A chilling new surveillance video has surfaced, capturing the horrifying scene just before 28-year-old Lidya Valdivia Juárez disappeared on January 18, 2026. Recorded at 12:09 a.m. on the road heading to Acajete, Puebla, the footage shows the heavily pregnant woman—nine months along and due to give birth any day—driving alone in the dead of night.

Moments before losing contact, Lidya sent desperate messages and a photo to her husband via WhatsApp. In a frantic voice note, she reported being chased by a suspicious vehicle and a motorcycle that repeatedly blocked her path on the dark highway. The image she shared shows the two motorcycles closing in, heightening fears of an ambush or abduction.

Authorities in Puebla activated an Amber Alert-style search immediately, expanding efforts to neighboring Estado de México after geolocation data suggested her phone pinged there shortly after. Family members, devastated and refusing to accept rumors questioning her pregnancy (which they’ve debunked with ultrasound proof), blocked roads in protest to demand faster action from officials.

The case has gripped Mexico, with volunteers, citizen search parties, and intense scrutiny on highway security joining the effort. Hospitals across regions are being checked in case she sought help, but no confirmed sightings have emerged. As days pass, the urgency grows—Lidya was en route after visiting her parents in Puebla, heading toward Acajete when everything went silent.

This disappearance echoes broader concerns about violence against women in Mexico, where thousands vanish each year amid rising fears on isolated roads. Her loved ones plead for any leads: “She was about to become a mother—please help bring her home safely.” The investigation remains active, with prosecutors analyzing every clue from messages to potential witnesses.