EXCLUSIVE: “It doesn’t add up” — a shocking autopsy bombshell is raising serious questions in the death of 18-year-old Rodrigo “Rico” Montes.

The high school senior’s body was pulled from an Indiana river, but new findings are now fueling suspicions that this was far more than a tragic accident.

With a suspect already in custody, the case is quickly shifting as the family demands answers and pushes for the truth behind what really happened.

And what the autopsy may have revealed is casting doubt on everything investigators first believed.

Rodrigo “Rico” Montes was the kind of teenager who made everyone around him feel seen. At 18, he had just walked across the stage at his high school graduation in Lafayette, Indiana, diploma in hand, eyes bright with plans for the future. He wanted to study criminal justice at Purdue University and eventually become a police officer — the same dream that had driven him to volunteer with local youth programs and coach his younger cousins’ soccer team. Friends called him the peacemaker, the one who could defuse any argument with a joke or a quiet word. His family described him as their “sunshine boy,” always smiling, always moving, always the first to help someone in need.

On the night of March 28, 2026, Rico told his mother he was heading out with a small group of friends to celebrate the end of the school year. They were going to hang out by the Wabash River, a popular spot for teenagers in the area — a place to skip rocks, share music from a Bluetooth speaker, and talk about life after high school. He kissed his mother on the cheek, promised he wouldn’t be out too late, and walked out the door wearing his favorite black hoodie and jeans. That was the last time she saw him alive.

The next morning, Rico’s mother received the call no parent ever wants to answer. His body had been pulled from the murky waters of the Wabash River near the old railroad bridge in Tippecanoe County. At first, authorities treated the death as a possible accidental drowning — a tragic but all-too-common story along Indiana’s rivers, especially after a night of teenage celebrations. The preliminary report suggested Rico had slipped on the muddy bank, hit his head, and fallen into the water. No foul play suspected. Case nearly closed.

That changed dramatically this week when the full autopsy results were released to the family and their attorney. The findings, described by one source close to the investigation as “a bombshell,” have turned the case upside down and left investigators scrambling to rewrite their timeline.

According to the detailed autopsy report obtained exclusively by this outlet, Rico Montes did not drown. His lungs were completely dry. There was no water in his airways or stomach — the classic signs that would confirm death by drowning. Instead, forensic pathologists found evidence of significant blunt force trauma to the back of his head and multiple defensive wounds on his arms and hands, consistent with someone trying to protect himself from an attack. Toxicology results showed only trace amounts of alcohol — far below the level that would cause disorientation or a fatal fall. Most damning of all: the bruising pattern on his neck and shoulders suggested he had been held underwater after the initial blow, long enough for him to lose consciousness but not long enough for water to enter his lungs.

“It doesn’t add up,” Rico’s father, Carlos Montes, told reporters in an emotional interview outside the family home. “They told us it was an accident. But now the science says someone hurt my son and tried to make it look like he drowned. Who does that to a kid who never hurt anyone?”

The family’s attorney, Sarah Kline, went further. “The autopsy tells a story of violence, not misfortune. Rico was struck from behind, fought back, and was then deliberately placed in that river. This was no accident. This was murder.”

A 19-year-old local man, identified as Tyler J. Hargrove, was arrested two days after Rico’s body was recovered. Hargrove had been part of the group at the river that night. Police initially described him as a “person of interest” who was cooperating. Now he faces upgraded charges of murder, aggravated battery, and tampering with evidence. Court documents reveal that Hargrove’s phone records place him at the scene for more than two hours after Rico’s last known activity, and surveillance footage from a nearby gas station shows his truck leaving the area at high speed around 2:15 a.m. — the same window the medical examiner estimates for the time of death.

Hargrove’s attorney has maintained that his client is innocent and that the death was a tragic accident involving alcohol and roughhousing among friends. But the new autopsy findings have weakened that defense significantly. Sources say investigators are now examining whether a heated argument over a girl — one that had been simmering in their friend group for weeks — escalated into physical violence.

Rico’s family is not waiting for the courtroom to demand answers. His mother, Maria Montes, has become the public face of their fight for justice. In a series of raw social media posts and interviews, she has shared photos of Rico — smiling at graduation, coaching his cousins, laughing with his little sister — and repeatedly asked the same question: “Why was my son’s body in that river if he didn’t drown?”

The family has also hired a private forensic pathologist to review the autopsy. That expert’s preliminary opinion, shared with this outlet, supports the official findings and goes even further: the injuries suggest Rico was unconscious or already deceased when he entered the water. “The absence of water in the lungs combined with the defensive wounds paints a picture of someone who was attacked on land and then disposed of in the river to stage an accident,” the expert stated.

This revelation has sent shockwaves through the tight-knit Lafayette community. Vigils have drawn hundreds of mourners, many of them Rico’s former classmates wearing their graduation caps and holding signs that read “Justice for Rico.” Local high school administrators held an emergency assembly to discuss grief counseling and the dangers of teenage conflict. The Wabash River, once a place of weekend relaxation, now feels haunted to many residents.

What makes the case even more disturbing is the speed with which the initial narrative was accepted. Police first told the family that Rico had likely slipped while trying to climb the riverbank after a night of drinking. No mention of trauma. No immediate deep dive into the injuries. It was only after the family pushed for a full forensic review — and threatened to go public — that the deeper analysis was completed.

Tyler Hargrove remains in custody at the Tippecanoe County Jail. His bond hearing is scheduled for next week, but the new evidence has prosecutors confident they can move forward with a murder charge. Friends of both young men have begun speaking out anonymously, describing a long-simmering rivalry over a mutual female friend that had grown increasingly tense in the weeks before graduation. One classmate told investigators that Hargrove had texted the group chat the night of the incident saying, “Rico needs to learn to stay in his lane.”

Rico’s family has set up a GoFundMe to cover funeral costs and legal expenses as they prepare for what they know will be a long and painful trial. They have also started a scholarship fund in Rico’s name for students pursuing criminal justice — a way to turn their unimaginable loss into something positive.

Maria Montes stood at the riverbank yesterday, holding a photo of her son, and spoke directly to the camera for the first time since the autopsy results were released. “My boy was taken from us in the most cowardly way possible,” she said, her voice steady despite the tears. “Someone hit him, hurt him, and then tried to hide what they did. We won’t let them get away with it. Rico deserves the truth, and we’re going to make sure the world hears it.”

As the investigation continues, questions remain about what exactly happened in those final hours by the river. Did a simple disagreement spiral into violence? Was there alcohol involved beyond what toxicology showed? Were other people present who have not yet come forward? Police have issued new appeals for anyone with video or messages from that night to contact them immediately.

The Montes family has made one thing crystal clear: they will not accept the easy narrative of an accident. Not when the science tells a different story. Not when their son’s body showed signs of a struggle. And not when the one person who could explain what really happened is already behind bars.

For the people of Lafayette, this case has become more than a local tragedy — it is a stark reminder of how quickly a celebration can turn deadly, how fragile teenage friendships can be, and how important it is to question the first story told when a young life is lost.

Rico Montes was 18 years old. He had his whole future ahead of him. He was a son, a brother, a friend, a mentor. And now his family is fighting not just for justice, but for the truth that was almost buried with him at the bottom of an Indiana river.

The autopsy may have revealed the truth. But only a trial — and the courage of witnesses — will deliver the full story of what happened to Rodrigo “Rico” Montes on that warm spring night.