OnlyFans' Nicole Pardo Molina Reportedly Kidnapped in Mexico
Photo Credit: Jonathan Raa | NurPhoto via Getty Images

OnlyFans’ Nicole Pardo Molina Reportedly Kidnapped in Mexico

In a shocking turn of events, renowned OnlyFans model and social media influencer Nicole Pardo Molina has reportedly been abducted by a group of masked men. The cameras installed in nearby vehicles seem to have captured the terrifying incident, which sees three unidentified assailants forcefully kidnapping the online celebrity in their car.

OnlyFans’ Nicole Pardo Molina reportedly kidnapped amid clip circulating online

According to a viral clip currently making the rounds on the internet, three armed men recently succeeded in kidnapping the OnlyFans personality from her lilac Cybertruck.

The video, shared by Blog del Narco Mexico on X (formerly Twitter), starts with Nicole Pardo Molina trying to get into her distinctive car, outside a shopping mall in Culiacan, Sinaloa State. Suddenly, a white Toyota Corolla pulled up beside her, frightening the content creator. Initially, Molina tried to stop a man from coming out of the backseat by pushing the rear door.

The 20-year-old then proceeded to board her own car, only for an armed masked man from the white Corolla to intercept her. With help from one of his gang members, the man overpowered Molina and dragged her into his car. Finally, the third assailant, stationed in the driver’s seat (not seen in the video), accelerated away from the crime scene.

Born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, Nicole Pardo Molina reportedly owns a hat and clothing store in the shopping plaza outside where the aforementioned perpetrators kidnapped her. Authorities have since linked the abduction of the OnlyFans model, who supposedly had ties to a Mexican cartel, to a rival gang.

“Versions circulating on social media, particularly TikTok, point to the Los Mayos faction as responsible for the incident; this is part of the ongoing investigation,” police officials noted, as per El Pais.

Nicole Pardo Molina’s abduction comes in the wake of a steep rise in crimes against women in Sinaloa. According to data from the Attorney General’s Office, as many as 398 women were victims of kidnapping, went missing, or forcibly disappeared in 2025 alone.

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