


In one text, he wrote, “i could just breach the door with a shotgun i think.”Īva’s family learned that Justin lived hundreds of miles north, which alleviated some of their fears. Justin asked the classmate if he had access to a gun. He contacted one of Ava’s classmates and began plotting his attack, according to text messages provided to the Times. Justin’s behavior from there took a threatening turn. My whole thing is my pretty smile - that’s my content.”īut soon after, Justin began messaging her on Venmo, requesting “booty pics” and pictures of her feet in exchange for money.Īt that point, Ava blocked Justin on all of her accounts, but he persisted, sending her three payments totaling over $600 and begging her to unblock him.Īva’s father, Rob Majury, a retired police lieutenant, then ordered Justin via text to stop contacting his daughter. “It was just pictures of my face, which is what I assume that he was paying for.

“I wasn’t sending anything of my body,’’ Ava said. FacebookĪva, who rakes in thousands of dollars in sponsorship deals as an influencer, was given permission by her parents to sell Justin a few selfies that had already been shared on Snapchat. Ava is shown as a child with her brothers and parents, Kimberly and Rob. “Everyone around me was like, ‘Oh you’re going Hollywood on all of us, you don’t want to talk to us anymore.’ And I’m like, ‘You’re selling my stuff,’” she recalled. “I used to reply to my fans, like ‘Hey, how was your day?’’’ she told the newspaper.īut from there, unknown to Ava at the time, Justin managed to connect with some of Ava’s classmates - paying them in exchange for photos of her and her cellphone number.Īva said she unfollowed her friends from Florida and from back in New Jersey - where the family lived before moving to Naples in 2019. TikTok star Ava Majury revealed how her father fatally shot an armed intruder who stalked her on the app. Majury told the New York Times that early on, she responded to the user, 18-year-old Eric Rohan Justin, as she did with many fans, with general greetings. ‘Girl hammers’ go viral as women share items they use instead of toolsĪ Florida teenager gained a legion of fans by posting fun videos on TikTok - but the hobby quickly turned into a nightmare when a stalker showed up at her family’s home in 2020 and fired a shotgun through their front door.Īva Majury created a TikTok account in 2020 when she was 13 and within a year attracted more than a million followers by sharing videos of herself dancing and lip-synching to trendy music.ĭuring the early part of the pandemic, the teen noticed she kept receiving messages from one particular fan across three of her social media platforms - Tiktok, Snapchat and Instagram. I demanded my guests wear all black to my summer wedding - haters are saying it looked like a funeral I live on $50 a month in San Francisco - here’s everything I buy For Nintendo merch that doesn't infringe copyright, why not check out the IGN store? And for more Pokemon, check out the release date for Pokemon Sword and Shield's Crown Tundra DLC.Dog escapes kennel mid-flight by chewing through cage, surprising workers Talking to Kotaku, Digitalprincxss said: “I want to make it clear that I’m not trying to play the victim in the situation, and only hope to be somebody people can learn from and not make the same mistakes I did.” “It’s kind of a cool thing to say, that.the ones who made my childhood so cool, they finally noticed me! All it took was for me to infringe on everything about them,” she added, which seems to show that she’s taking the situation in good spirits. “Nintendo doesn’t want people to think that I’m in any way, shape or form affiliated with them, or that I have a partnership with them, and it all comes back to me being an adult entertainer,” she said in a video explaining her name change. Digitalprincxss also runs a successful OnlyFans account, which she believes contributes to Nintendo’s action against her.
