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NBA investigating whether referee is using Twitter burner account
NBA referee Eric Lewis is the subject of a unique investigation. David Richard-USA TODAY Sports

The NBA is investigating whether referee Eric Lewis has been secretly using a Twitter burner account to defend himself in discussions online.

Some Twitter sleuths allegedly discovered that Lewis was using an account anonymously to defend himself. The account in question is called “Blair Cuttliff.” “Blair” is his wife’s maiden name and also the name of one of Lewis’ children.

At the time most people tracked the account, it had no followers and was following five accounts. The five accounts it was following included: the NBA’s official account, three accounts related to NBA officials and then the George Mason women’s basketball Twitter account. Lewis’ wife Vanessa Blair-Lewis coaches the George Mason women’s team.

Much of the Twitter activity from that account involved replies to conversations where the name “Eric Lewis” was mentioned. You can see a screen recording that shows the Twitter activity from that account:

If that is not an account belonging to Lewis, then it’s run by someone who seems to share subjects that would interest Lewis and a strong stake in defending the official.

After several tweets emerged alleging that Lewis had a burner account, reporter Marc Stein said the NBA was looking into matters.

According to his bio, Lewis is in his 19th season as an NBA official. He entered this season having officiated 1,098 regular-season games and 82 playoff games, including six NBA Finals games.

The investigation about Lewis’ Twitter activity comes on the heels of a video that circulated last week showing an official’s interesting reaction to a Jimmy Butler layup.

This article first appeared on Larry Brown Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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