JANUARY 18--While Manti Teo did himself no favors by hitting the mattresses in the wake of this weeks Deadspin report, there is compelling evidence--at least to TSGs eyes--that the Notre Dame star was the victim of the remarkable hoax and not a coconspirator.
In a story packed with bizarre details and inexplicable behavior, it is key to focus on the actions last month of Teo and Ronaiah Tuiasosopo, the 22-year-old California man who invented Lennay Kekua, the fictitious woman with whom Teo, 21, maintained an online romance/relationship. Until, of course, Kekua died last September of leukemia.
As part of the Kekua hoax, Tuiasosopo established a Twitter account for the fake woman. The account, which has carried several different names since its inception in 2011, was most recently @LoveMSMK (until it was deleted earlier this month).
As Deadspin reported, the account included several Twitpics purporting to show "Kekua," an attractive brunette who appeared to be in her early 20s (one Teo tweet indicated that she turned 22 last February 14, Valentines Day).
But the Kekua photos were actually images that had been taken from the Facebook and Instagram accounts of Diane OMeara, a 23-year-old Los Angeles marketing executive. When interviewed by Deadspin, OMeara identified Tuiasosopo as a former high school classmate whom she remembered fondly, but had not been in touch with since graduation.
Until last month.
Tuiasosopo, OMeara recalled, contacted her on Facebook with a strange request. As Deadspin reported, Tuiasosopo claimed that his cousin had been in a serious car accident, and he had seen her photos before and thought she was pretty. Would she be so kind as to take a picture of herself holding up a sign reading MSMK, to put in a slideshow to support the cousin's recovery?
Though puzzled by the request, OMeara agreed and sent Tuiasosopo a photo showing herself holding a white piece of paper with the handwritten letters MSMK (the meaning of which OMeara had no clue). As seen below, the photo of OMeara with the sign was subsequently uploaded last month to the @LoveMSMK Twitter accounts profile. Te'o last September told Sports Illustrated that Kekuas first name was actually Melelengei, so perhaps MSMK is a reference to her initials. [It is.]
The addition of the photograph was not a random act on the part of Tuiasosopo, but rather a clear attempt by the hoaxs mastermind to establish proof of life for Kekua, who had purportedly died three months earlier.