The Secret Service is investigating how an uninvited couple was admitted to US President Barack Obama’s White House state dinner, penetrating layers of security, a spokesman said on Wednesday.
The agency charged with protecting the president and other high-level officials is conducting a comprehensive review of the security breach on Tuesday at the dinner in honor of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, US Secret Service spokesman Edwin Donovan said.
The Washington Post first reported that a northern Virginia couple, Tareq and Michaele Salahi, not on the official guest list, crashed the White House party, but were never seated at a table in the South Lawn tent where the dinner was held.
The White House has asked the Secret Service for a full review of what happened, an official said.
“An initial finding has identified one of our checkpoints that did not follow proper procedures to ensure that the two individuals that were named in the Washington Post story were on the invited guests list,” Donovan said. But he said no was at the dinner was ever in danger.
“I want to stress that these individuals went through magnetometers and several other levels of screenings just as all of the guests attending the dinner did,” he said.
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