Background: Between 2017 and 2018, nine overdose prevention sites and supervised consumption sites (OPS/SCS) began operating in Toronto, Canada. This paper aimed to evaluate the effects of the OPS/SCS on incidence and rates of crime (i.e., assault, auto theft, break and enter, robbery, theft over $5000, bicycle theft, and theft from motor vehicle) and mental health act apprehensions. Methods: Primary analyses used multiple baseline interrupted time series to compare outcome incidences within 100m, 200m and 500m of each OPS/SCS pre- vs. post-implementation. Secondary analyses compared rates of outcomes in treated vs. synthetic control neighbourhoods. We used exclusively publicly available confirmed incidents that occurred within city boundaries between 1 January 2014 and 30 June 2024. Results: Within 100m of OPS/SCS, incidents of assaults (61%, 95%CI: 10 to 134%), robberies (62%, 95%CI: 10 to 138%), and break and enters (47%, 95%CI: 6 to 104%) increased following sites' implementation; but monthly incident trends for robberies (-2%, 95%CI: -3 to 0%) and break and enters (-2%, 95%CI: -3 to -1%) declined. At 200m and 500m, there were no observed level effects in incidents of assault or robberies, but level effects persisted for break and enters. Further, thefts from motor vehicles (-2%, 95%CI: -3% to -1%) declined faster post-implementation. Our secondary analysis revealed rates of assaults increased faster (1%, 95%CI: 0 to 1%; p=0.003) in treated neighbourhoods compared with synthetic controls. Conclusions and relevance: The effects of Toronto's OPS/SCS on crime were complex; with immediate effects being attenuated or reversed over time.