D4VD's People's Brief Alleges a Level of Planning That Changes Everything
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The People's Brief filed in the case of David Anthony Burke — the musician known as D4VD — lays out a prosecution theory of premeditation and post-offense conduct that extends well beyond the alleged killing of fourteen-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez. Prosecutors allege Burke texted the victim's phone after she was allegedly already dead. They allege he purchased disposal materials including chainsaws, a body bag, and an inflatable pool using the alias "Victoria Mendez." They allege three separate trips to a remote location near Lake Cachuma. And they allege that blue plastic fragments recovered from the victim's remains were forensically matched to that pool by the LAPD lab.
This week's True Crime Today review examines the most significant D4VD case developments — the prosecution's evidentiary blueprint, the scope of the investigation, and the legal and behavioral analysis of what the filing reveals.
Burke has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder with special circumstances, continuous sexual abuse of a child under fourteen, and unlawful mutilation of human remains. His defense maintains he did not cause Celeste's death. The People's Brief represents the prosecution's theory — allegations, not established facts. But the specificity of what Beth Silverman laid out across nine pages provides significant insight into how the case is being constructed.
Prosecutors allege Burke met Celeste online when she was eleven and that the sexual contact began at thirteen. The filing states she was reported missing on multiple occasions and that law enforcement informed Burke of her age during a welfare check. According to prosecutors, he denied having more than one encounter with her. Fifty-four search warrants were executed — a volume that indicates the investigation's scope extends beyond a single defendant.
Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer analyzes the prosecution's evidence architecture — what the warrant volume, the alias purchases, and the forensic match tell us about how premeditation and consciousness of guilt are being established. Robin Dreeke addresses listener questions focused on the alleged behavioral patterns, the people who reportedly had proximity to the situation without intervening, and the systemic failures alleged in the timeline.
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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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