Crime in Toronto

Toronto police reports show that in 1970 alone 32 Little Italy businesses were burned down in cases of mob-related arson. In 1970, the Toronto Mafiosi, Rocco Zito met with Vic Cotroni and Paolo Violi of Montreal’s Cotroni family, and Paulo Gambino, the brother of Carlo Gambino of New York’s Gambino family. Zito established a “pipeline” for smuggling heroin via Montreal and Toronto to New York. An article in the Toronto Star on 7 July 1972 linked most of the cases of bombings, arson and assaults in Little Italy to the Siderno Group, which was described as being the most aggressive of all the Mafia-type groups in Toronto.

Later that year, local activist Dudley Laws claimed that police bias against blacks was worse in Toronto than in Los Angeles. However, 2007 saw another, smaller wave of gun violence starting in May with the shooting death of 15-year-old Jordan Manners at his school, C. W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute. 27 gun deaths recorded the previous year. Toronto recorded 49 homicides in 1999, which, as of 2023, remains the city’s lowest homicide total since 1986. That year, there were a total of 90 homicides across Toronto’s census metropolitan area, with a murder rate of 1.68 per 100,000 people. On December 26, 2005, 15-year-old Jane Creba was shot and killed in the Boxing Day shooting while shopping on Yonge Street in downtown Toronto.

The falling murder totals continued in 2009 with 65, followed by 63 in 2010, then the lowest total in recent times with only 51 (75 total in the GTA) in 2011, the lowest homicide total since 1986 at a rate of 2.0 per 100,000, close to the national average, representing a further dramatic decline in the city’s murder rate for the fourth consecutive year. The number of homicides stabilized to the mid-50s for the next 4 years.

Cecil Kirby, a Satan’s Choice biker who worked as an enforcer and a hitman for the Commisso ‘ndrina between 1976 and 1981 wrote in his 1986 book Mafia Enforcer: “I quickly learned that their big thing for making money was the construction industry. They probably made more money from extortions in the construction industry than they did from trafficking in heroin – and it was a helluva lot safer”. The Commisso ‘ndrina clan was led by the three Commisso brothers, Rocco, Michele and Cosimo, whose principle interest in life besides for making money was avenging the murder of their father, Girolomo Commisso, who had killed in 1948 in Siderno by rival gangsters. The best known of Kirby’s crimes in the employ of the Commisso brothers in Toronto occurred on the morning of 3 May 1977 when he blew up a Chinese restaurant, the Wah Kew Chop Suey House, and killed a cook, Chong Yin Quan.

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