Just two days after Deadspin broke the story that Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o’s dead girlfriend never actually existed, the woman whose photos were used as the face of the hoax girlfriend has been revealed to be a Cal State Long Beach graduate.
The Daily 49er reported Friday that the photos ussed to create multiple Twitter accounts for Kekua were stolen from the Facebook and Instagram accounts of Diane O’Meara, a Torrance native who graduated from CSULB with a BS in business administration. Sports media outlets focused on Te’o during his senior season, repeating the story that he overcame the tragic deaths of both his grandmother and his girlfriend, Kekua, within the same few weeks to bring Notre Dame’s football team to glory.
It was revealed this week, however, that Kekua not only didn’t exist, but that her photos were that of a high school friend of one of Te’o’s aquaintences. In the original Deadspin story, O’Meara–who was referred to as “Reba”–said that she was initially confused, then horrified to find that she had become the face of a dead woman. She said that all but one photo had been taken from her personal Facebook and Instagram accounts, the only exception being one that showed her holding up a sign with letters “MSMK” on it, letters that related to the purported profile of Kekua.
That photo hadn’t appeared on the internet—at least, not to Reba’s knowledge. She had taken it in December 2012 and sent it directly to an old high school acquaintance. The two hadn’t talked since graduation, but the classmate, whom Reba remembered fondly, contacted her on Facebook with a somewhat convoluted request: 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? (He didn’t explain what MSMK meant, and Reba still doesn’t know.) Baffled but trusting, Reba made the sign and sent along the photo.
Te’o claims that he was the victim of an elaborate internet hoax, telling the media that he “developed an emotional relationship with a woman [he] met online” and “maintained what [he] thought to be an authentic relationship.”
“To realize that I was the victim of what was apparently someone’s sick joke and constant lies was, and is, painful and humiliating,” Te’o said in a statement.
O’Meara has not responded to requests for comment.