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Appeal court upholds Rob Ford’s victory in defamation lawsuit

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford shares a laugh with one of his staff members outside his office at city hall in Toronto onWednesday, March 19, 2014. A stage musical is in the works about scandal-plagued Ford. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young.
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford shares a laugh with one of his staff members outside his office at city hall in Toronto onWednesday, March 19, 2014. A stage musical is in the works about scandal-plagued Ford. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

TORONTO – Ontario’s highest court has upheld a legal victory for Toronto Mayor Rob Ford against a restaurant owner who had sued him for defamation.

George Foulidis had sued over comments Ford made to a newspaper – when he was a city councillor – suggesting an untendered, 20-year leasing deal between Foulidis’s company, Tuggs Inc., and the city was corrupt, adding that it “stinks to high heaven.”

A lower-court judge dismissed the lawsuit in December 2012, ruling that Foulidis did not prove the comments were directed at him nor that they were defamatory.

In Depth: Rob Ford

Foulidis appealed the decision, but the Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissed it in a ruling released today.

The court writes that Foulidis was not the target of Ford’s words, nor were the remarks abusive or insulting toward Foulidis.

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The trial judge had come to the same conclusion, saying Ford “voiced only a suspicion of corruption” and linked the word corruption to city council in-camera meetings, and the Appeal Court says it sees no basis to interfere with that.

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