Manti Te'o #5 of the Notre Dame Fighting Irish warms up prior to playing against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the 2013 Discover BCS National Championship game at Sun Life Stadium on January 7, 2013 in Miami Gardens, Florida.
Word is he's at a combine camp in Florida and has hired Tom Condon of CAA as his agent. Neither have talked.
But that hasn't stopped others from trying to piece together the details of the bizarre story that's rocked the sports world.
Ronaiah Tuiasosopo, the man who has been publicly identified as being behind the hoax, called a church friend in early December crying and admitted to duping the Heisman finalist, that friend told ESPN's "Outside the Lines" Thursday.
Manti Te'o's uncle, Alema Te'o, was a guest on a Salt Lake City radio show on Thursday and said he suspected Tuiasosopo was a "bad rat" from the moment he met him in a hotel room before Notre Dame's game against the University of Southern California in November.
Citing sources, Us Weekly reported Friday that Tuiasosopo is believed to have told an elaborate lie to producers of NBC's "The Voice" when he auditioned for the show. "He claimed a truck crashed into their vehicle, sending them flip-flopping all over the freeway. He also said doctors thought one of them might have been brain-dead, but miraculously, everyone was fine," the magazine reported.
Te'o may not have been the only man who "dated" Kekua. Ariel Schulman, the director of the documentary "Catfish" told ABC's "Good Morning America" on Friday that he believes there may have been "a few other people duped by the fake Lennay character."