Metro

Bridge-jump beauty lashed out at frenemies on Facebook minutes before death leap

The troubled fashionista who jumped to her death from the George Washington Bridge posted a Facebook message a moment before her plunge to take a parting shot at her frenemies.

“Just like anyone want to be spoke. to nice, so would I,” Ashley Riggitano, 22, wrote in a typo-filled status update at 4:29 p.m. Wednesday. “Love those who treat you right all the time not some.”

At 4:40 p.m., Riggitano flung herself into the icy Hudson from the Jersey-bound upper level of the bridge.

Riggitano had been engaged in an ongoing feud with a group of perceived enemies — including former college mates, her fashion-business partner and high-school friends.

“People make others lived miserable because they satisfaction and victory, and need constant attention and be the top be better,” read her last post.

Hours after learning of Ashley’s death, her heartsick older sister, Jennifer, 25, commented on the post, noting: “Your words are words of wisdom. Don’t ever let anyone tell you different.”

Ashley’s Facebook post was the last in a series of online observations from the unhappy New York fashion-school graduate, who ran a fledgling jewelry-design business with sometime-pal Victoria Van Thunen.

In a multi-page, handwritten suicide note, Riggitano blasted Van Thunen and several others, barring them from her funeral and saying they’d bullied her and suggested she kill herself.

Before her suicide, Riggitano’s dad, Roy, CFO of the Elmwood Park Fire Department in New Jersey, had been concerned about bullying, law-enforcement sources said.

The distraught dad yesterday approached at least one of the frenemies on Ashley’s list about appearing with him on a daytime talk show, another source said.

But a woman who knows Riggitano and the women involved said her death was a last, attention-grabbing stunt to ruin the reputations of her frenemies.

“She was deeply troubled and needed mental help,” said the woman, who asked that her name not be published. “She was a very jealous person who planned this from the beginning. If you work in the fashion business, your name and reputation is everything.

“She did this to sabotage the other girls. She wanted to cause a huge spectacle and take as many people down with her as she could,” the woman said.

Riggitano’s Facebook page is full of pictures of her clubbing, swigging from champagne bottles and crashed out on the floor.

Additional reporting by Pedro Oliveira Jr.