Prince Harry and Meghan Say They Were Chased by
Paparazzi in New York
The initial description of the episode in Midtown
Manhattan recalled the chase that killed Harry’s mother, but the fuller picture
was more complicated.
By Chelsia
Rose Marcius, Mark Landler, Hurubie Meko and Michael M. Grynbaum
May 17,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/17/nyregion/harry-meghan-car-chase.html
The
statement was alarming, unmistakably evocative of the car chase that killed
Princess Diana 26 years ago: Prince Harry and his wife Meghan had been
“involved in a near catastrophic car chase at the hands of a ring of highly
aggressive paparazzi,” according to an unnamed spokesperson for the couple.
That story,
of a chaotic and dangerous pursuit through Midtown Manhattan on Tuesday night,
ricocheted all over the world on Wednesday morning, making headlines on both sides
of the Atlantic. CNN, which like SKY News and outlets all over the world
provided minute-by-minute updates, reported that a member of the couple’s
security team said the episode “could have been fatal.”
But as more
details emerged on Wednesday from the accounts of the police and a taxi driver
who was briefly involved, the picture became more complicated.
It
illustrated any number of issues surrounding the Duke and Duchess of Sussex:
their incandescent fame and the news media’s endless appetite for stories about
them; their frosty relationship with the Crown and their fight for a royal
security detail; and their determination to avoid the paparazzi’s lenses,
surely informed by the tragic death of Diana, Harry’s mother, as she rode in a
car speeding away from them in Paris in 1997.
The episode
began Tuesday evening at the Ziegfeld Ballroom in Midtown, where Harry, Meghan
and her mother, Doria Ragland were attending the Women of Vision awards, where
Meghan was among the honorees.
Around 9:50
p.m., the family left the theater to return to the Upper East Side, where they
were staying, according to a law enforcement official with knowledge of the
matter.
Concerned
that paparazzi who had gathered outside the theater would follow them, they
left in a private security vehicle with a police escort, the official said.
They were driven around for about an hour, traveling up the F.D.R. Drive at one
point, but they could not shake the paparazzi.
The police
then escorted them to the 19th police precinct on the Upper East Side, the
official said.
Around 11
p.m., a little over an hour after they had left the ballroom, one of their
security staff hailed a cab outside the police precinct, according to the
taxi’s driver, Sukhcharn Singh.
“All of a
sudden the paparazzi came out of nowhere and just started snapping pictures,”
he said, adding, that he heard one of the women from the back say “‘Oh, my
God.’”
“They were
nervous,” Mr. Singh said. “His wife looked scared and Harry was nervous. And
the other lady was very quiet.”
The truck
moved out of their way less than five minutes later, but as Mr. Singh drove, he
said, he saw paparazzi following them in at least two cars. When the couple’s
security guard noticed they were being followed, he instructed Mr. Singh to
drive back to the precinct.
Around
11:30, Mr. Singh returned them to the precinct and they climbed back into the
same black S.U.V. they had been traveling in before, he said.
They
remained at the precinct while the police blocked traffic in the area, after
which they left with a police escort and no paparazzi in tow, the official
said.
Mr. Singh
said he would not describe what happened as a “chase,” though he was not
involved in the much longer drive earlier in the evening. Though the family had
clearly been frightened, Mr. Singh said, he was not. “I wasn’t afraid,” he
said. “They didn’t grow up in New York.”
A spokesman
for the New York Police Department confirmed that officers had assisted the
couple’s security team on Tuesday evening, but also did not refer to the
episode as a “chase.”
“There were
numerous photographers that made their transport challenging,” the spokesman,
Julian Phillips, said in a statement. “The Duke and Duchess of Sussex arrived
at their destination and there were no reported collisions, summonses,
injuries, or arrests.”
A
spokesperson for the couple did not respond to questions about the initial
statement.
Speaking at
an unrelated news conference on Wednesday morning, Mayor Eric Adams condemned
what happened as “a bit reckless and irresponsible,” while noting that he had
not been fully briefed on the incident.
“It’s clear
that the press, the paparazzi, they want to get the right shot,” Mr. Adams
said. “But public safety must always be at the forefront.”
But he cast
doubt on the duration of the chase described in the statement. “I would find it
hard to believe that there was a two-hour high speed chase,” he said, adding
that even a 10-minute pursuit would be “extremely dangerous in New York City.”
Mr. Adams
also invoked the death of Harry’s mother, saying, “I don’t think there’s many
of us who don’t recall how his mom died.”
Buckingham
Palace said it had no comment on the incident, as did Kensington Palace, which
is the household of Harry’s brother, Prince William.
Prince
Harry has long been bitterly at odds with the press, blaming the paparazzi for
his mother’s death and saying that the ongoing harassment of his wife by the
tabloids reminded him of his mother’s experience.
He and
Meghan have taken legal action against several British newspapers, saying the
papers hacked his cellphone and made other intrusions into their privacy.
Harry is
also suing Britain’s Home Office over his security arrangements in his home
country. He and Meghan lost police protection after they withdrew from royal
duties and left Britain in 2020. Harry said that poses an unacceptable risk to
him and his family when they visit.
He has
offered to pay for police protection himself but has been turned down by the
Metropolitan Police. Lawyers for the Home Office argue that wealthy people
should not be allowed to “buy” police protection.
Harry is
estranged from his father, King Charles III, and his brother, meeting neither
of them during his brief visit to London for his father’s coronation on May 6.
Meghan did not attend the ceremony, which coincided with the fourth birthday of
the couple’s son, Archie.
Charles and
William, royal watchers say, are deeply aggrieved by the claims in Harry’s
recent memoir and a documentary about the couple, where Harry portrayed his
father as emotionally distant and more worried about his public image than his
son’s happiness, and William as jealous and bullying.
But many of
Harry’s grievances are aimed at the press. He claims the tabloids have struck
unsavory deals with members of the royal family, promising favorable coverage
in return for disparaging details about other family members.
Following
their departure from Britain and their move to California, the couple has
sought to burnish their image with the help of the media in Harry’s adopted
home. Americans have at times shown sympathy to the couple, perhaps because
they can claim Meghan, who grew up in Los Angeles, as their own.
The couple
chose Oprah Winfrey to conduct their first major interview since moving to
California, a prime-time special on CBS that drew more than 17 million viewers.
They signed a roughly $100 million deal to produce programming for
California-based Netflix, which broadcast the documentary, “Harry &
Meghan,” that went to the top of streaming charts. And the memoir, “Spare,”
released by Penguin Random House, became a best seller.
But the
couple’s eager courtship of and collaboration with the American media has also
fueled a cottage industry of photographers who seek to capture their every
public appearance, driven by demand from gossip sites like TMZ and Page Six.
The popularity of the Netflix documentary and Harry’s memoir has only raised
Americans’ appetite for these images and for other insights into the life of
the royals living in their midst.
And British
royalty has long proved a surefire draw for American media companies seeking
views, readers, and clicks. To cite just one example, Harry and Meghan’s 2018
wedding at Windsor Castle was viewed by 29 million Americans, according to
Nielsen — a bigger audience than the 18 million Britons who tuned in. More
Americans watched Harry and Meghan’s wedding than William and Catherine’s
nuptials in 2011.
Christine
Hauser and Remy Tumin contributed reporting. Kirsten Noyes contributed
research.
Mark
Landler is the London bureau chief. In three decades at The Times, he has been
bureau chief in Hong Kong and Frankfurt, White House correspondent, diplomatic
correspondent, European economic correspondent, and a business reporter in New
York. @MarkLandler
Michael M.
Grynbaum is a media correspondent covering the intersection of business,
culture and politics. @grynbaum
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