Chilling cry witnesses heard around time Texas cheerleader plunged to death — as family bashes suicide claim
Witnesses heard someone yell, “Get off me!” in the moments before Texas A&M cheerleader Brianna Aguilera plunged to her death — and the “suicide note” cops found deleted from her phone was in fact a creative writing essay, her mother’s lawyer said Friday.
Texas attorney Tony Buzbee revealed that a man down the street from the apartment where the 19-year-old student died heard fighting early Saturday.
“[He heard], “Get off of me!” — and screaming, and then a muffled cry between 12:30 and 1 a.m. next to the apartment,” Buzbee said at a press conference Friday.

Texas A&M cheerleader Brianna Aguilera was found dead after a college football.Facebook / Stephanie Rodriguez
The high-powered attorney, who represented over 150 alleged victims of Sean “Diddy” Combs, said a second witness across the hall also heard what sounded like trouble.
“Another witness could hear running back and forth and screaming,” he said.
But Austin cops failed to talk to either potential witnesses — and instead jumped to the unfounded conclusion that Aguilera had taken her own life, he said.
Police have said they found a suicide note on the student’s phone — but Buzbee insisted it was actually an essay she penned four days before her death.

Texas attorney Tony Buzbee revealed that a man down the street from the apartment where the 19-year-old student died heard fighting early Saturday.Stephanie Rodriguez
“[The lead investigator] sees an essay on her phone and he calls it a suicide note,” Buzbee said. “She wrote an essay on the 25th that she deleted — and then she goes and kills herself four days later? It’s really ridiculous,” he said.
“It’s total baloney that they’re trying to sell you,” he said.

Witnesses heard someone yell, “Get off me!” in the moments before Texas A&M cheerleader Brianna Aguilera plunged to her death, her mother’s lawyer said.Google st View
Buzbee added that despite the assertion by cops that Aguilera died by suicide, it’s the medical examiner’s job to make that conclusion, not police.
“They are lazy and incompetent,” he said of the police who investigated the case.
Austin Police have said the student likely jumped to her death but Aguilera’s mother, Stephanie Rodriguez, believes her daughter was fatally pushed or thrown off a balcony during a long day of heavy drinking.
Rodriguez said Friday Aguilera wasn’t suicidal and was looking forward to a bright future as a lawyer.
“I can’t deal with [cops] jumping to conclusions and not performing an actual investigation,” she fumed at the press conference. “Do your job.”