Popular beauty influencer shot dead during TikTok livestream
A Mexican social media influencer was shot dead during a live stream on TikTok, where she had tens of thousands of followers, authorities said Wednesday.
The Mexican press named her as Valeria Marquez, 23, who posted videos related to beauty and lifestyle, some of which had hundreds of thousands of views.
She was killed on Tuesday evening at her beauty salon in Zapopan, a suburb of the western city of Guadalajara, the Jalisco state prosecutor's office reported.
"The victim is someone with an active presence and influence on social media," it said in a statement. "A man entered the premises and apparently fired a gun at her."
According to the Reuters news agency, Marquez was seen on the livestream saying, "they're coming," before a voice off screen asked "Hey, Vale?" Marquez replied "yes" before muting the sound on the livestream and seconds later, she was fatally shot, Reuters reported.
The motive of the attack was not immediately known.
The region is a hotbed of criminal activity, home to one of Mexico's most violent drug trafficking groups, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. The group has been accused of using fake job advertisements to lure new members and of torturing and killing recruits who resist
So far, however, investigators have found no evidence that a criminal group was behind the shooting, state security coordinator Roberto Alarcon told reporters.
Zapopan mayor Juan Jose Frangie said that his office has no record of Marquez requesting help from authorities because of threats against her.
"It's incredible that you're making a video and then you're murdered. A femicide is the worst thing," Frangie said.
According to media reports, Marquez was killed by a man pretending to bring her a gift.
Just a few hours later, a former congressman with the Mexican PRI party, Luis Armando Córdova Díaz, was also shot dead in a cafe in the area, the Associated Press reported. The state prosecutor's office said he was killed in the Valle Real neighborhood of Zapopan.
The United Nations says that around 10 women or girls are murdered every day in Mexico, where criminal and gender-related violence is rampant.
Since 2001, at least 50,000 women have been murdered in Mexico, according to the U.N, but only 2% of cases end in a criminal sentence and only one in 10 victims reports their aggressor.
Sneak peek: Fatal First Date
Trump teases "good news" on Russia-Ukraine war
Sneak peek: The Footprint
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
GOP lawmaker suggests Padilla part of ‘Cartel Caucus'
GOP Rep. Warren Davidson (Ohio) suggested Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) was supporting Mexican drug cartels during his Thursday protest at a presser hosted by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). 'I didn't know the Senate had a Cartel Caucus to protect the interests of the cartels, but maybe so,' Davidson wrote in a Thursday post on the social platform X. Padilla was thrown to the ground by law enforcement and detained after interrupting remarks by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem. 'I'm Sen. Alex Padilla. I have a question for the secretary,' Padilla, the senior senator from California, said as he was hauled off by several men. The incident follows large-scale protests in Los Angeles over the Trump administration's efforts to combat illegal immigration through widespread detainment and removals. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted four raids last week resulting in the arrest of 44 individuals including a local labor union president. Demonstrations started shortly after as residents protested overpopulation at ICE facilities, inhumane treatment and wrongful seizures. 'What just happened to @SenAlexPadilla is absolutely abhorrent and outrageous. He is a sitting United States Senator,' Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) wrote in a Thursday post on X. 'This administration's violent attacks on our city must end,' she added. Her words were echoed by former Vice President Kamala Harris, who represented California in the upper chamber prior to serving as second in command during the Biden administration. 'United States Senator Alex Padilla was representing the millions of Californians who are demanding answers to this Administration's actions in Southern California. This is a shameful and stunning abuse of power,' Harris wrote on X. However, DHS and White House officials said Secret Service agents were right to detain Padilla and falsely claimed he did not identify himself as a lawmaker. 'Senator Padilla chose disrespectful political theatre and interrupted a live press conference without identifying himself or having his Senate security pin on as he lunged toward Secretary Noem,' DHS wrote on X. 'Mr. Padilla was told repeatedly to back away and did not comply with officers' repeated commands. @SecretService thought he was an attacker and officers acted appropriately.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Russian scientist from Harvard accused of smuggling frog embryos is released from federal custody
A Harvard scientist who spent months in custody on a federal smuggling charge was released Thursday after a bail hearing in Boston. Russian citizen Kseniia Petrova was stopped in February at Boston's Logan Airport by Customs and Border Protection agents as she returned on a flight from Paris. The Justice Department said in a press release that a search of her bags turned up undeclared frog embryos and embryonic samples. Petrova initially denied carrying biological materials but later admitted to it, the Justice Department said. According to a court filing by Petrova's attorney, the materials were "non-hazardous, noninfectious, and non-toxic" and she was transporting them at the request of the leader of a research group at Harvard Medical School. "Having no prior experience transporting biological samples," her attorney wrote, she "was unfamiliar with U.S. customs requirements regarding these samples. She simply placed the samples in her luggage and did not declare them to CBP at the time of her entry." But prosecutors allege that texts on her phone from a colleague show that she had been informed she would need to declare the materials. Harvard University researcher Kseniia Petrova, 30, smiles after being released on bail from federal custody at the John Joseph Moakley United States Courthouse in Boston on June 12, 2025. Leah Willingham / AP Upon discovery, CBP canceled Petrova's visa and she was taken into custody. She was sent to an ICE detention facility in Vermont and then transferred to another ICE facility in Louisiana. In May Petrova was released from ICE custody, but remained in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service, according to The Associated Press. Petrova was a researcher at Harvard's Kirschner Lab, which focuses on cell and development biology, including cancer research. Colleagues testified on her behalf, saying she is doing valuable research and "excellent science," AP reported. "It remains difficult to understand why someone like Kseniia had to spend four months in jail. She poses no danger and has deep ties to her community," Petrova's attorney, Gregory Romanovsky, wrote in a statement to CBS News. "Her work has the potential to improve lives around the globe — including here in the United States," he added. Petrova's immigration case is ongoing, but Romanovsky said that she hasn't yet decided whether she will stay in the U.S. if she is permitted to. CBS News has also reached out to Harvard for comment.. A probable cause hearing is set for June 18.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Police attacked as Northern Irish violence spreads to another town
PORTADOWN, Northern Ireland (Reuters) -Rioters attacked police with petrol bombs, rocks and fireworks in the Northern Irish town of Portadown on Thursday, a Reuters witness said, as a fourth night of anti-immigrant violence moved to a different part of the British-run province. Violence first flared on Monday after two 14-year-old boys were arrested and appeared in court, accused of a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in the town. The charges were read via a Romanian interpreter to the boys, whose lawyer told the court they denied the charge, the BBC reported. One of a number of anti-immigration protests on Thursday was held in Portadown, 50 kilometres from the capital Belfast. A large policing operation of officers in riot gear and armoured vans closed off a number of roads in advance. Debris was strewn across streets and wheelie bins were set on fire. Other protests passed off without major incident, including in Ballymena, the primary flashpoint of the first two nights of more intense violence, local media reported. Paul Frew, a member of the regional assembly from Ballymena, said that while some people gathered on the streets again amidst a big police presence, it was much quieter and that heavy rainfall had helped keep people away. "Hopefully we're through the worst of it," Frew, a member of the Democratic Unionist Party, told the BBC. (Reporting Clodagh Kilcoyne and Ben Makori in Portadown, Amanda Ferguson in Belfast; Writing by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Daniel Wallis)