D4vd Attacked In Jail!
David Case Part Two: From Rising Star to Prison Target
That is done. He’s literally cooked, bro. Everybody knows David’s in hot water, but now the heat just got worse. After being detained, word is he took a hit inside. The walls are closing in on him — a rising star just months ago, now at the center of one of the darkest scandals in recent music history.
A Tesla registered in his name was towed, impounded, and when workers popped the trunk days later, the dismembered body of a 15-year-old girl was inside. That girl was Celeste Rivas Hernandez, a missing teen last seen in April 2024. The link between Celeste and David is chilling — photos of them together, FaceTime screenshots, alleged payoffs to classmates, and matching tattoos. She had “sh” inked on her finger. So did he. Same design. Same placement.
Her mother confirmed her boyfriend was named David. The same name behind the stage persona now under fire.
And then there’s the music. A leaked track called Celeste, recorded back in late 2023, sounded like just another moody ballad at the time. Now, with her body turning up in his car, every lyric reads like a confession. His breakout hit Romantic Homicide takes on a darker meaning too. It dropped on the exact day of Celeste’s 12th birthday. A coincidence? Maybe once. But with all the other receipts, it starts to look like a roadmap.
The fallout was immediate. Intercope yanked every campaign. Crocs and Hollister cut ties overnight. His album rollout is dead in the water. Even his defenders are running out of excuses.
And then came the attack in jail. Reports say inmates don’t take kindly to anyone accused of preying on minors. Whether it was a planned hit or just prison justice, the message was clear: his fall from stardom to pariah is happening at breakneck speed.
Online, chaos erupted. At first, fans screamed he was framed. But as more evidence piled up — tattoos, songs, raids — those voices grew quiet. Streamers who once vouched for him now publicly drag his name. Discord sleuths and TikTok detectives are digging up every shred of proof, dissecting lyrics like they’re sworn testimony.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, are building their case. Raids, luminol sweeps for blood, electronics seized. The implication is terrifying: Celeste may have been killed or dismembered inside the Hollywood Hills house tied to him. And if that’s true, it means others around him may have looked away. Managers, handlers, execs — did they really not know? Or did they ignore the signs because the money was too good?
Here’s the most shocking twist: no formal charges yet. Not a single one. But in the court of public opinion, the verdict is already in. For Celeste’s family, the tragedy is permanent. For David, the story may end in a courtroom. And for the rest of us, it’s a mirror held up to a culture that rewards obsession, excuses predation, and only wakes up when there’s a body in the trunk.
The question that lingers: is this the start of a murder trial — or the cover-up of the decade?