🚨 THE GHOST CALL THAT CHANGES EVERYTHING…

Mom of Texas A&M student Brianna Aguilera just DROPPED A BOMB: That ‘final heated phone call’ with her boyfriend – the one cops say pushed her over the edge right before she fell from the 17th-floor balcony?

‘It NEVER happened.’

Police built their entire suicide story around witnesses hearing a fiery argument… but now the mother says it’s all a lie. Phones missing, ‘suicide note’ disputed, friends’ stories shifting.

If Brianna didn’t make that call… who was out on that balcony in her final moments?

This college tailgate tragedy is exploding into something much darker. Family demands new probe.

Full chilling details below – this one’s got everyone questioning the official story… 😱👇

The grieving mother of Texas A&M sophomore Brianna Marie Aguilera has fiercely rejected key elements of the Austin Police Department’s suicide conclusion in her daughter’s fatal fall from a 17th-floor balcony, including claims of a heated final phone call with her boyfriend moments before the tragedy. Stephanie Rodriguez, joined by high-profile attorney Tony Buzbee, is calling for a new investigation, a second autopsy, and intervention by the Texas Rangers, insisting the official narrative is riddled with inconsistencies.

Brianna Aguilera, 19, a political science major and former high school cheerleader from Laredo, was found dead on the pavement outside the 21 Rio apartment complex in West Campus around 12:46 a.m. on November 29, 2025. She had been in Austin attending a tailgate party ahead of the Texas-Texas A&M football rivalry game. Authorities quickly determined her injuries were consistent with a fall from height, and after reviewing evidence, ruled the death a suicide on December 4.

In a detailed press conference, Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis and lead homicide Detective Robert Marshall outlined the timeline: Aguilera arrived at the apartment around 11 p.m., partied with a group, and by 12:30 a.m., most had left, leaving her with three female friends. Witnesses reported Aguilera borrowed a phone to call her out-of-town boyfriend, arguing heatedly during a one-minute call ending at 12:44 a.m.—just two minutes before a passerby dialed 911 upon discovering her body.

Call logs from both phones confirmed the conversation, police said. Forensic examination of Aguilera’s recovered cellphone revealed a deleted digital note dated November 23 or 25, addressed to specific people, which investigators described as a suicide note. Additional digital evidence included prior suicidal comments to friends in October and self-harm indications that night.

“From the moment this call originated… at no time did any evidence point to this being anything of a criminal nature,” Marshall stated. Surveillance video, witness statements, and lack of signs of struggle supported the suicide determination, with no evidence of foul play.

But Rodriguez and Buzbee have vehemently disputed this account. In emotional press conferences and interviews, Rodriguez declared, “My daughter was not suicidal… We talked every day.” She described Brianna as thriving—planning to order her Aggie ring, preparing for the LSAT, and aspiring to law school. “She was living her best life. She loved life.”

The family questions the phone call’s role, with Buzbee highlighting conflicting police statements: Initially, friends claimed to be asleep and unaware; later, one admitted seeing Aguilera return the borrowed phone before heading back to the balcony alone. Buzbee argued this places someone nearby during the fall, yet no one called 911 from the apartment.

Aguilera’s own phone went missing that night, later found discarded in a wooded area near the tailgate site, along with other belongings. Rodriguez reported it pinging oddly and switching to “Do Not Disturb” mode hours earlier, raising her alarm. She reported Brianna missing the next day and provided the device to police on December 1.

Buzbee dismissed the deleted note as a “creative writing essay” from a prior class, not a genuine suicide intent. He cited a resident’s report of hearing a fight—”Get off of me”—and muffled sounds around the time of the fall, claiming police failed to interview key witnesses thoroughly.

The attorney accused APD of a “lazy” and “sloppy” probe, rushing to suicide within hours without examining the balcony (44 inches high, challenging for the 5-foot-2 Aguilera to “accidentally” fall over) or pursuing alternative scenarios. “There are serious and disturbing questions,” Buzbee said, suggesting incompetence and urging Governor Greg Abbott’s involvement.

Rodriguez echoed the pain: “I cannot deal with you doing a news conference and saying false things about my child without a thorough investigation.” She plans an independent autopsy once the Travis County Medical Examiner completes theirs (expected in 60-90 days) and demands a new detective.

APD has defended its work, noting the case remains an active death investigation (not homicide) pending the official manner of death. Chief Davis addressed misinformation fueling online bullying of witnesses, emphasizing exhaustive resources used: multiple interviews, video review, digital forensics.

“Sometimes the truth doesn’t provide the answers we are hoping for,” Davis said, extending condolences. The department stands by its findings, with no evidence of crime.

The case has gripped Texas communities, especially Texas A&M, where Aguilera was remembered as bright and ambitious. A GoFundMe for funeral costs and family support raised significant funds. Friends and classmates expressed shock, while online speculation has intensified scrutiny.

Maritime and high-rise falls often lack witnesses, complicating determinations. Toxicology reports are pending, which could clarify intoxication levels—witnesses noted Aguilera appeared impaired earlier.

As of December 25, 2025, no new official developments have emerged. The family continues pushing privately and publicly, with Buzbee hinting at further actions. Rodriguez vows not to rest: “I’m not going to let her name go down in vain as suicidal, because I know my daughter was not suicidal.”

Authorities urge tips to APD or anonymously. The Travis County Medical Examiner will finalize the ruling.

This heartbreaking incident underscores mental health challenges among college students, even those outwardly succeeding, while highlighting tensions between grieving families and official investigations in ambiguous deaths.