Jen Psaki.Photo: Alex Wong/Getty

Jen Psaki

For weeks,according to a new report, White House Press SecretaryJen Psakifielded questions from a journalist who wasn’t really who they claimed to be.

Just how this person (who claimed to be from the fake White House News and whose true identity remains murky) was able to trick legitimate members of the close-knit circle of White House reporters into asking questions on their behalf — and the White House itself into answering those questions — isn’t entirely clear.

According toPolitico, amid the pandemic, “it’s become the norm for the pool reporter to ask a question or two for a press corps colleague as a courtesy,” with the number of people allowed in the White House briefing room now at 14 (down from 49, pre-pandemic).

That’s why “Kacey Montagu,” who was never physically in the briefing room, would ask questions via other reporters who were there, purporting to be working on behalf of an outlet called White House News, or WHN for short.

Reporters writing pool reports will make a habit of asking questions on behalf of those who can’t physically attend a briefing though some, after searching Montagu’s name online and finding little more than a sparse LinkedIn profile, chose not to ask questions for them.

But others did — such as last Thursday, whenWashington Bladereporter Chris Johnson asked Psakia questionabout former PresidentBarack Obama’sinvolvement in the current administration.

Johnson’s question, he said in the briefing, came from a “colleague” but according to Mediaite, was askedon behalf of Montagu.

Politicoreports that, in conversations with journalists and U.S. officials, Montagu claimed to be “an 18-year-old law student from the United Kingdom who was born in the U.S. before moving across the pond with their family at age six.”

But some speculate that Montagu is a more likely a gamer on the online platform Roblox, whose users jokingly refer to themselves as “Legos.”

Avideo posted to TwitterThursday on Montagu’s account features a Roblox figure along with Obama’s voice (copy-and-pasted from various audio clips) reciting the lyrics ofJustin Bieber’s 2015 song “Sorry.”

“Here is a video I have recorded to the fake news,” the video caption reads, along with the Twitter handles of several reporters and a Democratic consultant.

The person behind the Twitter account continued: “None of my intentions were malicious at all — I wouldn’t even say I ‘impersonated’ a journalist, I’d just say I was being a journalist.”

When asked about their true identity, @SecMontagu told PEOPLE, “I can’t really mention my identity - but nothing I did was in any way malicious or was intended as that - I just wanted answers to questions from the White House.”

They added that they first started sending questions to the White House “a few months back.”

The White House did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s questions about Montagu.

source: people.com