Mexican influencer Camilo Ochoa Delgado, better known as “El Alucín”, was murdered on Saturday afternoon at his residence in the Lomas de Cuernavaca subdivision of Temixco, Morelos. The killing has drawn national attention, not only because of Ochoa’s online popularity but also due to his alleged links to the Los Chapitos faction of the Sinaloa Cartel.
According to reports, the incident occurred around 5:00 p.m. when Ochoa’s relatives heard a series of gunshots from inside the home. He died at the young age 42. Witnesses claim a lone gunman entered the property, opened fire, and fled in a white Chevrolet vehicle. Authorities later discovered Ochoa’s body in the bathroom with multiple gunshot wounds. He was wearing a black shirt and gray pants, the same outfit he had shown hours earlier in a livestream.
The Morelos State Attorney General’s Office (FGE) confirmed that an investigation has been opened, with state and federal agencies collaborating to determine responsibility. As of now, no arrests have been reported.
Ochoa, originally from Sinaloa, gained notoriety by creating content about the realities of drug trafficking. His storytelling often blurred the line between entertainment and firsthand testimony, as he openly admitted to once being affiliated with the Sinaloa Cartel. In past interviews, he claimed to have controlled the Mazatlán plaza in 2014, later cooperating with authorities, and serving prison time for weapons possession before his release in 2022.
Earlier this year, on January 9, 2025, Ochoa’s name appeared on flyers distributed in Culiacán, Sinaloa. The documents accused him and other influencers and musicians of being “financiers and collaborators” of Los Chapitos, the faction led by Iván Archivaldo Guzmán, son of Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán. These allegations placed Ochoa under heightened scrutiny, both from authorities and criminal rivals.
His death follows a pattern of escalating violence targeting figures in the entertainment and social media world who are perceived to have ties—or even symbolic associations with organized crime. Just months earlier, Gail Castro, brother of content creator Markitos Toys, was also executed under similar circumstances.
As tributes and debates flood social media, Ochoa’s killing underscores the dangerous intersection of digital influence, organized crime, and public perception in Mexico. While his online persona attracted thousands of followers, it also placed him in the crosshairs of a criminal underworld where exposure can prove fatal.
My name is Vijay Kumar. I work as content writer and founder of this website. I am studying BSC IT. I has been writing content since 2022. I also learn about journalism.