Fake heiress Anna Delvey planning to host dinner party series
Celebrities

Fake heiress Anna Delvey planning to host dinner party series at NYC apartment

Anna Delvey plans to host trendy dinner parties at her East Village apartment while she serves the remainder of her sentence on house arrest, a report said Thursday.

The convicted scammer’s team has been searching for kitchen decor and soliciting donations from food and beverage companies, according to an email obtained by Eater.

The exclusive monthly dinners are billed as a “salon series” and “welcome 10 – 12 VIP attendees including well-known founders, influencers, media, and celebrity talent friends,” the email states.

Each “invite only” dinner will reportedly focus on different dinner conversation topics about “social good movements” and “collective experiences across industries.”

A spokesperson for Delvey told The Post that plans for the dinner are not concrete at this time.

“Although not yet confirmed, the dinner series is one of the many projects Anna currently has in development,” the rep said.

Anna Delvey
Anna Delvey is planning to host a dinner series out of her one-bedroom Manhattan apartment. Emmy Park for NY Post

Unlike Delvey’s projects of the past, the dinners won’t cost invitees or associates a dime.

The counterfeit German heiress was sentenced in 2019 for stealing over $200,000 from banks and businesses. She served four years in prison before being taken into ICE custody before recently being released under house arrest in a $4,250-per-month one-bedroom apartment.

Last month, Delvey told CNN she wants to stay in the US to “prove people wrong” and change the narrative” that her scamming and subsequent Netflix series generated.

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Anna Delvey wearing an ankle monitor.
Delvey has been under house arrest since early October.Getty Images
Anna Delvey looks out an apartment window.
Delvey has several projects in development, a spokesperson said.Janet Mayer/Startraksphoto.com
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“I feel like I deserve a second chance, it was my mistake that I made and I served my time and I feel like I should deserve a second opportunity,” Delvey said.

Delvey is still living relatively lavishly — she is selling her prison artwork for thousands of dollars and taking Ubers to meet her parole officer.