KS: No need for apologies, I was just curious as to your reasoning for the posts. I'm always fine with agreeing to disagree but I'm also always curious about people whose opinion I respects post reasoning, hence the questions.
TBTB: It was poorly worded. Lately, I have seen too many "this is a hybrid" labels (without any justification or a straw-man effort whatsoever to show that it may be a hybrid and not some genuine species) freely thrown around here and it looks like it got under the skin of my subconscious mind. Your call is fair. My trying to be polite by using "I think" and "we should" is irrelevant. Besides, I don't expect anyone to care about what I think. That'd be plain silly. If they do, good, at their own risk. If they don't, even better.
KS: As for the Lei's I do agree that the color on most cats is invariably lighter but it's been in my experience less pronounced in Lei's then TSN's and usually of a dark beige color versus the white of a TSN. I will fully admit I've only kept 2 Lei's in my life but I've kept 4 Lei/TSN's and their coloration was almost identical to the fish pictured. What's interesting is difference that sticks out to you the most is the coloration while to me it's the shapes and size of the blotches that stand out as being unusual. As most of my hybrids had more thin elongate spotting similar to the TSN pattern then the Lei's(as seen in the pic of my hybrid below), in this case the Lei's pattern seems to be more dominant. That is if this is a hybrid which as I said is only my opinion and I can easily be wrong.
TBTB: Good food for thought. One correction is that when I said coloration, meant the whole thing, base, spots, shapes, patterns, etc. So again, we are in sync on the unusual "coloration". What's bizarre is that the "coloration" is uneven and asymmetrical and variable within the fish.