
OPP say they are investigating the mayor of North Bay
In an email to CTV News, an OPP spokesperson said the North Bay Police Service referred a complaint about Chirico to the OPP.
The complaint was 'concerning allegations involving the mayor of the City of North Bay, who also serves on the North Bay police services board,' OPP spokesperson Gosia Puzio said in the email.
'We can confirm that the OPP has opened an investigation into the matter.'
Personal expenses
Chirico has been in the spotlight since it emerged this spring that he had used the corporate credit card to pay for personal expenses, including golf club memberships, gifts and cigarettes.
He has said he repaid $16,000 in personal items he charged to the city credit card.
North Bay city council rejected a motion calling for a forensic audit into the mayor's expenses, and for Chirico to step down from the police board while the audit was being conducted.
However, city integrity commissioner Guy Giorno has been asked by Chirico to investigate.
It also emerged in July that Margaret Karpenko, the city's outgoing chief financial officer, recommended in early 2024 that Chirico's credit card be taken away. That recommendation was ignored and he continued to charge personal items on the card into late 2024.
He has since surrendered the card and Karpenko has announced she is leaving North Bay to become CFO in Greater Sudbury.
CTV News has contacted the City of North Bay to respond to the news that the OPP is investigating allegations involving the mayor.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
27 minutes ago
- CBC
Bike thefts prompt warning from P.E.I. cycling group
Some cyclists on P.E.I. say bike thefts are a growing concern in the community. Islanders, visitors and businesses alike have been targeted. CBC's Gwyneth Egan reports.


Edmonton Journal
29 minutes ago
- Edmonton Journal
What we know about alleged Ontario cottage country killer and why police said threat has passed
Article content 'Was the gun left there, so they're not worried about him having a gun? Do they know he had only one gun? But that doesn't mean he couldn't get more guns. Doesn't mean he doesn't have a knife or an axe. I just find the whole thing bizarre,' the source said, adding that the incident, on the surface, has eerie echoes of Gabriel Wortman, the serial killer behind a devastating gun rampage in Portapique, N.S., in 2020, Canada's deadliest mass killing. Wortman, who posed as an RCMP officer with a uniform and mocked up cruiser, killed 22 people; 13 were shot, and nine died in house fires. Article content In the Wortman case, police 'kept finding more and more bodies, and people were hearing gunshots in neighbour's houses,' the source said. Gray, the suspect in the Bracebridge homicides, 'has just gone quiet since this occurred,' the source said. Article content 'It's not like Portapique. But it's still weird. I'd be really interested to know what their thinking was when the dust settles on this.' Article content Article content In a statement to National Post, an OPP spokesperson said the shelter in place order was initiated as a precaution while officers searched the area. Article content 'It was lifted when the suspect was not found to be in the area,' Sgt. Joe Brisebois, of the OPP's Central Region headquarters, wrote. 'We never believed there were any threat to public safety since the incident was between individuals that were known to each other.' Article content The OPP 'recognizes that major police operations can be concerning for those who live, work or travel in the area,' he said. 'We understand the importance of keeping the public informed about police activity in their communities.' Article content Emergency alerts related to police are reserved for situations involving 'an ongoing, urgent and significant threat to life that is neither isolated nor contained,' Brisebois said. Article content 'Although the operation was active, it remained isolated and confined to a specific area under police control. As such, it did not meet the criteria for a broadcast intrusive emergency alert,' he said. Article content Article content 'While we were not authorized to issue a broadcast alert, the OPP shared timely updates with the public through social media and media releases,' Brisebois added. Article content As of Tuesday afternoon, Gray remained 'outstanding,' he said, and the search was continuing. 'We ask that anyone with information about this incident or his whereabouts to contact police or Crime Stoppers.' Article content On his Facebook page, last updated in April 2019, Gray described himself as a mechanic at Bracebridge Yamaha, but he hasn't worked there since 2017. 'It was before my time and actually the guys here never worked with him, either. The new owners never met him,' said service advisor Greg Williams. Article content 'I was a bit shocked, to have that up here. Don't usually get that stuff up here,' he said. Article content It could take weeks to identify the two bodies found inside the house gutted by fire. 'Until the fire cooled off and they could get in there, they wouldn't even know that there were more bodies inside,' the law enforcement source said.


CTV News
29 minutes ago
- CTV News
'The next few weeks are going to be slow': U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra on trade talks
Watch Mike Le Couteur speaks with U.S. Ambassador to Canada Pete Hoekstra about the future of Canada-U.S. trade negotiations.