Michaele Salahi | featured news

White House gate crashers land TV role

White House gate crashers land TV role

The woman who crashed President Barack Obama's first state dinner has cashed in with a reality TV deal. The Bravo network said Tuesday that Michaele Salahi (mih-KEL' sah-LAH'-hee) will be featured in the next installment of its "Real Housewives" franchise, this time focused on Washington.

 

Dinner crashers stopped near White House

The White House party crashers, Michaele and Tareq Salahi, were stopped in a limo near the White House Wednesday evening as President Barack Obama was holding his second official state dinner.

 

Salahis Plead Fifth In Probe Of White House Security Breach

A Virginia couple at the center of a congressional investigation into a security breach at the White House have invoked their Fifth Amendment right not to testify. Tareq and Michaele Salahi appeared before the House Homeland ...

 

After breach, gatekeeping begins

The White House insists the Salahi case is closed. But eyewitnesses, investigations and an internal review reveal something far more complicated.

 

Secret Service counts 91 breaches

Secret Service counts 91 breaches

Long before a pair of gate-crashers penetrated a White House state dinner, the Secret Service had detailed for its internal use a lengthy list of security breaches dating to the Carter administration -- including significant failures in the agency's protection of the president.

 

Couple denies "crashing" White House state dinner

Couple denies

The couple who drew international attention by getting into a White House dinner without an invitation denied on Tuesday that they gate-crashed the high-security gala.

 

Panel sets Thursday hearing on White House breach

The Secret Service director and the couple who crashed the Obama administration's first state dinner have been called to testify ...

 

Publicist says dinner couple not 'shopping' story

A publicist for the couple that crashed a White House state dinner denies they are "shopping" any interviews or demanding money from television networks to tell their story.

 

White House Intruders Want Money for Their Tale

White House Intruders Want Money for Their Tale

The aspiring reality-TV stars who finessed their way into a state dinner are trying to cash in on their notoriety.

 

State dinner crashers met President Obama

The Secret Service says it's 'deeply concerned and embarrassed.' The agency is looking into how such a security breach happened at the White House and whether Michaele and Tareq Salahi broke any laws.

President Obama met face to face with the Virginia couple who crashed this week's state dinner at the White House, officials acknowledged Friday, as the Secret Service said that it was "deeply concerned and embarrassed" by the breach of security.

 

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