D4vd: What Forty Terabytes of Evidence Actually Tells Us
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Prosecutors say they have over forty terabytes of digital evidence against David Anthony Burke. They have a wiretap. They have exploitation material allegedly recovered from his phone. They have three grand juries' worth of witness testimony. And they still could not get an indictment. So what does that tell a former FBI behavioral analyst about how this investigation was actually built — and what it's missing?
Robin Dreeke, retired FBI Counterintelligence Behavioral Analysis Program Chief, takes listener questions and applies behavioral analysis to the D4vd case from the ground up. Why did a year pass between the disappearance of fourteen-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez and the arrest of the man accused of killing her? What does the volume of sealed digital evidence reveal about how investigators approached a suspect with fame, resources, and a high-powered legal team? And what does it mean that Celeste was reported missing three separate times before she was gone — that there were systems in place that should have intervened and didn't?
Trial attorney and former felony prosecutor Eric Faddis brings the legal architecture into focus. The felony complaint charges Burke with first-degree murder with three special circumstances — and Faddis examines each one for structural weakness. The financial-gain allegation, which the DA tied to Burke allegedly protecting an existing career, may not survive the legal standard for that special circumstance. The defense statement — structured as two separate denials rather than one — reveals a specific trial posture. And Blair Berk's decision to push for an accelerated preliminary hearing after publicly flagging the absence of a grand jury indictment tells Faddis that this defense team is not playing for time. They want the prosecution's evidence exposed.
The unsealed autopsy confirmed Celeste died from penetrating wounds to her torso. Her dismembered remains were recovered from a Tesla registered to Burke. Prosecutors allege the abuse began when she was thirteen and that Burke killed her after she threatened to expose it.
Burke has pled not guilty. His attorneys maintain the evidence will prove his innocence.
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
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