Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
National

Jerry Bance, Conservative Caught Peeing In Mug, No Longer Candidate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Sep, 2015 12:48 PM
    TORONTO — A man who was reportedly caught on camera urinating into a coffee cup while working as an appliance repairman is no longer a candidate with the Conservative Party.
     
    A party spokeswoman says Jerry Bance will not be running in the east Toronto riding of Scarborough Rouge Park.
     
    The news comes a day after the CBC reported that in 2012 hidden cameras on its show Marketplace caught Bance doing the act while he was on a service call.
     
    Marketplace set up the hidden cameras as part of a story into home repair companies.
     
    The CBC aired video from the program showing Bance pouring the urine down the sink, then rinsing out the cup, all while the homeowner was in the next room.
     
    The broadcaster says Bance runs an appliance repair company.
     
    A statement from Bance released by the Conservative campaign Sunday night said he "deeply regrets" his actions on the day he was caught on the hidden cameras.
     
     
    "I take great pride in my work and the footage from that day does not reflect who I am as a professional or a person," Bance said in the emailed statement.
     
    Bance's story has drawn a great deal of reaction on social media sites.
     
    The hashtag "peegate" was trending on Twitter Sunday night, as the twittersphere buzzed with disparaging jokes, comments and bad puns targeting Bance, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party.
     
    The original Marketplace show only named Bance as "Jerry" — it did not mention that he had been a Conservative candidate in two previous elections in 2006 and 2008.
     
    I 'DEEPLY REGRETS' MY ACTIONS
     
     
    A statement from Bance released by the Conservative campaign says he "deeply regrets" his actions on that day.
     
    "I take great pride in my work and the footage from that day does not reflect who I am as a professional or a person," Bance said in the emailed statement.
     
    Response to the story on social media sites was nearly instantaneous.  The hashtag "peegate" was soon trending on Twitter, as the twittersphere buzzed with disparaging jokes, comments and bad puns targeting Bance, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party.
     
    The original Marketplace show only named Bance as "Jerry" — it did not mention that he had been a Conservative candidate in two previous elections in 2006 and 2008.
     
    Stephen Harper is set to campaign in east Toronto on Monday. A media advisory from the Conservative campaign names two candidates who will join him, but does not mention Bance.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ashley Madison CEO Noel Biderman Ends Relationship With Company He Founded

    Ashley Madison CEO Noel Biderman is ending his relationship with the adultery website he founded 14 years ago, weeks after the Toronto-based company was hacked in an attack that dealt a blow to its reputation for discretion.

    Ashley Madison CEO Noel Biderman Ends Relationship With Company He Founded

    Activist Files For Emergency Help For Skygreece Airline's Stranded Passengers In Toronto

    Activist Files For Emergency Help For Skygreece Airline's Stranded Passengers In Toronto
    A claim filed by passenger rights advocate Gabor Lukacs says the federal agency has broad powers and should use them now to protect an estimated 1,000 passengers affected by recent flight cancellations by SkyGreece Airlines.

    Activist Files For Emergency Help For Skygreece Airline's Stranded Passengers In Toronto

    Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case

    Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case
    Quebec's securities regulator is investigating a former Bell employee for alleged insider trading related to several acquisitions the company made between 2012 and 2015.

    Quebec's Securities Regulator Investigating Ex-Bell Employee In Insider Trading Case

    Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service

    Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service
    Fire information officer Kevin Skrepnek says Grand Forks and Christina Lake residents could be asked to leave at a moment's notice if winds blow embers from the 195-square-kilometre Stickpin blaze across the border into B.C.

    Winds Could Whip Up Fire Activity In B.C., Washington State: Wildfire Service

    Several Items Of Interest In Murder Of Physics Student Found On Property: Police

    Police investigating the murder of a Dalhousie University physics student in Halifax say they have found several items on a property outside the city they believe are linked to the homicide.

    Several Items Of Interest In Murder Of Physics Student Found On Property: Police

    Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives

    Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives
    BERTHIERVILLE, Que. — The provincial Health Department is investigating an outbreak of legionnaires' disease that has claimed two lives.

    Quebec Officials Investigating As Legionnaires' Disease Claims Two Lives