


Apparently, these photos were circulating around town via email and had also shown up on websites, many of them dedicated to hard-core pornography and death.Ī fake MySpace page was even set up in Nikki's name, where she was identified as a "stupid bitch." The comments left on the page were equally as appalling, with people writing that Nikki deserved what happened to her, and what a waste of a Porsche it was. Two weeks after Nikki's fatal accident, her uncle Geoff received a call from a neighbor, who asked if he had seen the photos of the crash scene.

Nikki’s death scene became a sordid meme people would share for shock value known as “Porsche Girl”. The photos were so shocking that they decided to send them to some of their friends and family by email to warn against the dangers of drink driving and speeding.įrom there, the gruesome photos were shared over and over again online. Officers at the scene took many photographs to document what had happened. The coroner believed Nikki’s body to be so badly damaged that they didn’t allow the family to see the body. The family later found out that Nikki had been driving at close to 100mph when she clipped another vehicle, tumbled over the median, and smashed into a concrete tollbooth. But Christos recognized a hubcap, barely attached, and collapsed onto the pavement. When Christos arrived at the accident site, a crane was lifting the remains of a car so crumpled it was hard to tell what it had been. The accident was so severe that Nikki’s head was almost completely torn from her shoulders. As he waited on hold, two police cars rushed past him, sirens blaring, headed towards the toll road.

Lesli quickly phoned Christos, who started driving around to try and find his daughter while simultaneously calling 911. When Lesli called out to her, Nikki looked away and accelerated out of the cul-de-sac. Nikki was not allowed to drive that car, but she took it anyway.
