Project Traveller documents named city hall lobbyist - Action News
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Toronto

Project Traveller documents named city hall lobbyist

The connection between the high profile police raids last summer known as Project Traveller and Toronto City Hall are not limited to the video of Rob Ford smoking crack, CBC News has learned.

Search of Tim Lambrinos home turned up nothing

Court documents reveal a home in the city's west end belonging to Tim Lambrinos, a lobbyist for the adult entertainment industry, caught the attention of investigators last year. (CBC)

The connection between the high-profile police raids last summer known as Project Traveller and city hall were not limited to the video of Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack. CBC News has learned a city hall lobbyist is named in the police warrants.

Documents released by the court on Friday reveal a home in the city's west end belonging to Tim Lambrinos, a lobbyist for the adult entertainment industry in Toronto and a former executive assistant to Coun. Giorgio Mammoliti, caught the attention of investigators last year.

Lambrinos also sits on the board of the Business Improvement Area that Mammoliti started.

The house, owned by Lambrinos and his brother Chris, was raided by police but turned up nothing. Neithermanwascharged.

Police filed a 76-page document last year detailing the investigation stemming from Project Traveller. Police suspected at the time they would find find four guns in the home that had been smuggled into Canada via Windsor by the Dixon Hill Bloods gang. But the search turned up nothing.

The Project Traveller raid yielded dozens of arrests in what was a lengthy guns and gangs investigation targeting the local Dixon Bloods gang. It also netted a copy of a video of Mayor Rob Ford smoking crack, confirmed by police Chief Bill Blair in the fall.

Windsor resident Allyson Steill was charged with helping arrange gun sales. The documents suggest police used wiretaps and other surveillance.

Lambrinos said he is not in any way connected to Project Traveller. He concedes the police raided his home, but insists it was in error.

"I think we need to support the police in some aspects, but on the other hand, whatever judge pretended that there was some evidence about my home was erroneous," said Lambrinos.