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They Made D4vd a Star. Now They Want Him Convicted of Murder

Jennifer Swann· ·33 min read · 0 reactions · 0 comments · 3 views
#d4vd#murder charge#discord#tiktok#gen z music
They Made D4vd a Star. Now They Want Him Convicted of Murder
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Singer D4vd, who rose to fame through viral TikTok hits like "Romantic Homicide," is now facing murder charges in the death of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, sparking shock and turmoil among his young fanbase. Fans who once celebrated his DIY music success are now reexamining his dark lyrics and music videos for clues, while his career collapses amid canceled tours and severed industry ties. The case has ignited a grassroots online investigation by former supporters convinced the truth lies hidden in his Discord server. Once seen as a Gen Z music prodigy, D4vd is now at the center of a real-life crime that mirrors his artistic persona.

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WIRED · Jennifer Swann
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Jennifer SwannThe Big StoryApr 23, 2026 6:00 AMThey Made D4vd a Star. Now They Want Him Convicted of MurderA legion of young fans propelled the singer D4vd to viral fame. Now that he’s been charged with the murder of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, they say the clues were in their Discord all along.Photo-illustration: Elizabeth Renstrom; Getty ImagesCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storySafiyya was sound asleep at her parents’ apartment when the unthinkable happened. It was almost midnight on a Monday last September, and her phone wouldn’t stop buzzing. She got out of bed and went over to her computer, her body pulsing with adrenaline. Messages were pouring in on the Discord server she moderated. She began to panic.“What the fuck is happening,” one Discord user wrote in the general chat. “Yall i cant go to sleep now,” wrote another. “Dude I have school tmr,” someone else chimed in. “Daddy d4vd may be getting canceled,” a separate user wrote.“D4vd slimed someone,” another user said—slang for murdered.The Discord server known as “d4vd’s closet,” for fans of the Soundcloud-native singer-songwriter D4vd, was processing horrific news in real time. Hours earlier, on the afternoon of September 8, a decomposing body had been discovered in the front trunk of a black Tesla in a Los Angeles tow yard. It was registered, in Texas, to then-20-year-old David Anthony Burke, the real name of D4vd.Safiyya, who is 24 and lives in Canada, was near speechless. (She, like many sources in this piece, asked to be identified by either a username, pseudonym, or first name, out of fear of harassment.) “Bro wtf,” she typed into the Discord general chat, her hands shaking. “Just wtfff.” It wasn’t just the gruesome headlines that rattled her. This real-life homicide eerily paralleled the fictional ones depicted in D4vd’s song lyrics and music videos. There was, most obviously, his 2022 breakout hit, “Romantic Homicide,” a moody electronic ballad that Safiyya had first discovered, like so many others, as a viral earworm on TikTok. In the music video, D4vd—dressed as “Itami,” his murderous, blindfolded alter ego—stands in front of a woman’s lifeless, blood-splattered body; a knife drops from his hand.Then there was the 2025 music video for “One More Dance,” which evokes a 1990s horror movie à la The Blair Witch Project. The opening scene shows Itami, again played by D4vd, dragging his own body across the ground, dumping it in front of a car, and watching as friends stuff it in the trunk. The video culminates with his friends burying him alive in an open grave. Now D4vd’s fans wondered in the Discord server: Was D4vd’s art imitating his life, or was it the other way around?“D4vd didn’t kill someone itami did,” one user wrote. “He was trying to tell us all along,” wrote another who posted an image of a particularly catchy lyric from “Romantic Homicide”:“In the back of my mind, I killed you.”To get around copyright strikes on YouTube, D4vd used a mobile app called Bandlab and royalty-free beats to create viral earworms.Photograph: Christopher Polk/Getty ImagesSafiyya joined D4vd’s Discord more than two years earlier. She liked the song “Romantic Homicide,” but more importantly, her crush, whom she’d met while playing a first-person shooter game called Valorant, claimed to be a friend of D4vd’s. When she sent her first message, a simple “ello” in May 2023, she found that others were eager to engage. The server was one giant,…

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