
Louisiana police officer, 26, dies just days after receiving popular plastic surgery
The police officer and Army reservist had scheduled the operation as a birthday treat for herself. She had just recently returned from deployment in Kuwait when she underwent the procedure in March 2025.
Originally from New Orleans, Rosa, 26, went to Miami for the surgery, where prices are more affordable than in other major cities, and there is a wealth of clinics with world-renowned plastic surgeons.
For roughly 30,000 American women each year, the BBL is the optimal surgical route to obtain a Kardashian-esque hourglass figure, with a small waist and ample hips and buttocks.
Despite their popularity, BBLs carry the highest complication rates of all plastic surgeries, with one in 3,000 patients dying of lung failure as a result of fat accidentally being injected into a vein, infection or sepsis, and blood loss.
Rosa's recovery took a turn just days after the surgery. Her blood pressure dropped, and she was having trouble breathing.
Three days after the operation, she collapsed in her bathroom and was found unresponsive. CPR attempts failed, and she was pronounced dead the next morning.
While Rosa died in March of a severe blood clot that had traveled to her lungs, her death was only reported this week by her family.
Rosa, who aspired to work for the FBI, paid roughly $7,500 for the procedure, in which fat is liposuctioned from the abdomen, lower back, or other fatty areas of the body and injected into the buttocks to enlarge and shape them.
Doctors removed fat from 12 areas around her body, according to local reporting.
The price she paid falls within the standard price range for such a procedure in Miami, where it typically costs between $3,000 and $15,000, depending on the surgeon.
One of her four older siblings, Anamin Vazquez, knew she had gone to Miami but only learned about the surgery after it had happened.
She said: 'We had just that feeling in our guts, like something was wrong.
'I texted her and said, 'I hope you're doing okay, you're enjoying your birthday.' But there was no answer back.'
Rosa's family did not find out about the surgery until three days after the fact, when Rosa collapsed. By the following morning, she was dead.
Some estimates suggest that Miami-Dade County surgeons perform between 15,000 and 18,000 BBLs per year, the most in the country.
However, complications can still arise, even in procedures performed by the best plastic surgeons.
The surgery is technically challenging, involving careful liposuction and strategic fat transfer that avoids injecting the fat into a vein, where it can then travel to other organs.
According to her friend, Rosa was discharged from the plastic surgery clinic to her short-term rental about an hour after the procedure on March 18, a Tuesday.
When she went for a massage on Friday, Rosa was pale, with dilated pupils, and her lips were purple, according to her friend, who added that Rosa later complained of having no sensation in her legs or feet.
At a follow-up appointment the next day, she complained of extreme pain and a loss of sensation in her legs and feet.
'Things took a turn Saturday. That's when she fell,' Vasquez said. 'She went to the bathroom, and she fell down.'
The medical examiner ruled Rosa's death the following day an accident and not the result of medical neglect.
When South Florida's NBC News affiliate contacted the clinic Rosa went to and a representative said they did not recall her case. They did not answer specific questions, but stated that they follow all protocols for safety before and after procedures.
About 63,400 butt augmentations, including fat injections, fillers, and implants, were performed in the US in 2021, up from 45,000 the year prior, according to the Aesthetic Society, a professional organization and advocacy group for board-certified plastic surgeons.
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