Prince Falkenrath’s Travels
February 19, 2007
Deputy Commissioner for Counter-Terrorism Richard Falkenrath may be
helping the NYPD and the citizens of New York in fighting Al Qaeda. But
the NYPD and the citizens of New York are sure helping him.
They are treating him like a prince.
Last week, this column reported that the NYPD had leased two luxury
cars for the 37-year-old Falkenrath at a cost to tax-payers of $20,000
a year.
This week we will tell you how the NYPD — i.e., the city tax-payers — spent
nearly $13,000 on his week-long junket last month to London and Singapore.
Preparations began last July, a month after Falkenrath arrived in New
York from Washington, when he e-mailed his friend, Associate Professor
Kumar Ramakrishna, in Singapore. “As you may have heard,” Falkenrath
wrote, “I’ve gone back into public service as the deputy
commissioner for Counter-terrorism of the NYPD.”
A month later, Ramakrishna invited Falkenrath to give the “Distinguished
Dinner Lecture” on Jan. 16, 2007, for the Asia-Pacific Program
for Senior National Security Officers [APPSNO] in Singapore.
“This one-week senior executive seminar for Singaporean and foreign
officers will cover home/national security issues,” Ramakrishna
wrote. “In this respect I hope that you will be able to deliver
a lecture on ‘Mass Surface Land Transportation Security in the
Age of Transnational Terrorism.’”
Falkenrath had reservations about the topic. “Mass Transit is
important to me,” he wrote back on August 25th, “but a bit
narrow.”
When Ramakrishna assured him he could speak “on any topic which
you feel is relevant to senior homeland security officials,” Falkenrath
responded on Aug. 27: “Thanks, Kumar. I like this and will run
it by the Police Commissioner.”
On Sept. 15, Falkenrath e-mailed that he had received “a preliminary
thumbs up to do this. Re. my topic, I am thinking of something like ‘Protecting
the City: Observations and Lessons from New York.’”
It was not immediately clear what lessons and observations Falkenrath
hoped to impart, as he had at that time been on the job in New York only
three months.
He then asked Ramakrishna for a round-trip, business-class ticket on
a non-stop Singapore Airlines flight from Newark, a room in downtown
Singapore at the Hyatt or Raffles [Hotel], and a car and driver.
Ramakrishna answered the same day. “This is terrific news. The
topic … is great. And will excite interest here. We will be happy
to provide a room at one of those hotels as well as arrange for transportation.…Will
you be able to stay the whole week or less?”