[2] She later became president and sole shareholder of Hollis Crossing Realty, Inc., a real estate marketing and sales company.
[3] During the 1988 congressional election, Tamposi sought election to the United States House of Representatives from New Hampshire, but lost the Republican primary, largely due to her opponent's assertions that it would be inappropriate for a mother of young children to leave the home and hold political office.
According to Tamposi, on September 28, 1992, she was contacted by Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs Stephen K. Berry on behalf of the White House, asking her to search the consular records for a purported letter in which Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton either renounced his U.S. citizenship, or sought information about how to go about renouncing it, during his Vietnam War protest days in the late 1960s.
[5] Tamposi's name was later cleared of any wrongdoing and President Bush wrote her a hand-written apology stating that she is of "good character."
[6] Her daughter is Maggie Goodlander, a former United States Deputy Attorney General and Congresswoman-elect for New Hampshire's 2nd congressional district.