Nicole Olivera requested a civil restraining order after saying she feared for her life and the life of her son; that petition was dismissed in June when neither party appeared in court.
Newly released surveillance footage, published by TMZ, shows Huda Mustafa tailgating another vehicle into Olivera’s gated apartment complex in Los Angeles on February 21, the clip marking a specific moment tied to Olivera’s allegations.
The record assembled around the restraining motion includes claims that Mustafa allegedly entered Olivera’s apartment at about 1:30 a.m. without invitation and that Mustafa sent text messages to Olivera’s former partner referencing threats and mentioning Olivera’s window. There were no criminal charges filed in connection with the events raised in the petition.
Mustafa has denied the claims. The footage of a car following another car into the complex stands in contrast to that denial, but the surveillance clip does not show what — if anything — occurred inside the building or the apartment doorways after the vehicle passed the gate.
Olivera’s filing framed the events as a frightening escalation; she told the court she feared for her and her child’s safety. The legal record ends at dismissal: because neither side showed up in June, the restraining order was not resolved on its merits and no judge issued findings on the alleged conduct.
The gap between the video and a legal determination is the central unresolved fact. The surveillance release fixes time and place — February 21 and the gated entrance — but it does not document an alleged entry into a specific unit nor does it capture any verbal threats that Olivera described in texts. With no criminal case and the civil request dismissed, the public record contains the video, the allegation, Mustafa’s denial and the lack of adjudication.
Outside the legal dispute, Mustafa has remained active professionally; she continues to release music, most recently the single "Bad Girls," and has been offering advice to single mothers on a podcast. She has also referenced her Love Island background in public remarks, a detail noted in coverage of her career and personal life.
The immediate legal consequence is clear: the restraining motion Olivera filed terminated in June without a ruling because neither party appeared, and there are no confirmed follow-up hearings. Unless Olivera files again or prosecutors pursue separate criminal allegations, there is no active court proceeding tied to the February 21 surveillance clip to compel testimony or a judicial finding about what happened inside the complex.






