🚨 **“STAY AWAY FROM ME!” – The mystery behind Brianna Aguilera’s final desperate scream before her death, and why her family accuses Austin police of “closing the case too quickly”**
On the evening Brianna Aguilera – the 18-year-old Texas A&M cheerleader – fell from a 17th-floor balcony, neighbors only remember one haunting detail:
**a desperate scream, “STAY AWAY FROM ME!”** echoed through the night wind before her body plummeted into the void.
Yet, just **48 hours later**, the Austin Police Department (APD) closed the case with the conclusion: **suicide**.
No motive.
No compelling evidence.
No independent autopsy.
Only a cold verdict that devastated Brianna’s family – and filled them with outrage.
Now, with the arrival of renowned lawyer Tony Buzbee, the case is entering a completely new phase.
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## **A shocking conclusion: “Suicide” — despite numerous discrepancies**
APD stated they found no “clear signs of foul play,” leading to a swift decision to close the case.
But the family and legal experts argue this conclusion is **unusually hasty**.
Key inconsistencies:
### **1. The 17th-floor balcony is too high to climb alone**
Tony Buzbee emphasized:
* The railing is over 110 cm high
* There are no handholds
* No chairs, boxes, or objects were pulled close to the railing
He asserted:
> “An 18-year-old girl, less than 1.60 meters tall, could not have climbed over that balcony by herself. Someone must have been there with her.”
### **2. The final scream completely contradicts the suicide scenario**
Witnesses on the 16th and 18th floors both reported the same thing:
**“Get away from me!”**
No one who commits suicide screams that.
It was the words of someone **struggling**.
### **3. The autopsy was delayed for months**
This is what infuriated Buzbee.
The family did not receive:
* the autopsy results,
* the toxicology report,
* the exact time of death,
* or confirmation of injuries other than “multiple injuries from a fall”.
This delay, according to Buzbee, was “unusual, unreasonable, and unacceptable.”
—
## **“Someone knows what happened in that apartment” – Buzbee declares**
Lawyer Buzbee – famous for his multi-million dollar lawsuits – bluntly accused the APD:
> “They are lazy. They are incompetent. And I believe they are hiding something.”
He asserted in a small press conference:
* Someone was **in the apartment** with Brianna at the last moment
* Messages on Brianna's phone showed “signs of being deleted”
* Her phone disappeared for hours and then **suddenly reappeared at a stream bank**, hundreds of meters from the scene
And then Buzbee said the sentence that caused the entire case to explode:
> “I believe someone moved the phone to obscure its last known time and location.”
—
## **Family: “She was pushed out. She fought.”**
Brianna’s mother, in tears, said her daughter:
* showed no signs of depression,
* had just been drafted into a new cheerleading team,
* was planning to move in with her sister,
* and **had bought tickets to a concert next week**.
She said:
> “She screamed ‘stay away from me’ because there were people there. I know my daughter. She didn’t want to die.”
The family described the APD’s work as:
* not collecting sufficient camera footage,
* not holding the apartment for fingerprinting,
* not adequately interviewing everyone inside the building that night.

—
## **Tony Buzbee's Appearance: A Sign That the Real Legal Battle Begins**
Buzbee's involvement – who has previously clashed with the NFL, Exxon, the Houston government, and won numerous major investigations – shows that the family not only wants justice…they want to **uncover the truth**.
He announced that:
* he will request a reopening of the case
* he will file a request to seize all hallway camera footage
* he will summon witnesses that the APD has never questioned
* and will sue if the “suicide” conclusion is not reconsidered
He asserted:
> “I have reviewed enough details to know this was not suicide. The question is: What did the APD miss – or intentionally ignore?”
—
## **A Case Seemed Closed – Now Just Beginning**
Brianna Aguilera's death is no longer a “personal tragedy.” It became:
* a question of investigative competence,
* a suspicion of cover-up,
* and a legal battle that could last for years.
People are asking:
* Who was the last person with Brianna?
* Why wasn't her last scream considered evidence?
* Who touched her phone?
* And most importantly: **why did the police jump to conclusions?**
These questions – under pressure from Buzbee and his family – will not disappear.
