Formal investigation On December 1, 2009,
The Washington Post reported that the Secret Service found e-mail exchanges between the Salahis and
Michele S. Jones, special assistant to the
Secretary of Defense and the
Pentagon-based liaison to the White House; Jones specifically told the Salahis not to come because she had no authority to grant admittance. That morning, the Salahis appeared on the
Today show on
NBC, interviewed by
Matt Lauer. When Lauer asked the couple whether they were invited to the dinner, Michaele stated, "we were invited, not crashers and there isn't anyone that would have the audacity or the poor behavior to do that." Michaele also claimed victimization: "Everything we worked for, Matt—for me 44 years just destroyed." The Salahis also asserted that they had received no payment in return for granting the interview. The Salahis were requested by the
U.S. House of Representatives Homeland Security Committee to appear at a hearing on December 3, 2009, but they refused to attend. Following this, Representative
Bennie Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi and chairman of the Committee, defeated Republican efforts to subpoena White House social secretary Desirée Rogers and to hold the Secret Service officially responsible for the Salahis' unauthorized entry. He also began a formal process to
subpoena the Salahis. On December 9, 2009, the Committee on Homeland Security voted 26 to 3 to subpoena Tareq Salahi, and 27 to 2 to subpoena Michaele, for a hearing on the gatecrash that was scheduled for January 20, 2010. The Salahis' attorney advised that the Salahis would invoke the
Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and they did so at the hearing, declining to answer questions 32 times. Despite this invocation of the Fifth Amendment, Tareq Salahi had informed the
Las Vegas Sun that he and his wife "want the story of The White House cover-up about their invitation to be told." Tareq also told the
Loudoun Times-Mirror prior to the hearings, "It will truly be a historic moment ... Not since the 1950s has Congress held hearings of such a historic nature." However, the Salahis' attorney, Stephen Best, described the Congressional inquest as "not a hearing looking for information. This was an opportunity for a public flogging." White House Principal Deputy Counsel Daniel J. Meltzer stated in a letter on December 23, 2009, to the House of Representatives Committee on Homeland Security, We have found no evidence the Salahis were included on any White House access list or guest list. The Salahis were not on the lists for the State Dinner, the Arrival Ceremony, or any other event scheduled for November 24. Indeed there is no record of the Salahis in the White House visitor access system since the beginning of the Obama Administration. Moreover, we have found no evidence that the Salahis called the White House and asked about the proper dress code for the State Dinner.
Politico reported that the subpoena does not mention the Salahis, but "says that the grand jury is investigating a possible violation of 18 USC 1001, a federal statute that covers lying to a government official." In addition, White House Usher Rear Admiral
Stephen Rochon testified voluntarily to the grand jury, the first White House official to do so. In an interview by
Robin Roberts on
ABC's
Good Morning America television program broadcast January 10, 2010, Carlos Allen's attorney called Allen a "cooperating witness" and stated that Allen is not a subject of the grand jury investigation.
Reactions Indian security officials expressed shock at the apparent breach of security. An anonymous Indian official told
The Economic Times, part of the
Times of India media group, We are glad that it happened in the US. If such a security breach had happened out here in
Hyderabad House, or even
Vigyan Bhavan, we would have never heard the end of it and heads would have rolled. How such a breach in the most important official residence in the world happened is something all of us are very keen to know. Secret Service Director
Mark Sullivan issued a statement on November 27 saying that the
Secret Service was "deeply concerned and embarrassed by the circumstances surrounding the State Dinner". Sullivan's statement also pointed out that "the preliminary findings of our internal investigation have determined established protocols were not followed at an initial checkpoint, verifying that two individuals were on the guest list."
Newsweek magazine further reported, "The White House staff member whose job was to supervise the guest list for state dinners and clear invitees into the events says she was stripped of most of her responsibilities earlier this year, prompting her to resign last June." Representative
Peter T. King, Republican of New York, wrote a letter to the House Committee on Homeland Security requesting an investigation into this incident. Secret Service Director Sullivan put three identified employees on administrative leave. Sullivan testified at the December 3 hearing that the White House and Secret Service collaboratively planned security protocols for the state dinner. In a televised interview on the
CBS program
60 Minutes that aired December 13, 2009, President Obama termed the gatecrash a "screw-up", expressed anger that it had taken place, and vowed that such incidents would not occur again. The incident also resulted in criticism of the White House for an alleged lack of transparency due to the Administration's unwillingness to allow the White House social secretary to testify before Congress. Security was tightened both at the White House and at outside events involving the President, with one commentator referring to the new White House security regime as "so tight it operated like a beast on steroids." Congressman
Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) complained in March 2010 about members of Congress having to walk a block in the rain to enter the White House: The member of Congress, like today in the rain, has to go down a block and then go through security there with double the number of guards and then come up and go through security again and go through guards again ... not because Secret Service messed up or the armed guards that are now doubled in number, but because somebody in the White House staff screwed up ... Now they’re deciding to punish members of Congress and law-abiding citizens that normally just get in. At the
State of the Union address in the Capitol January 27, 2010, security was reportedly more stringent than before, with multiple checks of identification. An anonymous U.S. Senate official was quoted in
The New York Times as saying, Nobody, the Secret Service, the Capitol Police, wants another one of those ... They don’t want some
chucklehead out on the House floor with a camera, then putting it on YouTube that he snuck in. Security was also tightened for the May 19, 2010, state dinner in honor of Mexican President
Felipe Calderón, to the extent that the wife of the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs was turned away for lack of proper identification.
Repercussions for the Salahis The widely publicized incident created a huge wave of interest in the personal lives and business dealings of Tareq and Michaele Salahi. Within days, their family winery was deluged with angry phone calls condemning their actions. Within a week of the incident, Tareq Salahi resigned from the Virginia Tourism Board at the request of Governor
Tim Kaine, an Obama ally, and other state officials. Multiple sponsors withdrew support from the Salahis' "
America's Polo Cup" event, although those withdrawals were not always acknowledged in the event's publicity materials. By the end of December 2009, the
Washington Post alone had assigned more than a dozen reporters to investigate them. By the end of June 2010, according to the
Washington Post's
ombudsman, the paper had extended its coverage of the couple to a new total of 110 articles by more than thirty reporters and contributors, ascribing its readers' interest to "the unique audaciousness and astonishing self-absorption of the Salahis." Tareq Salahi remarked in an interview that the White House should apologize for ruining his reputation and for the way he has been treated by the public and members of the media.
Loss of prestige A
USA Today/
Gallup Poll conducted December 11–13, 2009, of 1,025 adults in the United States, revealed that 70% of respondents considered the Salahis "losers" politically as a result of their White House breach, versus 16% who considered them "winners". Of the 13 choices offered in the poll, the Salahis yielded the lowest score. At a January 20, 2010, congressional hearing on the gatecrash, the Salahis were subjected to what
The Washington Post called a "blistering bipartisan tongue-lashing." The
New York Daily News criticized Bravo for "settling for [the] bottom of [the] social ladder" in its casting policy for the
Real Housewives program.
The New York Times characterized the gatecrash as a gross breach of social
protocol in the nation's capital, thus: ... when Ms. Salahi strutted onto the
South Lawn in that bright red
lehenga, she and her husband breached far more than a secure perimeter. They also trampled countless protocols that are the social, business and networking bedrock of official Washington. Essentially, the couple used the mixed martial arts approach to upward mobility in a town that still cherishes the
Marquess of Queensberry rules. However,
Maureen Dowd, a
New York Times columnist, used the incident to cast aspersions on Washington society, writing, ... even the outrage over the fakers is fake. The capital has turned up its nose at the tacky ''
trompe-l'œil'' Virginia horse-country socialites: a faux Redskins cheerleader and a faux successful businessman auditioning for a “reality” show by feigning a White House invitation ... Yet Washington has always been a town full of
poseurs, arrivistes, fame-seekers, cheaters and camera hogs.
Cultural references An episode of
Law & Order, titled "
Crashers", was partially inspired by the incident. The Salahi surname became a
synonym of "
gate crashing". The phrase "Salahi route" has additionally been used to refer to refusal to pay for services rendered or goods delivered, as in Some go the Salahi route, stiffing working folks on their bills (tradesmen, lawyers, beauty salon operators, purveyors of services), crashing parties. In the opening segment of the
December 5, 2009, episode of
Saturday Night Live, Tareq was portrayed by
Bobby Moynihan and Michaele by
Kristen Wiig as interlopers who got on stage at a
Barack Obama speech in
Allentown,
Pennsylvania, and posed for various pictures behind the President with
Secret Service special agents and Vice President
Joe Biden. At one point in the skit they ask the President to stop his speech and snap a group shot of all of them. The monologue segment of the
Late Show with David Letterman parodied the Salahis.
NBC's Washington, D.C., affiliate posted on its website parody photographs of well-known American events into which images of the Salahis had been edited.
TV Squad listed this incident as one of the top four "reality scandals" of 2009. The
Huffington Post ranked the incident fourth on its list of "Rubbernecking's Top Ten Pop Culture Moments of 2009". Addicting Games, a subsidiary of
MTV Networks, created an online computer game, White House Party Crashers, in which the gamer is challenged, "Use your most devious skills to get past White House security." Political satirist
Dave Barry included the following mention of the incident in his summary of major "lowlights" of 2009: ... a Washington couple, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, penetrate heavy security and enter the White House, a feat that Joe Biden has yet to manage. As details of the incident emerge, an embarrassed Secret Service is forced to admit that not only did the couple crash a state dinner, but they also met and shook hands with the president, and they "may have served briefly in the Cabinet." ''The Washington Post's'' "Reliable Source"
gossip column chose Tareq and Michaele Salahi as its Persons of the Year for 2009, saying, ... the Salahis took what could have been an enjoyably seedy little horse-country melodrama and catapulted it into the gossip stratosphere with one fateful night at the White House that exposed the dark secrets of our decade's major growth industries: national security and reality television. ==See also==