The news that seven Toronto police officers have been swept up in a corruption probe sparked by a conspiracy to kill a corrections official last June cannot overstate the impact of organized crime on the community, York Regional Police Chief Jim MacSween said Thursday.  Â
The officersâ charges range from conspiracy to commit murder to drug trafficking. York police led the investigation, which also saw 19 civilians arrested on varying charges.
âThis is a deeply disappointing and sad day for policing,â said MacSween.
The sentiment was echoed by Toronto police Chief Myron Demkiw, who spoke at Thursdayâs news conference alongside MacSween.
“Corruption has no place in policing,â Demkiw said.
âIt strikes at the trust people place in us.”
‘Deeply disappointing’: Toronto police chief speaks after officers charged in corruption probe
In its own statement Thursday afternoon, the Toronto Police Association said it was âdisturbed by the allegations.âÂ
âThere is nothing our members or the TPA hate more than a corrupt cop,â the statement said.Â
Demkiw himself sent a letter sent to Inspector General Ryan Teschner on Wednesday, asking him to inspect five areas in the police service â supervision and span of control, screening and vetting in the force, access to police databases and information systems, evidence and property management practices, and substance abuse and fitness for duty.
âThis is a painful and unsettling moment,â Demkiw said Thursday. âI understand this news will be distressing for Torontonians and our police service members.âÂ
Mayor Olivia Chow said she supports Demkiwâs request for an independent review. She did not hold back when asked about the investigation at an unrelated event Thursday afternoon, saying police officers found guilty of committing any crimes âdeserve to be thrown in jail.âÂ
Public trust is a fundamental part of policing and Torontonians deserve the right to know they can trust police officers, she said.
Premier Doug Ford also weighed in during an unrelated announcement, but struck a more conciliatory tone, saying it was âdisturbingâ but he didnât want to tarnish police.
âI donât want the public to lose trust in our great police, because they are incredible,â he said, noting that in any organization there are always a few âbad apples.â
Ford said he maintains confidence in Demkiw to do his job, and that the police service has âhit a bump in the road.âÂ
Ford says Toronto police arrests in corruption probe ‘disturbing’
Meanwhile, Karen McCrimmon, Ontario Liberal critic for public safety, said she was “deeply disturbedâ by the charges.Â
Sheâs calling for an independent judicial inquiry â which would go a step further than the inspector generalâs investigation requested by Chow, Demkiw and the Toronto police board. Â
âLaw enforcement officers are entrusted with immense power and responsibility, and any abuse of that trust is unacceptable,â said McCrimmon in a statement.
âTrust in our institutions can only be restored through openness, accountability, and real consequences for wrongdoing â no matter who is involved.â
The issue of tow-truck wars in the GTA seems to ânever go away,â said Ian Scott, a former director of the Special Investigations Unit (SIU), said.
He said heâs seen the problem go as far back as the 1980s. A systemic review of the Toronto police and the tow-truck industry is now needed, he said.  Â
âItâs a huge deal. Itâs virtually unprecedented in Canada,â said Scott. âThe vast majority of police officers are trying to do a good job. ⦠Itâs like something out of The Sopranos.”










