🚨 BOMBSHELL ESCALATION IN TEXAS A&M CHEERLEADER MYSTERY: Family SLAMS “lazy” cops, drops 40-page dossier on Gov. Abbott demanding Texas Rangers TAKE OVER Brianna Aguilera’s death probe!

They say the “suicide note” was just a creative writing class assignment… witnesses heard screams of “Get off me!” and a violent struggle right before she plunged 17 stories.

Bright future ahead—law school dreams, Aggie ring on order—NO signs of despair. But police rushed to suicide ruling WITHOUT autopsy?

Mom begs: “My daughter was murdered.” Chilling ignored evidence, conflicting timelines… this fight is going nuclear. 👇 Full explosive details – the truth they’re hiding will shock you!

In a dramatic escalation that’s gripped the Lone Star State, the family of 19-year-old Texas A&M sophomore Brianna Marie Aguilera is formally appealing to Gov. Greg Abbott and the elite Texas Rangers to seize control of the investigation into her death, alleging “sloppy,” “lazy,” and “incompetent” handling by the Austin Police Department. Attorneys representing the family announced plans to submit a 30- to 40-page dossier packed with witness statements, timelines, and evidence they claim local investigators ignored or mishandled.

The high-profile push came during a fiery Houston press conference on December 5, 2025, led by prominent attorney Tony Buzbee of the Buzbee Law Firm, alongside the Gamez Law Firm and Aguilera’s grieving parents, Stephanie Rodriguez and Manuel Aguilera. Buzbee blasted APD for prematurely concluding suicide—without a completed autopsy—and demanded the case be reassigned to a new detective or handed over to state authorities.

Brianna Aguilera, a Laredo native, former high school cheerleader, and political science major with dreams of law school, was found unresponsive around 12:46 a.m. on November 29, 2025, outside the luxurious 21 Rio apartment complex at 2101 Rio Grande Street in Austin’s West Campus area, near the University of Texas. She had suffered massive trauma consistent with a fall from the 17th-floor balcony and was pronounced dead at 12:56 a.m.

The sophomore had traveled to Austin the previous day for the heated Texas A&M vs. University of Texas football rivalry, attending a tailgate at the Austin Rugby Club. Witnesses described her as intoxicated, noting she repeatedly dropped her phone, staggered into a nearby wooded area, and was eventually asked to leave around 10 p.m.

Surveillance video captured her arriving at the high-rise just after 11 p.m., heading to a 17th-floor apartment with a group of friends. By 12:30 a.m., most had left, leaving Aguilera with three other women. Shortly before her fall, witnesses reported hearing her arguing on the phone—using a friend’s device—with an out-of-town boyfriend.

On December 4, APD held its own press conference, with Lead Homicide Detective Robert Marshall detailing findings: no evidence of foul play or criminal activity. Key elements included a deleted digital note recovered from Aguilera’s phone, dated November 25 and addressed to specific people, which police characterized as a suicide note. Marshall also cited prior suicidal comments to friends dating back to October, texts indicating self-harm thoughts the night of her death, and “self-harming actions” observed.

APD stressed the investigation remains active and open, with the Travis County Medical Examiner’s Office solely responsible for determining official cause and manner of death—an autopsy still pending as of late December. Chief Lisa Davis expressed heartache for the family while defending the probe’s thoroughness amid circulating misinformation.

But the family fired back the next day, with Buzbee accusing detectives of rushing to a conclusion “within hours” and building the case backward to fit it. He dismissed the note as “total malarkey”—an essay possibly written for a creative writing class Aguilera took the previous semester. Rodriguez tearfully insisted her daughter showed zero signs of despair: “My daughter was not suicidal. I know my daughter better than anyone. We talked every day—she was living her best life.”

Buzbee highlighted alleged oversights: conflicting accounts of what the three women in the apartment were doing at the time of the fall; an uninterviewed witness who posted on TikTok about hearing screams—”Get off me!”—and muffled struggles from the 17th floor area; questions about balcony railing height (44 inches, with Aguilera at 5’2″ and no furniture to climb); and APD’s public suicide suggestion lacking medical examiner authority.

He also noted Aguilera’s phone was found in “Do Not Disturb” mode near a creek, unusual for the location-sharing teen, and criticized perceived dismissiveness toward the mother’s repeated calls for updates.

If APD refuses to reassign the lead investigator, Buzbee vowed to forward the evidence packet directly to Abbott for Texas Rangers intervention. As of December 27, 2025, no public confirmation has emerged of Rangers involvement, though the family continues pushing for an independent review and has discussed a private second autopsy.

The case has sparked widespread debate online and in Texas media, with supporters rallying around the family’s GoFundMe and calls for transparency. Aguilera’s community remembers her as vibrant and ambitious—an honor student planning to take the LSAT and order her Aggie ring.

APD has reiterated condolences and commitment to a “thorough, complete, and respectful” process, cautioning that speculation harms the probe. The department stands by its shared information while noting only the medical examiner can rule on manner of death.

As the holidays passed quietly for the Aguilera family, questions persist: Was this a tragic suicide amid unseen struggles, or does overlooked evidence point elsewhere? With state-level pressure mounting, authorities face intense scrutiny in a case blending heartbreak, rivalry weekend chaos, and clashing narratives.

The investigation continues, with tips encouraged to APD or anonymously through proper channels.