Saying her case is based on “sheer speculation,” a federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by a drunken Pennsylvania college student who apparently fell from a balcony after making the rounds at multiple frat parties.

Savannah Ruiz-Rivera herself doesn’t remember what happened before she was discovered unconscious on the ground outside a York College residence hall on Sept. 22, 2017 with spinal injuries that sent her to the hospital, U.S. Middle District Judge John E. Jones III noted in tossing the case.

So, he found, Ruiz-Rivera’s suit lacks the evidence required to support her contentions that the college and the fraternities and sororities where she claims to have been drinking alcohol while underage are somehow responsible for the harm she suffered.

She “does not allege, for example, that any of the defendants or their agents coerced her into drinking or using drugs or that they manipulated her into jumping off the balcony, nor does she allege that any of the defendants or their agents pushed her,” Jones wrote. Ruiz-Rivera presented no evidence that the balcony was defective, either, the judge added.

He rejected her plea to allow the case to continue so she could gather more evidence about what happened by subpoenaing the college, the frats and the sororities.

That would merely be a “wild goose chase,” Jones found. Ruiz-Rivera “cannot discover her way into a lawsuit,” he wrote.

As it stands, Jones concluded, Ruiz-Rivera “has failed entirely” to make a legally sufficient argument that her injuries were caused by the college or the Greek groups “rather than her own malfeasance or inadvertence.”