This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here.
LAKE ELSINORE, Calif. — Over 75 miles from the tony Hollywood Hills neighborhood where teenager Celeste Rivas’ decomposing body was found in the trunk of a Tesla belonging to the singer D4vd sits the modest Inland Empire community of Lake Elsinore, where she lived with her family.
But residents and acquaintances of the teenager are following the case with a mixture of heartbreak, shock and anger as more details emerge that she knew the multiplatinum singer, whose real name is David Anthony Burke.
“She deserves justice,” resident Rubi Alonso said. “It’s just so sad.”
Alonso’s son is around the same age as Celeste Rivas. She met the girl’s family when Celeste Rivas was in kindergarten and remained friends with her family.
“She was studious, a hard worker and intelligent,” Alonso said.
California
An investigation into the death of a teenage girl who was found dead inside the trunk of singer D4vd’s Tesla is focused on a Hollywood Hills home that the singer rented.
Celeste Rivas was reported missing in 2024 from the Inland Empire, according to authorities, but her whereabouts since then remain a mystery.
Her body was found in the vehicle at Hollywood Tow on Sept. 8 after it was impounded from the Hollywood Hills. Someone noticed a foul odor coming from the vehicle, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.
While the medical examiner listed Rivas’ age as 15 at the time of her death, her body was located in the Tesla a day after her birthday. Los Angeles police officials have described her body as severely decomposed, suggesting she died while she was still 14.
Police say the car was towed from the area near a home rented by Burke’s manager.
It’s unclear when the girl died and how long her body was in the trunk. The car had a Texas license plate, and the remains were in a bag, according to a law enforcement source.
Rivas’ family could not be reached for comment on Friday. They did not answer the door at their home in Lake Elsinore, and neighbors said they have not seen them recently.
California
The mystery deepened this week in the case of the girl whose decomposing body was found in an abandoned Tesla registered to singer D4vd.
Last February, missing-person posters blanketed the quiet residential street where Celeste Rivas lived with her family.
It was one of the first times neighbors recall seeing the girl’s face on a poster. But it wouldn’t be the last time she was reported missing.
“I recognized her because of her big, curly hair,” neighbor Kayleigh Cortez said. “I would see her walking with her backpack on her way to school.”
The teen was reported missing on Valentine’s Day 2024, when she was 13. The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department confirmed Rivas was reported missing last year but did not provide any additional information about the case and referred all questions to the LAPD.
It’s unclear how many times the teen was reported missing or how many times she was returned to her family by authorities.
Just after 7 a.m. on March 19, 2024, a young girl walked down the street in a dark sweater and light pants, according to surveillance footage from Del Lago Spirits, which is in Rivas’ neighborhood.
Rivas’ family asked store owner Elie Naddaf for the footage. He sent it to them, confident the girl in the video was Celeste Rivas.
He believes that she got into a vehicle down the street from the store but he could not make out any clear details as she walked out of the frame in the video. He says that police have not contacted him for the footage.
The teen regularly stopped by the corner store on her way to a nearby bus stop.
California
The girl’s severely decomposed body was found at Hollywood Tow on Sept. 8 in a black Tesla registered to musician David Anthony Burke, whose stage name is D4vd.
“She was going to school with the other kids and she would stop by all the time,” Naddaf said.
She would get Takis, soda, maybe candy.
“She was always so quiet, shy, just a sweet child,” Naddaf said, who is a father and has operated his business for 11 years in the neigborhood. “I feel a connection to the community. It’s just heartbreaking to see this happen.”
Rivas attended Lakeland Village School in Lake Elsinore, roughly 76 miles from Los Angeles.
Then her body appeared in the Tesla in Hollywood.
“I got goosebumps when I heard about what happened to her, when they found her in the car,” Cortez said. “It was just so horrible.”
Rivas had returned to Lake Elsinore in the last year, said Alonso, the family friend, but she could not recall specific dates.
She said that on one occasion Rivas came home by herself and another time with police.
Authorities have said D4vd, 20, was initially cooperating with investigators when news broke that a body was located in a vehicle registered to his name. It’s unclear if he remained cooperative after the medical examiner’s office identified Rivas as the person in the trunk.
Law enforcement sources say Burke has since retained a lawyer.
Representatives for the musician did not respond to requests for comment, and the musician has canceled several show dates on his tour that was slated to play in Europe in October.
Since then, multiple photos of Burke and Rivas have circulated on social media, raising questions about how the two knew each other.
Gisel Vera, who identified herself as a relative of Celeste and helped start a GoFundMe page for her funeral, told The Times the family had no immediate comment on the case.
An Instagram account previously used by Rivas has since been reactivated by her relatives. The Times was unable to verify the validity of the account. In a series of posts, a user who appears to be her brother Matthew Rivas made several posts saying the family tried to find her before her death.
“We lost our girl,” the Instagram story said. “But we did everything flyers at her school, TikToks, Instagram, FaceBook, Police, family searching everywhere. Even our family in Mexico shared and prayed for her.”
Another post said, “My mom hasn’t spoken in a week… she feels she failed her daughter, but she didn’t. She did everything. Our home is quiet and broken.”
Times staff writer Salvador Hernandez contributed to this report.
Follow Us
Nathan Solis reports on breaking news with the Fast Break team at the Los Angeles Times.
California
California
Television
Sports
Altadena fire survivors face uncertainty rebuilding. We talk with Greenline Housing, a group helping Black and Latino families buy lots to preserve the community’s character.
After a jail fight, an inmate defies norms and becomes an expert in the jail’s computer system. A smuggled phone leads to a shocking cover-up.
Police hunted a serial killer preying on women in 1970s Los Angeles. Richard Winton and Madison McGhee discuss the case’s grim history and recent developments.
California
California
California
California
Subscribe for unlimited access
Site Map
Follow Us
MORE FROM THE L.A. TIMES