Lena the Plug says someone posing as her submitted divorce paperwork to end her marriage to Adam22 without her consent, and the YouTuber has now commented on the claim.
The adult creator has been married to Adam22, a YouTuber with more than a million subscribers, for three years. They also share a five-year-old daughter.
Speculation began circulating on June 1 — which also marked Lena’s 35th birthday — suggesting she had filed for divorce. Lena quickly pushed back, insisting the filing was fake and the reports were not accurate.
Documents previously referenced by TMZ indicated the person submitting the filing was seeking full custody of their child, and claimed Lena had no job and relied on $3,000 per month in spousal support from Adam.
Lena responded in a long Instagram video, saying this was not the first time someone had attempted to file paperwork in her name. Adam later addressed the strange situation as well.

In an Instagram Story post, Adam wrote: “I love my c****, I could never turn my back on her.”
Lena, whose full name is Lena Nersesian, said the person behind the alleged fraud had tried more than once to submit the documents, but repeatedly made mistakes when completing them.
However, she claimed that this time the paperwork appears to have been accepted, meaning a case was opened under her name.
In her message to followers, she said: “How am I going to undo this? When I called the courthouse, I was like is there actually a case number under my name?
“And they’re like yeah, so what do I do? ‘We don’t know, since you filed this,’ they responded.
She continued: “Yeah, but not me, this other person who I guess we can call a crazy psycho stalker fan maybe.”

She also suggested the alleged impersonation wasn’t the only issue tied to the same individual.
Lena claimed that police were twice sent to her home to conduct welfare checks after reports were made alleging she was being abused by Adam, whose legal name is Adam Grandmaison.
She said things escalated after she checked her mailbox and found divorce paperwork that had reportedly been rejected — documents she claims used her personal details and included a forged signature.
Lena added that the packet also contained a $435 check from a man whose name immediately raised red flags for her.

