🚨 HER HAUNTING LAST WORDS TO HER BEST FRIEND: “BYE CAMI, I LOVE YOU” – THEN SHE VANISHED ON CHRISTMAS EVE WALK, CAPTURED ON CCTV SEARCHING HER CAR BEFORE DISAPPEARING FOREVER 😭💔

19-year-old Camila Mendoza Olmos woke up, left her phone powered off, stepped out for her “usual morning walk”… but surveillance shows her rummaging in her vehicle – then POOF, gone. No trace. No calls. Nothing.

Best friend reveals their final heart-wrenching phone call the night before: Planning dress shopping, ending with “I love you”… Now cops say she’s in “IMMINENT DANGER” – mental health crisis? Trafficking? Something darker?

Family in tears: “This is our nightmare Christmas.” FBI involved, searches nonstop, even fears she left the country…

The chilling CCTV and her friend’s emotional interview will break you. Is she out there needing help RIGHT NOW? SHARE THIS EVERYWHERE – someone HAS to know! 👇 Full devastating details + video below.

The desperate search for 19-year-old Camila Mendoza Olmos entered its seventh day on Tuesday, with authorities and family clinging to hope amid revelations about her emotional final conversation with her best friend the night before she disappeared on Christmas Eve.

Camila Mendoza Olmos, a beloved 19-year-old from northwest Bexar County, was last captured on a neighbor’s surveillance camera around 6:58 a.m. on December 24, 2025, outside her family home in the 11000 block of Caspian Spring. The footage shows a figure, believed to be Olmos, searching inside her parked vehicle for an unknown item before walking away on foot. That was the last confirmed sighting—what authorities are calling her “final moment” on camera.

Her childhood best friend, Camila Estrella, shared the gut-wrenching details of their last phone call on December 23 in interviews with local media. The two Camilas—often called “the Camis” by friends—were excitedly planning a shopping trip for a dress Estrella needed for her boyfriend’s family event. “She said, ‘Bye Cami, I love you,’” Estrella recalled, her voice breaking. “She was someone that was just full of love.” The friends spoke daily, and Estrella described Olmos as always full of affection and plans.

That simple goodbye has taken on tragic significance as the days pass without any sign of Olmos. Her mother, Rosario Olmos, woke up around 8:30 a.m. on Christmas Eve to find her daughter gone. The two had shared a bed that night, and Rosario felt Camila get up early but thought nothing of it, assuming it was for one of her routine morning walks. When she didn’t return, Rosario discovered Camila’s cellphone left behind in the bedroom—powered off—and immediately grew worried.

“I called her cell phone, but the cell phone was there on the bed, and it was turned off,” Rosario told reporters. “I put it to charge and went out to look for her. I thought I would find her like other times, walking, and we would come home together.” Rosario contacted Camila’s father, Alfonso Mendoza, and others before calling the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office (BCSO).

Sheriff Javier Salazar activated a CLEAR Alert that day, signaling that investigators believe Olmos is in “imminent danger of bodily injury or death” or that the disappearance could be involuntary. While some details from her phone’s texts and calls remain private, Salazar said there is enough concerning information to heighten the urgency. “All possibilities exist right now,” he noted, ranging from self-harm to abduction or human trafficking.

Mental health concerns have loomed large. Salazar disclosed that Olmos had been struggling with depression following a recent mutual breakup and had a history of suicidal ideation. “Problems seem a lot bigger when you’re at that age,” he said sympathetically. “Nothing has occurred that can’t be fixed.” However, her father has contested portrayals of severe ongoing depression, insisting she was generally happy.

Friends paint a picture of a vibrant young woman. “She truly loves her loved ones and always puts herself before others,” one said. Another noted her reliability: “She’s always been the one to make sure her phone’s always charged.” Leaving it behind, turned off, was “very out of the norm.”

The search has been exhaustive. BCSO deputies, FBI agents, Texas Department of Public Safety, and volunteers—including over 100 community members—have scoured greenbelts, parks, schools, and a multi-mile radius. Drones, cadaver dogs, and ground teams have been deployed around the clock. New dashcam footage released December 29 shows what appears to be Olmos walking alone shortly after leaving home. Authorities have checked airports, border crossings, and outbound transportation, with some speculation she may have left the state or even the country—though no confirmation.

Family members flew in from California and Mexico. Aunt Nancy Olmos posted desperate pleas: “Cami needs us… Hold tight, fight it… pray to God that he will bring you to us.” Brother Carlos Mendoza joined foot searches, saying, “I want her to come back.” The family held prayer vigils, with strangers turning out in support.

“It’s a nightmare,” Nancy Olmos said. “This was not a Christmas for us.” Rosario added, “I only ask God to please bring her back home. Bring her back to me.”

As of December 30, the CLEAR Alert remains active, and no major leads have broken the case open. Olmos is described as a 5-foot-4 Hispanic female, 110 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. She was wearing a black North Face hoodie with baby blue accents, baby blue pajama shorts or bottoms, and white shoes—possibly carrying only her car key and driver’s license.

Investigators urge anyone with doorbell footage from Christmas Eve morning or tips to come forward. “We’re not going to stop,” family members vowed.

Contact BCSO at (210) 335-6000 or [email protected] with information.

The disappearance has gripped the San Antonio area, turning what should have been a joyful holiday into a community’s shared vigil for a young woman’s safe return.