LosPollosTV threatens lawsuit against U-Haul alleging worker leaked his ID verification photo

Los Pollos models for Champion.

Popular Kick streamer LosPollosTV has hinted at suing vehicle rental service U-Haul, claiming one of the company’s workers leaked the photo that he used to verify his identity.

LosPollosTV is a prominent streamer, boasting over 779K followers on Twitch, 275K on Kick, and 229K subscribers on YouTube. He’s best known for playing NBA2K and having humorous interactions with his viewers online.

However, one of these interactions is going viral for all the wrong reasons after a fan tried to “troll” him by leaking a photo he used to verify his identity with U-Haul approximately one year ago.

The streamer came across the photo during a broadcast in September 2025 while scrolling through X. At first, he was confused, knowing that he’d used the photo, along with his government ID, to verify his identity with U-Haul.

Los Pollos takes a selfie.
LosPollosTV is a prolific streamer who usually broadcasts on Kick.

He quickly DM’d the person who’d posted the picture, fearing that he’d been hacked — but the real explanation was somehow more baffling.

“You aren’t hacked,” Pollos said, reading the poster’s response aloud. “I don’t even know how to do that stuff. You mentioned a company I worked for at some point, and I looked stuff up. I took the screenshot to troll you, but I understand it was a bad thing to do. I got it here.”

The streamer was left gobsmacked by the poster’s confession, revealing that they’d gotten into the backend of U-Haul’s systems to retrieve the photo he’d used to identify himself with the company.

“This is from U-Haul, bro,” he said. “I don’t know how old that picture is — it’s gotta be over a year old. He f**king went in the backend of U-Haul, ’cause you have to send a picture with your ID.”

Related

LosPollosTV hits back at criticism over threats to sue U-Haul

A few days later, another clip from one of Pollos’ streams began making the rounds on social media showing the influencer threatening to sue the company for this breach of privacy.

“I had family members reach out to me, they do law sh*t,” he revealed. “They’re like, ‘Dude, this is 100% a lawsuit.’ That’s what I thought it was, but I’m so used to getting f**king trolled and sh*t.

This dude literally committed a f**king crime. It’s not just a dude, it’s the f**king company themselves. All I’m gonna say is, GG bro.”

Pollos’ response to the situation garnered some criticism online, with one user mocking him for “suing over a selfie.”

“Let me get this straight… So a guy at U-Haul looks me up in their system and then tweets out my personal info with a picture I had to send along with my license for proof. Private information… he violated completely,” the streamer shot back.

This isn’t the first time a streamer has had to take legal action against a company for using their likeness without permission. In early 2024, prominent broadcaster Amouranth told Dexerto that she was working with a law firm to get to the bottom of an eyebrow-raising situation after a fan sent her a knockoff adult toy that used her photos on the packaging.