Rising Latin music artist fatally shot in a parked vehicle in Los Angeles

This version of Rising Latin Music Artist Fatally Shot Parked Vehicle Los Angeles Rcna245993 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

Police said Maria de la Rosa, 22, who has more than 40,000 followers on Instagram, was with two other people in the vehicle when she was shot in the Northridge neighborhood.

Fans and relatives of a rising talent in the Latin music scene were mourning her death this week after she was shot in a parked vehicle in Los Angeles over the weekend.

Maria de la Rosa, 22, who performed as DELAROSA, was one of three people in the vehicle in Northridge when two males walked up and opened fire early Saturday, police said.

De la Rosa later died at a hospital, the Los Angeles Police Department said in a statement Monday. The other two people appeared to have been injured, but their conditions were unavailable, Officer K. Terzes said Tuesday.

Officers responded to the incident at 1:40 a.m., Terzes said.

"The incident is believed to be gang-related," he said, reading from the department's initial media log for the crime.

Motive, however, remained a mystery, and no suspects had been taken into custody, he said.

De la Rosa had more than 40,000 followers on Instagram and announced on the platform in August that she had released a Spanish-language single, "No Me Llames." She also marked her birthday in October on her Instagram account, which was verified by NBC News.

Her mother, Deyanira de la Rosa, is a fitness instructor with more than 140,000 followers on her Instagram-verified page. In a comment on Maria de la Rosa's page three weeks ago, she refers to the singer as "my baby."

Prominent figures in Latin music and on social media responded to De la Rosa's death on social media. Colombian reggaeton artist Sharik wrote in Spanish, "Te amaré siempre" — "I will always love you."

Juan Moises, lead singer of Los Gemelos de Sinaloa, responded by posting three dove emoji.

Telemundo interviewed Deyanira de la Rosa, who said she was very close to her daughter, who was taken from her too soon.

"She wanted to help everyone," she said. "She was talented. She was a good soul. She was strong. She was happy."

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