17-year-old influencer’s brutal death linked to suspected revenge motive: report (Credit: La Mazorca/TikTok)
A teenage content creator from Honduras who had built a devoted following on TikTok was found dead last week under deeply disturbing circumstances, her death sending shockwaves through her online community and leaving her family devastated.
Katherin Mejía Argueta, known to her tens of thousands of followers as “La Mazorca,” was 17 years old. Her body was discovered on April 17 on an African palm tree plantation less than a mile from the CA-13 highway in Tocoa, Honduras, by people passing through the area. According to local outlet El Heraldo, citing the National Police, Argueta had been partially decapitated and her face was bloodied.
Authorities have not ruled out a targeted killing. “It is assumed that the motive for her death is revenge,” Police Commissioner Wilber Mayes told El Heraldo. A 21-year-old man has since been arrested in connection with her death as part of the ongoing investigation.
The last time Argueta was seen alive, she had told her mother she was heading out with a friend. According to El Heraldo, one of the friends who had been with her that night later told her mother that “three armed men” had “grabbed her, dragged her and put her in a gray sedan.” It was the last anyone who loved her would see of her.
Just two days before her body was found, Argueta had shared what would become her final TikTok, a video in the same vein as the dancing clips that had made her a beloved figure on the platform. She was known for her joyful, energetic content, and the comments section of that last post quickly filled with tributes and heartbroken messages from friends and followers who could not reconcile the vibrant girl in the video with the news that followed.
For her mother, no words have been adequate to describe the grief. Speaking to El Heraldo, she recalled the moment she learned what had happened to her daughter with raw, unfiltered pain. “It’s a pain no mother expects,” she said. “This is hard. You’d rather die, seeing a daughter lying like this, even worse a female. I never imagined that this could happen to me.”
Argueta’s death has drawn renewed attention to the dangers facing young women in Honduras, where gender-based violence remains a deeply entrenched crisis. She was 17 years old, dancing on the internet two days before she was killed and the contrast between those two realities has left few who encountered her story unmoved.
