A shocking twist has emerged in the disturbing case surrounding singer D4vd and the death of a teenager whose body was found in the trunk of his impounded Tesla — and it’s raising more questions than answers.

According to a private investigator brought in by the owner of the Hollywood Hills property once rented by D4vd (real name David Anthony Burke), an unusual and highly alarming item was uncovered inside the luxury home after authorities completed their own search: a “burn cage” incinerator, still in its box and never used. The device — advertised as capable of reaching extremely high temperatures — was discovered tucked away in the residence under circumstances many are calling just plain bizarre.

The revelation comes amid an already tense and high-profile investigation: on September 8, 2025, the decomposed remains of 14-year-old Celeste Rivas-Hernandez were found in the front trunk of a Tesla registered to D4vd. The vehicle had been left waiting in a Hollywood lot, where workers alerted police to a foul odor. Officials later executed a search warrant at the nearby mansion D4vd had been renting, seizing several items of evidence as part of an ongoing probe that has yet to yield an official cause of death.

While law enforcement has not publicly linked the incinerator to the case or formally named a suspect, the presence of such an object — illegal to use in Los Angeles County and highly atypical in a private residence — has caught the attention of both investigators and the public. The burn cage was reportedly delivered under a false name, another detail that adds to the mystery surrounding its purpose.

According to the private investigator, the device seemed more suited to a farm or industrial site than a Hollywood mansion. Many are now asking why such an item would be ordered, delivered, and then left unused — especially in a home tied to a case as grim as this one. Some observers suggest it could have been intended for filming or artistic purposes, though that raises further questions about why it would arrive under false identification and never appear in any known production.

The case itself has been cloaked in uncertainty. The Los Angeles Police Department has not officially declared the death a homicide, and no charges have been filed — despite ongoing examination of evidence and continued public scrutiny. D4vd has neither been named a suspect nor interviewed publicly, and details about his connection to Rivas-Hernandez remain murky. The singer canceled the remainder of his world tour after the body was discovered and has since remained largely out of the spotlight.

Yet the burn cage discovery has reignited conversation and speculation across social media and true-crime communities. Some argue that any device capable of incinerating material at high temperatures is disturbing by nature, especially when found in the context of a case involving a young girl’s death. Others caution that without confirmation from law enforcement, the meaning of the find remains purely speculative — a piece of context that may or may not ever tie into official findings.

For now, authorities continue their investigation in silence, leaving the public with more questions than answers. The presence of the burn cage, the unanswered delivery mystery, and the unanswered cause of death only deepen the intrigue.

What was it doing there? Why under a fake name? And will it ever be linked to the tragic death at the center of this case?
Those are the questions that may not be answered for some time — if ever.