White House gatecrashers went without confirmed invitation

December 02, 2009 02:51 pm | Updated December 16, 2016 10:23 am IST - WASHINGTON

FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2009  file photo, Michaele and Tareq Salahi, right, arrive at a State Dinner hosted by President Barack Obama for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the White House in Washington. This time, the picture is the story. After the Secret Service insisted that President Barack Obama was never endangered by a security breach that allowed a couple to crash his first state dinner, the White House has released a photo showing that not only did the pair get close to Obama, they actually shook hands and talked to him. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 24, 2009 file photo, Michaele and Tareq Salahi, right, arrive at a State Dinner hosted by President Barack Obama for Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at the White House in Washington. This time, the picture is the story. After the Secret Service insisted that President Barack Obama was never endangered by a security breach that allowed a couple to crash his first state dinner, the White House has released a photo showing that not only did the pair get close to Obama, they actually shook hands and talked to him. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file)

Copies of emails between the White House party crashers and a Pentagon official undermine their claims that they were invited to President Barack Obama’s first state dinner.

Tareq and Michaele Salahi pressed the Pentagon aide for four days to score tickets to the big event. By their own admission in the emails, they showed up at the White House gates at 6:30 p.m. on Nov. 24 without an invitation “to just check in, in case it got approved since we didn’t know, and our name was indeed on the list!”

But the Secret Service has said they weren’t on that list and that it erred by letting them in anyway.

In an email sent just hours after last week’s dinner to Pentagon official Michele Jones, the Salahis claimed a dead cell phone battery prevented them from hearing Jones’ voice mail earlier that day advising them they did not make the guest list.

A collection of emails between the Salahis and Jones was obtained Tuesday night by The Associated Press from a source who got them in a manner that confirmed their authenticity.

Last week’s White House gate caper has captivated a capital where high-end social life and celebrity eruptions frequently enliven the day-to-day business of governing. Congress also is about to hold a hearing. President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle are described as angry. And the Salahis asked a national television audience to take their word that the email exchange would show that they were invited to the dinner for the visiting Indian prime minister.

Earlier Tuesday evening, the administration said it will make at least one change to its practices for invitation-only events: The White House social office will go back to making sure that one of its staff members will be present at the gates to help the Secret Service if questions come up, the first lady’s communication director, Camille Johnston, said.

Johnston maintained that this has been an existing policy, but the White House and Secret Service have said that no such person was present last week as guests arrived for the dinner. Secret Service spokesman Malcolm Wiley said that the plan for the dinner did not call for a social office employee to be at the gate but that agents also didn’t call the office to ask for assistance or clarification.

The emails between the Salahis and Jones show the couple contacted Jones, a special assistant to Defense Secretary Robert Gates and a Pentagon-based White House liaison, for help getting the invitation they so eagerly sought. Jones emailed that she would try to get them access to part of the state dinner and asked for their Social Security numbers and other data needed for clearance.

An administration official said Tuesday night that Jones had her deputy email the Salahis information to the White House Office of Public Engagement.

The day before the state dinner, Jones emailed Salahi that she was still trying, “but it doesn’t seem likely.” Salahi replied with a list of people he said were invited to the dinner but unable to make it, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and his wife. Jones replied, “This will help also!”

At 8:46 a.m. the day of the dinner, Jones wrote: “I will call or email as soon as I get word one way or another.”

According to the administration official, the White House told Jones the Salahis could not get in to the dinner and Jones then left the Salahis a voice mail before the dinner that they did not get an invitation. The official, who was not authorized to discuss the emails, spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The emails show the Salahis had told Jones earlier that the best way to reach them was through their cell phone.

At 1 a.m. Wednesday - hours after the dinner ended - the Salahis emailed Jones to say their “cell phone battery died early this evening while we were in D.C.” and they just received her voice mail message but had gone earlier to the White House anyway.

They wrote that they got in and had a “wonderful evening.”

Jones replied: “You are most welcome. I hear the smile in your email. Am delighted you and Michaele had a wonderful time.”

The administration official said Jones was assuming the Salahis obtained tickets some other way because she never told them they could come.

On NBC’s “Today” show Tuesday morning, the Salahis said they had emails that would make clear they did not go to the White House uninvited, but said they could not yet provide them while they were cooperating with the Secret Service on its internal investigation.

NBC’s parent company, NBC Universal, also owns the cable network Bravo. Michaele Salahi has been trying to land a part on an upcoming Bravo reality show, “The Real Housewives of D.C.,” and was even filmed by the Bravo show around town as she prepared for the White House dinner.

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