CBS/AP/ December 22, 2009, 3:35 PM

How NYC Mayors Are Protected

The mayor of the nation's largest city is protected around the clock, even when he's not working. He's trailed on the golf course, at the theater, while visiting relatives for Thanksgiving dinner - with taxpayers footing the bill.

That's usually all but unnoticed. But questions now have arisen about how New York City's mayoral security detail works and how its expenses are handled, after a report that ex-Mayor Rudy Giuliani's administration shuffled around expenses incurred by his security detail on his trips to a Long Island resort as he was beginning an extramarital affair.

In an interview with CBS News anchor Katie Couric on the CBS Evening News on Thursday, the Republican presidential candidate said he had done nothing wrong and dismissed the report as "a typical political hit job with only half the story told."

For as long as anyone can remember, whoever the city's mayor is and wherever he has gone, the New York Police Department has protected him. And not always without incident.

There was the time in 1923 when a police bodyguard blocked a man who charged at Mayor John F. Hylan in the midst of a Board of Estimate meeting. A half-century later, in 1979, police wrestled to the ground assailants who had pelted Mayor Ed Koch with eggs and tried to attack him before a speech at a hotel. Just last month, Mayor Michael Bloomberg's bodyguards tussled with a man who lunged at his entourage on a subway platform.

Bloomberg's spokesman, Stu Loeser, declined to discuss the workings of the mayor's security, but a former police official offered some details.

Mayors typically are protected by a five- or six-person team of plainclothes detectives, including one who often goes ahead to secure the destination. There are generally three teams that rotate for the 24-hour job.

Bodyguards generally have stayed overnight with the mayor in Gracie Mansion, the city's official residence. Bloomberg, a billionaire, has opted to stay in his own town house on a prime block of East 79th Street, where there is now a police booth.

Protection is available for a mayor's family members, but the Police Department makes those decisions based on the individuals and any perceived threat against them.

When Giuliani was in office and having an affair with Judith Nathan - who later became his wife - both she and his then-wife, Donna Hanover, were given protection.

When mayors travel, the costs of the security team are paid by the city. Bloomberg has taken the unusual step of covering their expenses when he takes personal trips.

According to a 2002 letter from the city comptroller and numerous travel receipts and documents released Thursday, Giuliani's administration billed tens of thousands of dollars in security travel expenses to little-known city offices. Those included the Loft Board, which oversees some types of apartments, and an office in charge of helping the disabled.

Giuliani told Couric that the billing practice was not to conceal anything but was for convenience to the officers on the detail, who would otherwise have to wait to be reimbursed by the Police Department.

"Since the Police Department would sometimes be slow in payment, City Hall would pay it first and then the Police Department reimbursed every single penny of it," he said.

"This was a way of expediting payment. All of it on the record, all of it discoverable, all of it going on for five or six years," Giuliani added.

The story was first reported by the political Web site Politico.com.

Ed Koch, who is supporting Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton in the presidential race, said Thursday that rerouting expenditures was highly unusual.

"Hiding the expenses by having agencies other than the Police Department carry them is not warranted - I don't understand why he did that," Koch said.
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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prinzowhales says:
Mayor Bloomberg needs to come to the rescue with a "Wh*re Protection Team" to move the extra women of politicos swiftly and quietly to their assignations.
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mcvet says:
If this was all above board, if there was nothing wrong with it all, why didn''t Rudy turn over the info requested by the controller? Folks the last thing we need in our next President is someone who claims secret every time the people want to know something. We MUST end the Secret Presidency, make it clear to who ever we elect that hiding things from us is NOT acceptable.
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rowdytexan2 says:
Government agencies don''t ever pay for anything that is not mandated in the budget. Every penny is budgeted and requires special dispensation to be moved or used for other purposes. Sometimes this can take weeks when waiting for board meetings or commissioner meetings.

The idea that Mr. Guiliani even NEEDED to expedite payment to security details is ludicrous. This money is already budgeted in the police department or mayor''s office. What could possibly hold it up?

If The Loft is a city office or agency why would there be special security details needed if the man is protected 24 hours a day? That money is already in the budget!

You can look at this every which way, and always come back to the old money shimmy shammy!

I hope they have sense enough to audit every dime of security money for THIS mayor and figure out where it went.

If he was off to the Hamptons to visit his mistress, then the security should have been paid out of his own pocket.

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