Rival claims surface over ‘near catastrophic’ car chase involving Prince Harry, Meghan
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Police and media outlets are playing down claims by a spokesman of Prince Harry and his wife Meghan of a "catastrophic" car chase involving the couple in New York.
PHOTO: AFP
LONDON – Competing claims surfaced on Thursday over Prince Harry and his wife Meghan’s purported involvement in a “near catastrophic car chase” with paparazzi in New York.
A spokesman for the couple drew global attention by announcing on Wednesday that they endured a “relentless” two-hour pursuit that resulted in “multiple near collisions involving other drivers”.
The account of Tuesday’s incident prompted comparisons to the circumstances around the Paris car crash in 1997 that killed Prince Harry’s mother, Princess Diana, which the Prince blames on paparazzi pursuing her.
However, New York police, the city’s mayor and a taxi driver who briefly transported the couple have played down the danger and duration of the reported pursuit.
In an interview aired on Thursday on Britain’s ITV, one of the photographers involved in the drama alleged the couple’s vehicle entourage was to blame for any danger.
“It was very tense trying to keep up with the vehicles,” said the photographer, who asked to remain anonymous.
“They did a lot of blocking, and there were a lot of different types of manoeuvres to stop what was happening. Their driver was making it a catastrophic experience.”
‘Very chaotic’
He added that Prince Harry and Meghan’s driver “wanted to drive fast, cut through lanes and do this and do that, go the wrong way”.
The episode occurred after Prince Harry, 38, and Meghan, 41, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, attended an awards ceremony in New York with Meghan’s mother, Ms Doria Ragland.
A New York police spokesman said photographers made the group’s transport “challenging”, but there were “no reported collisions, summonses, injuries or arrests”.
The New York Post quoted a source as saying that there were no emergency calls to police about the incident, and that the purported chase “definitely wasn’t two hours”.
But Mr Chris Sanchez, a member of the couple’s security team, told CNN that the pursuit was alarming and dangerous.
“I have never seen, experienced anything like this,” he said. “What we were dealing with was very chaotic. The public were in jeopardy at several points. It could have been fatal.”
Prince Harry, the younger son of King Charles III, has long had a difficult relationship with the media and, in recent years, has launched multiple ongoing lawsuits in Britain against outlets, alleging privacy breaches.
The couple relocated to North America after quitting royal duties in early 2020, in part citing press intrusion for the decision. AFP


