New Footage Of D4vd At His Ex Girlfriend’s Funeral Goes Viral
New Footage Of D4vd At His Ex Girlfriend’s Funeral Goes Viral
The Detective and the Demon: When Art Mirrors Atrocity
“An evil version of myself would commit the crimes… and I would solve them. Solving murders that I’m committing myself.”
When singer d4vd uttered those words in a now-viral interview, most fans took it as just another edgy metaphor. An alter ego. A dramatic flourish. The trope of the tortured artist isn’t new—split personalities, symbolic violence, art that flirts with the abyss. But what happens when the darkness stops being symbolic?
Because in 2025, the line between performance and reality may have been crossed in the most horrific way.
The Body in the Frunk
On September 8, a Hollywood Hills tow yard worker noticed a foul odor coming from an impounded Tesla. When authorities opened the front trunk—the “frunk”—they found a decomposed, dismembered body sealed in plastic.
That body was later identified as Celeste Rivas Hernandez, a 15-year-old girl from Lake Elsinore who had been missing since April 2024.
The car? Registered to David Burke, known to the world as d4vd—a fast-rising music star with millions of listeners, a breakout hit titled Romantic Homicide, and a moody persona built on heartbreak, violence, and shadowy confessionals.
Suddenly, a fictional detective chasing his own crimes didn’t seem so fictional anymore.
Celeste’s Life — and Disappearance
Celeste wasn’t famous. She didn’t trend. But she mattered.
She had run away from home more than once in 2024. Her family had tried desperately to find her, but her vulnerability made her a target for manipulation. She was just 15 years old. Small. Tattooed. Known to love music, especially d4vd’s. She even had a tattoo that read “Shhh…” on her index finger—an eerie detail that became important later, as it matched imagery d4vd himself had used online.