D4vd: Every System That Should Have Protected Celeste Failed

May 02, 10:00 PM

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Celeste Rivas Hernandez was reported missing three times in fourteen months. She had not been in school for a year. She was a seventh grader from Lake Elsinore with long curly black hair and braces who weighed seventy-one pounds when the medical examiner received what was left of her. And people in the orbit of the man now charged with her murder reportedly believed she was a nineteen-year-old college student. Nobody checked. Nobody verified. Nobody protected her.

Prosecutors allege David Anthony Burke killed Celeste on or around April 23, 2025. Within days, he released an album and launched a world tour. He performed across the country for months. On September 8, a tow yard worker in Los Angeles reported a foul odor from Burke's impounded Tesla. Inside was a bag containing Celeste's dismembered remains — arms and legs severed, blue plastic fragments embedded in the cuts, two stab wounds to her torso from a sharp instrument, one perforating her liver. Toxicology found benzodiazepines and what screened presumptive for meth or MDMA. The next night, Burke took the stage at The Fillmore in Minneapolis.

His team initially said he was cooperating. LAPD later stated he was not cooperative and that investigators believe he had help disposing of the body. The Tesla was reportedly held for only forty-eight hours before being released. The autopsy was sealed at LAPD's request — reportedly over the medical examiner's own objection — while Celeste's family waited months for answers about what happened to their daughter.

Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer examines every layer of this case — what Burke's alleged behavior after the crime reveals about the person investigators believe they are dealing with, what it takes to allegedly build and maintain a false identity around a child, and why the forensic evidence in the autopsy may be devastating for the defense. She breaks down what the wound patterns indicate about intent, what the embedded physical material means for connecting Burke to the dismemberment, and how over forty terabytes of digital evidence — including alleged exploitation material — changes the scope of everything.

But Coffindaffer also confronts what failed. Law enforcement had missing person reports. Schools had an absent student. People close to the situation had a child in front of them who did not match the story being told about her. Celeste deserved better from every single one of them.

Burke faces first-degree murder with special circumstances. He has pled not guilty. His attorneys say 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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