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Miami-Dade Lawsuit Accuses Streamer ‘Clavicular’ of Assault and Nonconsensual Injection

The case spotlights legal risk for influencer looksmaxxing that turns medical on camera.

Overview

  • Aleksandra Mendoza, 18, filed a civil complaint in Miami-Dade County on Wednesday seeking damages of more than $50,000 and court orders to curb use of her image.
  • The suit says she met Braden “Clavicular” Peters at 16, became intoxicated at his family’s Cape Cod home, and experienced sexual encounters she could not consent to.
  • Mendoza alleges Peters injected her cheeks with Aqualyx during a Kick livestream without consent, noting the FDA has not approved the fat‑dissolving compound and that he suggested methamphetamine was in the mix.
  • She claims the broadcast left her visibly disoriented on camera and that replay videos used her name and image for profit without permission.
  • Peters and his attorney deny the allegations, as reporters note his recent March battery arrest, an April hospitalization for a suspected overdose, YouTube channel takedowns, and a looksmaxxing persona that promotes extreme appearance hacks.