SAEDNEWS: Police in Los Angeles are now investigating two separate bodies found in cars at different impound yards – one inside a Tesla registered to singer D4vd. But while headlines focus on ownership, the real mystery may lie in who actually had access to the vehicle before the shocking discovery.
When police in Los Angeles announced the discovery of a decomposing body inside the trunk of a Tesla registered to singer David Anthony Burke – better known by his stage name D4vd – the news immediately dominated headlines. The image was grim: a woman’s body, hidden in the front trunk of the car, wrapped in plastic and left to rot for days in a Hollywood tow yard.
But just as the public tried to make sense of this revelation, a second body was reported in another impound lot across the city. That corpse, partially burned, was found inside a different vehicle, a Honda Civic. Authorities have been quick to emphasize that the two cases are not officially linked. Yet the eerie coincidence of timing and location has added a chilling layer of uncertainty.
Much of the media focus has been on the fact that the Tesla is registered to D4vd, a rising star in the music industry known for his viral tracks and collaborations with major brands. However, investigators have pointed out a critical detail: registration documents prove legal ownership, but they don’t necessarily reveal who was in daily control of the vehicle.
According to LAPD sources, several individuals may have had access to D4vd’s vehicles, either through family, staff, or associates. The Tesla itself had Texas plates, had not been reported stolen, and was towed from Hollywood Hills before the gruesome discovery. These details raise urgent questions: Who drove it last? Who parked it in the Hills? And when was the victim placed inside?
D4VD with Family
One of the least reported but most significant aspects of the case is the timeline. The Tesla sat in the tow yard for at least two days before staff noticed the smell and alerted police. This suggests the body could have been in the car long before it was impounded – or possibly placed there afterward. Either way, the delay complicates the forensic puzzle.
In criminal investigations, every hour matters. The gap between when the car was towed and when the body was discovered could prove decisive in reconstructing events. For now, detectives remain cautious, refusing to speculate on whether the singer himself, or others in his circle, had direct involvement.
While investigators continue their work, the ripple effects have already reached the entertainment and business world. Brands like Crocs and Hollister, which had partnered with D4vd, quickly removed promotional content featuring the singer. This rapid distancing raises questions about whether companies acted purely out of risk management or if they had received additional information from behind the scenes.
Los Angeles, no stranger to celebrity scandals, now finds itself gripped by a story that merges the worlds of fame, crime, and corporate image. The discovery of a second body, however unrelated it may turn out to be, has amplified the sense of unease.
For fans of D4vd, the unanswered question is simple but haunting: Was he merely the unlucky registered owner of a car used for something sinister – or is his connection deeper than anyone yet knows?