DAVID’S CAREER ENDS IN HORROR – Black Celebs REACT to D4vd’s Disturbing Plans for His Ex GF
Rising star David, 20, faces ruin after 14-year-old Celeste’s butchered body was discovered in his abandoned Tesla – police raid manager-rented mansion for blood evidence while fans expose years of grooming.
Celebs like Charleston White cry “frame job” as Kali Uchis yanks collab, Discord mods delete chats, and leaked lyrics tie “Romantic Homicide” to Celeste’s birthday—justice or witch hunt?
The music world is reeling from a scandal that could bury 20-year-old R&B sensation D4vd—real name David Anthony Burke—faster than his viral hit “Romantic Homicide” climbed the charts. On September 8, 2025, a foul odor led tow yard workers in Hollywood to a grim discovery: the decomposed, dismembered remains of 15-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez stuffed in the front trunk of D4vd’s abandoned Tesla. The car, registered to the singer in Texas, had sat idle for weeks on a quiet Hollywood Hills side street, just blocks from a $20,000-a-month mansion rented by his manager, Josh Marshall. What began as a missing persons case—Celeste vanished from her Lake Elsinore home in April 2024—has spiraled into a homicide probe, with LAPD Robbery-Homicide detectives scouring for blood evidence using luminol and draining sinks for traces of tissue.
Celeste, a seventh-grader with wavy black hair and a slight 71-pound frame, wasn’t just any runaway. Police records show deputies visited her family’s home 11 times between February 2024 and April 2025 for welfare checks, amid reports of multiple disappearances starting as early as January. TMZ-released surveillance footage captured her last at home on September 8, 2024—four months after her final reported vanishing—arguing with pranksters in a frantic “Delete everything!” meltdown, eerily prophetic. Private investigator Steve Fischer, hired by the home’s owner post-raid, pieced together a chilling timeline: Celeste was last verifiably alive on January 2, 2025, but her body likely decomposed in the Tesla since July, around D4vd’s tour kickoff. The medical examiner deferred her cause of death pending tests, but sources whisper “sadistic” findings, including possible strangulation or overdose, with not all remains recovered—fueling speculation the dismemberment happened inside the rented estate.
Fans didn’t wait for cops to connect dots; they unearthed a digital breadcrumb trail screaming grooming. Leaked Discord chats from 2022 show a 12-year-old Celeste venting to D4vd about “annoying” parents blocking her from his shows: “Don’t worry, I’ll fix it,” he replied, knight-in-shining-armor style. She popped up in his streams and IG Lives, hooded and hidden like a fugitive—oversized hoodies, big glasses, hands over her face—while mods ignored red flags. One user asked, “Who’s the girl?” D4vd snapped, “You’re a fed.” Screenshots reveal fans joking about him dating a minor as early as last year, with some claiming Discord staff knew she was the missing Celeste Reves Hernandez but did nothing. Moderators later issued a lengthy denial: They thought she was 18-19, missed real-time chats in the frenzy, and have since bailed, praying for justice. But deletions of DMs between the pair? That’s obstruction vibes.
D4vd’s lyrics add fuel to the fire. “Romantic Homicide,” his breakout with over a billion YouTube views, dropped on Celeste’s birthday—twisted romance laced with murder fantasies: “I said I’ll fix it, don’t worry about it.” An unreleased track titled “Celeste” croons her name twice, while he admitted in streams to bingeing LiveLeak gore videos for “inspiration,” laughing at deaths. Fans spotlighted his Discord bias: Adding underage girls’ requests (one tester posed as a teen girl and got in instantly) while ghosting boys. Matching tattoos? Check. Fake IDs letting a 13-year-old slip into 18+ clubs and USC parties? Confirmed by cops. Celeste’s family allegedly emailed Marshall in 2024 about their runaway minor shacking up with D4vd; she “returned” the next day. Marshall hit back on TikTok: “No emails received, I live in Miami with my wife and kids—no involvement.” Fischer doubled down, handing the email to LAPD, challenging him to deny knowing her age.
The fallout? Catastrophic. D4vd’s tour—booked with Tyler, the Creator, Ice Spice, Daniel Caesar—canned mid-run, Europe scrapped. Crocs and Hollister axed their collab; Spotify yanked collabs like Kali Uchis’ “Crashing,” which she blasted online: “Not friends—just a song, now down amid this horror. Stop blaming women for men’s sins.” With 30 million monthly listeners and a billion YouTube views, he was Gen Z’s next big thing. Now? Ghosted by black creators like Tyler and Ice Spice, his Innerscope Records deal teeters as Marshall eyes the exit.
Yet, amid the deluge, controversy brews. Black commentator Charleston White went rogue on a podcast, screaming “frame job!”—claiming D4vd’s innocence like Diddy’s, pinned on jealousy of a black kid’s success. “They’d lock him up on less if she was white—no arrest with a butchered body in his trunk? Smells like setup,” he ranted, waving circumstantial evidence as proof of bias. A fake mugshot flooded X, sparking “arrested!” rumors LAPD debunked: No charges, D4vd’s “fully cooperating,” per his rep. Swatting hit his parents’ Texas home days post-discovery—fake 911 about a shooting, guns drawn on his family. He transferred the property to his mom amid the chaos.
Is it justice or witch hunt? LAPD’s tight-lipped, building an airtight case—no suspect named, but the raided mansion yielded computers, “evidence of interest.” Celeste’s heartbroken kin demand answers; fans chant #JusticeForCeleste. D4vd’s silence? Deafening. In hip-hop’s underbelly, where talent collides with trauma, this isn’t just a fall—it’s a reckoning. Will the gore-obsessed crooner rise from the trunk, or is his homicide romance his epitaph?