
OnlyFans influencer found dead at home in France after father reports her missing
Juli Luxie had not been answering calls for several days and was reported missing by her father, who described her as feeling 'depressed'. Also known as Julie Diablotine, she was found in her apartment in a southern suburb of Paris, Corbeil-Essonnes, last Thursday, along with traces of blood and bottles of nitrous oxide, known as laughing gas.
An investigation has been opened and an autopsy is expected to establish the cause of death, Le Parisien reports. Police do not currently suspect criminal behaviour.
Originally from the Pas-de-Calais region in northern France, Ms Diablotine was usually active on social networks and responsive to friends and family.
The influencer had nearly 40,000 followers on Instagram and was active on paid platforms like OnlyFans.
Police arrived at the apartment around midday and found it locked from the inside. With the support of firefighters, they entered the property where her body was found near the front door.
The news of her death spread quickly online with tributes rolling in from her followers.
Her previous boyfriend, influencer TheKairi78, posted an emotional message on TikTok, which said: 'I really loved her. I've never loved someone as much as her.'
'We didn't have time to say goodbye... It's too hard... I know it's too late, if I did things differently you might still be here. Rest in peace.'

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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
TikTok Labubu trend exploited by criminals with dangerous fakes
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However, messages seen by BBC News also suggest scalpers may be buying hundreds of genuine products at a time to resell them at a profit, with authorities reporting a "flood" of counterfeits entering the Force has seized hundreds of thousands from UK ports in the past few months, meanwhile officers at the London industrial estate believe the dolls grinning up at them from the crates hide a darker secret."The head comes off. The feet will pull off," explained Rhys Harries from Trading Standards, as one literally falls apart in his hands. Mr Harries first saw dolls like this after raiding a corner shop almost 200 miles away in Swansea, before tracing them back here."I've found them in the bags where their eyes are coming off, their hands will come off." Mr Harries' team use a plastic tube, shaped like a child's throat, to measure how dangerous objects are - if it fits, it is a choking hazard."These [parts] will all get stuck and then potentially cause choking," he said. 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According to the Intellectual Property Office, the rush by criminals to get fakes to market often results in dangerous materials being used."Counterfeiting is the second largest source of criminal income worldwide, second only to drug trafficking," said Kate Caffery, deputy director of intelligence and law enforcement."It's in the interests of these criminal organisations to respond quickly to trends to maximise it, to get on the back of it and make the most money that they possibly can."So that's why we see it happening so quickly and a complete disregard for safety concerns." 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You can't get your hands on them," she she opted to find someone reselling them online, but also discovered why they may have been selling out so she asked an eBay reseller for proof the Big Into Energy Labubu series she was interested in was genuine, Ms Goldberger was sent "a screenshot of what could have been like almost 200 orders of Labubus". "These people will sit at home and somehow robots hack the websites and bulk buy them, which is why they go so quickly. Then they'll resell them." Mr Harries said a selection of fake Labubus would be taken from London back to Swansea for use as rest will be stored as evidence at a secret location before being either recycled or destroyed."These were going everywhere," he said."There were invoice books with them and they were going all across the UK. It's a national issue."Pop Mart has been asked to comment.


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
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Daily Mirror
9 hours ago
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