D4vd: What the Autopsy and the Timeline Actually Reveal

May 02, 10:00 PM

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The autopsy was completed months before prosecutors charged David Anthony Burke. It was sealed at LAPD's request — reportedly over the medical examiner's own public objection. Celeste Rivas Hernandez's family waited without answers while the investigation continued behind closed doors. When the report was finally unsealed, it confirmed what prosecutors had been building toward — and what the defense now has to confront.

Two stab wounds to the torso, both with smooth edges consistent with a sharp instrument. One perforated her liver. The other damaged her ribs. Her arms and legs had been severed, with blue plastic fragments embedded in the cut surfaces. Toxicology screening found benzodiazepines and what tested presumptive for meth or MDMA. Celeste was fourteen. She weighed seventy-one pounds at the time of examination. She should have been in eighth grade.

Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer analyzes the forensic picture piece by piece — what the wound characteristics tell investigators about intent and planning, what the embedded material means for connecting Burke to the dismemberment, and how over forty terabytes of digital evidence containing alleged child exploitation material reshapes an investigation from a single criminal act into something investigators treat as a pattern.

But Coffindaffer also examines the systemic failures. Prosecutors allege Burke killed Celeste on or around April 23, 2025. Within days, he released an album and launched a world tour. On September 8, a tow yard worker in Los Angeles reported a foul odor from Burke's impounded Tesla. The next night, Burke performed at The Fillmore in Minneapolis. His team initially said he was cooperating with investigators. LAPD later stated he was not cooperative and likely had help disposing of the body.

People in Burke's circle reportedly believed Celeste was a nineteen-year-old college student. She was a seventh grader from Lake Elsinore who had been reported missing three times in fourteen months and had not attended school in a year. Coffindaffer examines what it takes to allegedly construct a false identity around a child, who should have seen through it, and why the decision to hold the Tesla containing Celeste's remains for only forty-eight hours before releasing it raises serious questions about how critical evidence was handled in the early stages of this case.

Burke has pled not guilty. His defense says 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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