logo
TikTok Influencer Shot and Killed on Camera During Live Stream

TikTok Influencer Shot and Killed on Camera During Live Stream

Yahoo14-05-2025

A gunman shot and killed a popular Mexican TikTok influencer during a live stream on Tuesday, according to reports.
Valeria Marquez, 23, was murdered on camera at her Blossom the Beauty Lounge salon in Jalisco, Mexico, said El Imparcial. A man on a motorbike who claimed to be bringing Marquez a gift pulled up outside the shop before opening fire.
The fashion and beauty expert was shot in the chest and head, with horrified followers watching the entire time. The gunman then fled the area and has yet to be apprehended.
Marquez, who boasts nearly 200,000 followers on TikTok and Instagram, was pronounced dead at the scene.
The Jalisco State Prosecutor's Office announced an investigation is underway. As of now, a motive for the shocking crime has not been determined.
"The investigation procedures have already begun in accordance with the femicide protocol, with the aim of clarifying the death of a 23-year-old influencer, recorded today in Zapopan," the office said on X/Twitter.
Mexican blogger Mundo De Misses paid tribute to Marquez in an Instagram post early Wednesday.
"Today, with deep sorrow and great sadness, we mourn the passing of the beautiful Valeria Márquez, a beautiful model, former beauty queen, Miss Jalisco 2023 candidate, and a brave entrepreneur seeking to get ahead in a country where it is a daily challenge," the post reads.
"It is unknown who did it or why. I just hope the full force of the law falls on this individual. I hope this case is not forgotten like so many others in this country! You hurt my soul, Mexico 🇲🇽 FLY HIGH, VALERI."
Marquez was not the only person murdered in the Valle Real neighborhood in Jaliscoa Tuesday. Luis Armando Córdova Díaz, 56, a former federal and local deputy for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, was killed while spending time inside a cafe in the area.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Miranda Devine: Foreign flags fly in LA anti-ICE riots — vindicating Donald Trump and leaving Dems with no moral standing
Miranda Devine: Foreign flags fly in LA anti-ICE riots — vindicating Donald Trump and leaving Dems with no moral standing

New York Post

time4 hours ago

  • New York Post

Miranda Devine: Foreign flags fly in LA anti-ICE riots — vindicating Donald Trump and leaving Dems with no moral standing

The minute the foreign flags came out in the violent anti-ICE protests in LA over the weekend, that's when Donald Trump won the moral high ground. An iconic image showing a masked man on a motorcycle circling a burning car while holding aloft a giant Mexican flag against a backdrop of black acrid smoke and a row of police cars captured the mood. It was the 'Summer of Love' all over again — and America has had a gutful. The president could not have asked for a better advertisement for his tough border policies. He always said that the millions of illegal aliens who swarmed over the border under Joe Biden was an invasion, and here were the invaders making his point for him. Advertisement As a result, the Democrats have no moral standing. They are moored in no man's land, owning Biden's invasion and the violent masked agitators waving any flag but America's. They own the arson and looting and attacks on police and federal agents. They own the funding mechanisms for the rent-a-riots that are traced back to their donors and their corrupt donations platform, ACT Blue. Now that Elon Musk has gone, their street muscle has moved from torching Tesla dealerships to trying to block deportations. Click here to subscribe to Miranda Devine's Pod Force One Podcast Dems pick losing battle Their poster boy is Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the illegal alien gangbanger they tried to repackage as harmless 'Maryland Man' and transform into their latest George Floyd martyr. Too bad. Advertisement Their lawfare might have gotten him un-deported from El Salvador, and back on US soil. But now we see more clearly who he is, and the Trump administration's decision to deport him looks even more justified. The Department of Justice has charged him with human trafficking of thousands of illegal aliens, including children and MS-13 gang members. Federal prosectors allege he is an MS-13 member, too, and 'participated in violent crime, including murder,' trafficked children, firearms, and narcotics and 'abused' women under his control. Attorney General Pam Bondi outlined disturbing additional allegations last week which are being investigated, that he 'solicited nude photographs and videos of a minor [and] played a role in the murder of a rival gang member's mother. [He] is a danger to our community. This is the ditch Democrats have chosen to die in. As federal agents were being attacked by violent mobs throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails, slashing tires and setting vehicles alight, Mayor Karen Bass sided with the criminals: 'As mayor of a proud city of immigrants . . . I am deeply angered' by ICE officers' actions, she said in a statement. 'We will not stand for this.' Advertisement Presumably under her orders, the LAPD waited two hours before assisting beleaguered ICE agents Friday, sending the now-familiar Democrat signal to the rioters to do their worst. We saw the same in 2020, from Kenosha to Seattle. So President Trump mobilized the National Guard the next day. 'These Radical Left protests, by instigators and often paid troublemakers, will NOT BE TOLERATED,' he said on Truth Social. Advertisement 'If Governor Gavin Newscum [Newsom], of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' Trump has learned the lesson of 2020 and no longer has to deal with turncoats in his own administration. This time, despite the complicity of California authorities, the rioters are facing overwhelming resistance. Trump is not about to let the city that is due to host the FIFA World Cup next year and the 2028 Olympics descend into chaos. He has 'zero tolerance' border czar Tom Homan and unflinching Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem backing him. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is prepared to bring in Marines from nearby Camp Pendleton. Treasurer Secretary Scott Bessent pounded Newsom on Sunday, accusing him of 'threatening to commit criminal tax evasion' and warning of dire consequences. The Trump Cabinet is united and energized. Don presses forward 'You're going to see some very strong law and order,' the president told reporters Sunday en route to Camp David to meet with generals and admirals about 'a very major subject.' The riots were top of mind: 'If we see danger to our country and to our citizens, we'll be very, very strong in terms of law and order.' He was particularly disgusted by the tactic of protesters spitting in the face of federal officers. 'I have a little statement: 'They spit, we hit.' . . . Nobody's going to spit on our police officers. Nobody's going to spit on our military, which they do as a common thing. They get up and they start spitting in their face. That happens, they get hit very hard . . . We're going to have troops everywhere. We're not going to let our country get torn apart.' Advertisement He also warned, 'If officials stand in the way of law and order . . . they will face charges.' Law and order is what voters chose in November, and their good sense has been vindicated ever since. Now, a majority of Americans think the country is on the right track for the first time in Rasmussen polling history. Under Biden, in November 2024, the numbers were reversed. Only 26% said the country was on the right track, while 63% said wrong track. Trump is moving ahead relentlessly, dragging in investment trillions, trying to end two wars, bullying and schmoozing foreign leaders, bending Congress to his will, bulldozing every obstacle in his path, including the unfortunate Musk, while enthusiastically planning a new White House ballroom. Advertisement Despite the pace of change, his job approval is as high or higher than most of his predecessors at the same point. A clue to why Trump's popularity is defying gravity comes from a fly-on-the-wall documentary series, 'Art of the Surge,' about his historic return to the White House. It's now in its second season and has been snapped up by Fox Nation, which began streaming it Wednesday night. The project has been a labor of love for Tucker Carlson's former longtime producing partner, Justin Wells, who has been shadowing Trump for almost a year. From the Butler, Pa., assassination attempt to the opening scene of Season Two, in which Trump learns how to cook French fries at McDonald's, Wells secured historic behind-the-scenes access that no candidate, let alone a president, has ever granted. But Trump is an open book, the most accessible president in history. Advertisement The result might have been disastrous for his image, but he is such a showman and so good at relating to people that even the most Trump-deranged viewer would have to grudgingly admit he has charisma. And that is the problem for Democrats. They have no ideas except to keep demonizing Trump, and the country has stopped listening.

See photos of the National Guard confronting protesters in Los Angeles
See photos of the National Guard confronting protesters in Los Angeles

Boston Globe

time8 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

See photos of the National Guard confronting protesters in Los Angeles

California National Guard members at the Paramount Business Center in Paramount, Calif. ALEX WELSH/NYT A protester with a Mexican flag stands near authorities in riot gear in Paramount, Calif. MARK ABRAMSON/NYT A federal agent agent with members of the California National Guard near protesters, whose reflection is visible in his helmet visor, in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday. GABRIELA BHASKAR/NYT Federal agents and members of the California National Guard stand in front of protesters in downtown Los Angeles. GABRIELA BHASKAR/NYT Members of the California National Guard stand outside the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles. PHILIP CHEUNG/NYT A protester shouts to US National Guard deployed in downtown Los Angeles. Eric Thayer/Associated Press Members of the California National Guard stand outside the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles. PHILIP CHEUNG/NYT US Representative Maxine Waters speaks to the US National Guard in downtown Los Angeles. Eric Thayer/Associated Press US National Guard stand their line in the metropolitan detention center of downtown Los Angeles. Eric Thayer/Associated Press A protester confronts a line of US National Guard in the metropolitan detention center of downtown Los Angeles. Eric Thayer/Associated Press Smoke rises as protesters clash with members of the California National Guard in downtown Los Angeles. GABRIELA BHASKAR/NYT Members of the California National Guard deploy tear gas to protesters in downtown Los Angeles. GABRIELA BHASKAR/NYT Smoke rises as protesters clash with members of the California National Guard in downtown Los Angeles. GABRIELA BHASKAR/NYT Protestors against immigration raids march toward downtown Los Angeles on June 08 in Los Angeles. Mario Tama/Getty Protestors against immigration raids march toward downtown Los Angeles on June 08. Mario Tama/Getty Protestors against immigration raids march toward downtown Los Angeles on June 08. Mario Tama/Getty National Guard soldiers stand guard as protestors gather outside the Metropolitan Detention Center. Mario Tama/Getty Protestors against immigration raids march toward downtown Los Angeles on June 08. Mario Tama/Getty Protestors against immigration raids march toward downtown Los Angeles on June 08. Mario Tama/Getty Protestors are seen among smoke as confrontation with National Guard soldiers and US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Police officers, take place outside the Metropolitan Detention Center. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Protestors are seen among smoke as confrontation with National Guard soldiers and US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Police officers, take place outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Immigration rights supporters and protesters confront with National Guard soldiers and US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Police officers, outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images National Guard troops stand outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC on June 08. Spencer Platt/Photographer: Spencer Platt/Gett National Guard soldiers and US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Police officers clash with demonstrators outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images National Guard soldiers and US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Police officers clash with demonstrators outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images National Guard soldiers stand guard alongside federal officers as protestors gather outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. Spencer Platt/Getty Protesters stand off with National Guard soldiers and police outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC on June 08. Spencer Platt/Getty National Guard soldiers stand guard alongside federal officers as protestors gather outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. Spencer Platt/Getty Protesters stand off with National Guard soldiers and police outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC on June 08. Spencer Platt/Getty Protesters stand off with National Guard soldiers and police outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC on June 08. Spencer Platt/Getty Protesters stand off with National Guard soldiers and police outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC on June 08. Spencer Platt/Getty US Department of Homeland Security Police officers and members of the National Guard stand guard outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images California National Guard members at the Paramount Business Center in Paramount, Calif. ALEX WELSH/NYT Members of the National Guard stand guard outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC, in downtown Los Angeles. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Members of the National Guard stand guard outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC, in downtown Los Angeles. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Members of the National Guard stand guard outside the Metropolitan Detention Center, MDC in downtown Los Angeles. FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images Shanna Kelly can be reached at

National Guard Arrives in Los Angeles Following Protests Over Immigration Raids
National Guard Arrives in Los Angeles Following Protests Over Immigration Raids

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

National Guard Arrives in Los Angeles Following Protests Over Immigration Raids

National Guard troops deployed by President Donald Trump arrived in Los Angeles Sunday morning after two days of street clashes between law enforcement and protesters demonstrating against Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials' raids of local businesses. Immigration and Custom Enforcement, which is part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, led Friday's operation, targeting at least one business in the L.A. Fashion District, Ambiance Apparel. Other companies including Home Depot were also impacted. The detainment of dozens of workers sparked a series of protests in Los Angeles. More from WWD Leighton Meester, Rashida Jones and More Attend Urban Jürgensen's L.A. Bash EXCLUSIVE: Brad Pitt and Sat Hari's Luxury Label God's True Cashmere Releases First Linen Collection Tania Sarin Welcomes Friends to Celebrate Anastasio Home Collaboration A spokesperson for the police department in Paramount, Calif., where most of the protests took place, said Sunday that the number of protesters was in the hundreds Saturday, and that the crowd size would 'grow and shrink depending on the area and the response from the deputies and Homeland Security.' He described the damage, the vandalism, and the clean-up costs as 'significant.' The damaged property included businesses like restaurants and tire shops throughout the community that were vandalized, including vehicles and structures in what is primarily an industrial and residential area. Saturday's protests covered a radius of about three miles that encompasses the end of Paramount and the beginning of Compton. U.S. attorney Bill Essayli confirmed Friday that federal agents were serving a search warrant for the L.A. Fashion District for alleged fictitious employee documents. He told an NBC affiliate in Los Angeles that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was working with federal agencies to serve search warrants. Video footage online showed a crowd gathering outside Ambiance Apparel, a manufacturer, importer and wholesaler, on the 900 block of Towne Avenue on Friday, as about two dozen people were loaded into white SUVs by agents. There is also video footage on an ABC affiliate showing a crowd of people rallying against officials dressed in camouflage and riot gear. Pepper spray was used to disperse the group and a union official was among the injured, according to news reports. There is also online video footage that shows one individual being struck by one of the SUVs that was being driven by federal agents, following Friday's raids in downtown Los Angeles. Representatives at the ACLU and SEIU did not respond to media requests Sunday, nor did anyone at Ambiance Apparel or three executives at the L.A. Fashion District. A man, who was only identified as an Ambiance Apparel employee in an Instagram post AJo2Media, said, 'They came before, a couple of months ago. They were searching for specific people. One by one, they were interviewing us in the back. They were getting our information…needing our IDs and taking pictures of each one of us.' A U.S. citizen by birth, the employee was released by ICE at the establishment, he said. A media request to ICE had not been acknowledged Sunday afternoon. Asked about the status of the dozens who had been detained after Friday's raid in the fashion district, a public affairs representative for the Department of Homeland Security referenced a press release about ICE's Los Angeles operation, (which was not restricted to the L.A. Fashion District). The release identified 11 individuals ranging in age from 26 to 55 who have been arrested and are said to have criminal histories. One apparel manufacturer in the Fashion District said Sunday that the ICE raids 'are impacting everyone,' but he declined to comment further or to be identified. Media requests to several Los Angeles wholesalers in the district — J Squad Clothing, San Pedro Wholesale Mart, Fashion Mint, Glamazon LA, Be Cool, Ampm Textile, Mezon Handbags, 3A Thread & Supply Co. and Collective Clothing — had not been returned Sunday afternoon. As of Sunday afternoon, 300 of the 2,000 members of the National Guard that have been deployed by Trump had been stationed in three areas in Los Angeles. In a statement Saturday, Gov. Gavin Newsom described the federal government's move as 'purposefully inflammatory and will only escalate tensions.' Newsom said that L.A. authorities are able to access law enforcement assistance 'at a moment's notice.' Media request to the Los Angeles Police Department were not returned Sunday. 'The Guard has been admirably serving L.A. throughout recovery,' the statement continued. 'This is the wrong mission and will erode public trust.' Newsom also noted Saturday that California is the biggest 'donor state' in the country, providing around $83 billion more to the federal government than it receives from the federal government. 'Donald Trump is threatening to defund California,' Newsom said on his Instagram account. 'We help pay federal bills. So if Donald Trump is going to continue to threaten 40 million Americans that live in California, maybe we should consider withholding those resources.' In the Homeland Security press release that was issued Sunday, the department's assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said, 'Why do Gov. Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass care more about violent murderers and sex offenders than they do about protecting their own citizens? These rioters in Los Angeles are fighting to keep rapists, murderers, and other violent criminals loose on Los Angeles streets. Instead of rioting, they should be thanking ICE officers every single day who wake up and make our communities safer.' Founded in 1999, Ambiance is a manufacturer, importer and wholesaler of casual basic apparel for women and juniors. The company's corporate headquarters and a separately housed 50,000-square-foot showroom, which includes a 'megastore,' are located in the Los Angeles Fashion District. Ambiance also has 600,000 square feet of warehouse space that has 30 to 50 million units in stock 'at all times,' according to the company's site. Ambiance Apparel also operates a China branch in Shanghai, where it oversees production for China, Cambodia, Vietnam and Bangladesh. A spokesperson for U.S. Rep. Jimmy Gomez, whose Congressional district includes the L.A. Fashion District, did not respond immediately to a media request Sunday. The Fashion District, which is referred to as the 'Garment District,' is said to be the base for a few thousand wholesalers, suppliers, and retailers the majority of which are independently owned. The L.A. Fashion District Business Improvement District is a nonprofit that was created by and is maintained by property owners. It oversees a 107-block area that stretches between 7th Street to the north and the Santa Monica 10 freeway to the south, and from Broadway to the west and Essex Street to the east. The district serves a population of more than 220,000 people living in within a three-mile radius, according to the California Downtown Association. As for reports of additional protests being planned for Sunday, the Paramount Police Department spokesman said Sunday, 'Everybody has their opinion with social media about what they are or are not going to do. The position of the station is to respond to the area's needs. That dynamic could change at any time.' Best of WWD The Biggest Legal Battles Shaping the Fashion Industry Today PETA Asks Lululemon About Slaughterhouse Practices China's Livestreaming Star Viya Fined $210 Million for Tax Evasion

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store