Strange Call to Diogo Jota’s Phone: 27 Seconds of Static and Breathing from a Deactivated Payphone
The investigation into the tragic car crash that killed Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota and his brother André Silva on July 3, 2025, near Zamora, Spain, has taken a perplexing new turn with the discovery of a mysterious 27-second call to Jota’s phone at 3:52 AM—hours before the crash at 12:30 AM. Traced to a deactivated payphone in Spain, the call contained no voice, only static and breathing, adding a chilling layer to an already complex case. Combined with a tailing car, a smartwatch distraction, unanswered calls, a deleted text to “M,” a cryptic voicemail, 36,000 deleted messages, a warning letter, a payment note, and mechanical anomalies, this strange call suggests Jota was entangled in unsettling events before the fatal accident that claimed the lives of the 28-year-old Premier League star and his 25-year-old brother.
The Crash and the Mysterious Call
Diogo Jota and André Silva, a professional footballer for Penafiel FC, died when their Lamborghini Huracán veered off the A-52 highway near Cernadilla, Zamora, after a suspected tire blowout during an overtaking maneuver. The vehicle crashed into the central reservation and burst into flames. Initially, Jota was thought to be heading to Santander for a ferry to England, advised against flying due to recent lung surgery. However, GPS data revealed a divergent route, and a web of clues has deepened the mystery: a voicemail to a blocked number ending “Tell her… I tried,” a text to “M” deleted at 11:57 PM, a location pin sent at the same time, a glovebox letter with red lipstick warning “You’ll Regret This Drive,” two unanswered calls at 12:19 AM, no braking until after impact, rapid deceleration from 180 to 74 km/h in 3.9 seconds missing a turn by 2.4 meters, a car tailing for 18.6 km that vanished 0.7 km before the crash, a smartwatch notification 17 seconds before impact displaying a name that shocked Jota’s wife, Rute Cardoso, 36,000 deleted messages including 12 from “Don’t Answer,” and a crushed letter found 14 meters from the wreck mentioning a €417,000 payment due July 4 with a note to “show this to no one but her.”
The latest clue, uncovered by the Guardia Civil’s forensic team in Zamora, is a 27-second call to Jota’s phone at 3:52 AM on July 3, traced to a deactivated payphone in an unspecified Spanish location. The call, received roughly 20 hours before the crash, contained no discernible voice, only static and audible breathing, suggesting an intentional but silent communication. Investigators are puzzled by the use of a deactivated payphone, which should not be operational, raising suspicions of tampering or illicit access to the phone network. Efforts to pinpoint the payphone’s location and identify the caller are ongoing, but the lack of voice data and the payphone’s status complicate the process.
The Call’s Implications
The 27-second call’s eerie nature—static and breathing from a deactivated payphone—suggests it could be a prank, a threat, or a coded message. Its timing, hours before Jota’s intense communication activity (the text to “M,” location pin, unanswered calls, and voicemail), indicates it may have set the stage for his later distress. The reference to “her” in the voicemail and the crushed letter’s postscript suggests a female figure central to Jota’s final hours, possibly linked to the call. Was the caller the same as “M,” “Don’t Answer,” or the person behind the smartwatch notification? The payphone’s deactivation raises the possibility of a deliberate attempt to avoid traceability, a tactic often associated with criminal activity or harassment.
The call’s connection to the crash is unclear, but its timing aligns with Jota’s divergent route and urgent communications. The €417,000 payment mentioned in the crushed letter, due one day after the crash, suggests financial pressure, potentially linked to the caller. The tailing car, captured on CCTV for 18.6 km before vanishing 0.7 km from the crash, could indicate surveillance related to the call or payment. The smartwatch distraction 17 seconds before the crash, tied to a shocking name, and the lack of braking until after impact suggest Jota was preoccupied, possibly by the cumulative stress of these mysterious interactions.
Connecting the Clues
The strange call weaves into a complex web of evidence. The 36,000 deleted messages, including 12 from “Don’t Answer” between 8:30 PM and 12:30 AM, indicate Jota was avoiding a persistent contact, possibly the same person behind the 3:52 AM call. The text to “M,” deleted at 11:57 PM alongside the location pin, and the two unanswered calls at 12:19 AM suggest escalating urgency. The glovebox letter’s warning, “You’ll Regret This Drive,” with red lipstick, and the crushed letter’s payment note and “her” reference point to a personal or financial conflict. The tire blowout, likely caused by an oil patch, loosened gravel, or a metallic shard not from the Lamborghini, combined with a right-turn input 4.2 seconds before the crash and a 37-second stop 14 km earlier, suggests external factors or distraction, potentially triggered by the call’s lingering impact.
Investigators are exploring whether the payphone call connects to “Don’t Answer,” “M,” or the tailing car’s driver. The red lipstick and “her” references hint at a female figure, though no direct link is confirmed. The smartwatch notification, possibly a call or message, distracted Jota, delaying his braking and causing him to miss the turn by 2.4 meters. The deactivated payphone suggests sophisticated evasion, possibly tied to the payment or a threat. The seven-minute CCTV gap during the crash and the tailing car’s disappearance add to the timeline’s complexity.
Investigation Challenges
The Guardia Civil faces significant hurdles. The fire-damaged Lamborghini limits ECU analysis, though it confirmed deceleration data. The phone’s partial damage complicates recovery of the 36,000 messages and call logs, and the smartwatch’s heat exposure restricts data retrieval. The crushed letter’s condition and the earlier letter’s reconstruction are ongoing, with the red lipstick trace still unmatched. The deactivated payphone’s use suggests deliberate obfuscation, making tracing difficult without physical evidence or witnesses. Two Portuguese lorry drivers, who disputed speeding claims, emphasized the A-52’s poor condition, supporting road hazards as a factor. A similar crash at the same spot strengthens this theory, but the call introduces a potential human element.
The Football Community’s Response
The football world remains in mourning, with Liverpool retiring Jota’s number 20 shirt and fans leaving tributes at Anfield, including “Diogo lives forever.” Teammates like Virgil van Dijk and Cristiano Ronaldo have shared profound grief, and Rute Cardoso, supported by Liverpool’s pledge to pay out Jota’s £34.4 million estate, is reeling from the smartwatch and letter revelations. The brothers’ funeral in Gondomar, attended by players like Bruno Fernandes, highlighted their deep community ties.
A Haunting Enigma
The 27-second call from a deactivated payphone, filled with static and breathing, adds a chilling dimension to Jota’s final hours. Who made the call, and why? As the Guardia Civil traces the payphone, recovers messages, and connects the clues to “M,” “Don’t Answer,” and the tailing car, the tragedy of Diogo Jota and André Silva grows more mysterious. The football world, grieving a “friend to everyone,” as described by Liverpool manager Arne Slot, awaits answers to a case that continues to unravel with each unsettling revelation.