Imagine opening your mailbox and discovering you’re getting divorced—except you never filed the paperwork. That’s the surreal reality OnlyFans creator Lena the Plug faced when she checked her mail last month and found rejected court documents bearing her name.
On Thursday, June 4, the 35-year-old took to X to lay out a jaw-dropping sequence of events that reads like a crime thriller. Someone had apparently attempted to file for divorce on her behalf, citing an April 15 separation date and requesting custody of her and Adam22’s daughter. The filing even included detailed financial requests: half of the couple’s $1.152 million in real estate, $50,000 in household items, and splits of savings and podcast assets.
Here’s where it gets stranger. Lena noticed the name attached to the divorce filing matched someone police had mentioned during two separate wellness checks at her home—occasions when someone had called claiming she was being abused by her husband. She immediately contacted both law enforcement and the courthouse, filed an identity theft report on May 6, and thought the matter was closed. Then Adam22 informed her the media was reporting on their divorce, forcing her back to the courthouse, where officials admitted they’d never encountered this situation before. One court employee essentially told her: technically, you’ve filed for divorce.
Lena’s theory? Someone’s operating a catfish scheme, impersonating her online and using a third party to file fraudulent divorce papers in hopes of extracting money. The alleged abuse claims in the filing? Lena flatly denied them. I love my husband, she declared in her video. We’ve been together for 10 years. Adam22 backed her up, sharing her statement with a caption reading, I love my citch. Could never turn my back on her. He’d spent the previous day posting sarcastic Instagram Stories about the supposed divorce—one asking single women to slide into his DMs with the promise of a car.
The whole ordeal highlights how identity theft and impersonation can infiltrate even high-profile lives, creating legal chaos in minutes. Lena now has to hire an attorney to unwind paperwork she never submitted, all while publicly fighting to protect her marriage’s reputation. It’s a nightmare scenario that exposes gaps in courthouse verification systems—and raises a troubling question about who’s behind the scheme and what they’re actually after.
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Local Lawton
Local Lawton is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.