the very intrusive search and production warrants have given the the public insight into the conduct of those very close to the mayor some of whom are clearly associated with the criminal element of society.

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