Canadian police have identified and located the crack house in which Toronto mayor Rob Ford was allegedly video taped smoking crack cocaine, the Toronto Star reported.

The house is the backdrop of a photo showing Ford posing with a known drug dealer, Anthony Smith, 21, who was shot dead outside of a Toronto nightclub in March.

There's also a video in existence of Ford smoking crack cocaine in the house that Gawker.com writer John Cook flew to Toronto to view. The video was being shopped at $200,000 by a group of men associated with the local drug trade. Cook was approached about buying the video and, after viewing it, wrote an account of what he saw.

"Here is what the video shows: Rob Ford, the mayor of Toronto, is the only person visible in the frame. Prior to the trip, I spent a lot of time looking at photographs of Rob Ford," Cook wrote. "The man in the video is Rob Ford. It is well lit, clear. Ford is seated, in a room in a house. In one hand is a clear, glass pipe. The kind with a big globe and two glass cylinders sticking out of it. In the other hand is a lighter."

Read Gawker's full report by clicking here.

Toronto Star reporters also saw the video and turned down the chance to buy it as well. The Star reported direct quotes from the video:

"I'm f---ing right-wing," Ford appears to mutter at one point. "Everyone expects me to be right-wing. I'm just supposed to be this great...." and his voice trails off. At another point he is heard calling [Liberal Party leader Justin] Trudeau a "fag."

Later in the 90-second video he is asked about the football team and he appears to say (though he is mumbling), "they are just f---ing minorities."

Here is what the reporters had to say:

Gawker, confirmed by CBC News, reported that an unidentified man showed up to the house with a metal pipe demanding the video just days after media outlets published the photo and accounts of watching the video.

Police confirmed a man breaking into the house and assaulting two people. Police did not confirm the man, described as black and in his mid-30s, was demanding the tape.

Ford has strongly denied any drug use, his association with the crack house and that he is the man in the photo.

"I do not use crack cocaine, nor am I an addict of crack cocaine," Ford said in a press conference.

In its report, the Star admitted to not having any way to verify the tape's authenticity.

Dennis Morris, a lawyer retained by Ford, also questioned the tape's reliability.

"How can you indicate what the person is actually doing or smoking?" he said.

Robyn Doolittle, one of the Star reporters who claims to have seen the video, told CBC Toronto she's been fascinated by the response to the public response.

"It's fair that people are questioning the things that they're reading," she said. "The people who don't believe it, maybe won't believe it even when they're confronted with the video."