What Does The Developmental Profile Behind D4VD Tell Us About The Celeste Rivas Hernandez Case?
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 1 June 2026
⏱️ 42 minutes
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Summary
Psychotherapist Shavaun Scott, with more than thirty years of forensic mental health experience, provides a developmental analysis of David Anthony Burke's trajectory from a restrictive Houston household to a globally touring recording artist signed to Darkroom and Interscope Records — and the systemic failures she identifies at every stage.
Burke was homeschooled. His mother served as his teacher and primary social contact. Gospel was reportedly the only music permitted in the home until approximately age thirteen. The transition from a controlled environment to unrestricted digital access occurred without any documented intermediary — no gradual exposure, no external socialization structure, no institutional safeguard. By seventeen, Burke was signed to a major label, touring internationally, and generating significant revenue. The adults in his professional orbit were apparently structured around product management rather than developmental oversight. His mother reportedly managed his business finances.
Scott examines the forensic psychology literature on this specific developmental sequence: extended isolation during formative peer-socialization years, abrupt transition to unrestricted access, sudden acquisition of wealth and status without corresponding emotional infrastructure, and the absence of accountability mechanisms within the professional ecosystem. She identifies the specific vulnerabilities this trajectory allegedly creates in a developing adolescent mind and explains why the pattern has been documented in prior forensic case studies.
Prosecutors allege Burke is responsible for the death of fourteen-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez and that the killing was motivated by career protection. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges and maintains his innocence. This analysis does not address the criminal charges directly. It examines the developmental conditions that allegedly preceded the conduct prosecutors describe — and the failures of family, industry, and institutional oversight that Scott argues are identifiable at each stage of the trajectory.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is the big breakdown. |
| 0:02.2 | A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and true crime today. |
| 0:10.4 | This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske and Robin Drink. |
| 0:16.9 | One more case to talk about this morning. |
| 0:19.7 | Before anyone knew his name, David Anthony Burke was a kid recording music on an iPhone in his sister's closet in Houston by 20. |
| 0:27.5 | Prosecutors alleged he's responsible for the death of a 14-year-old girl, the alleged dismemberment of her body and a cover-up that reportedly lasted months. |
| 0:36.3 | The question underneath everything in this case, what made him? |
| 0:39.7 | Not the moment it allegedly went wrong. |
| 0:42.5 | The years before that, the specific conditions of his life that reportedly combined into something no one saw coming. |
| 0:53.4 | Chavon Scott is with us to help break it down. |
| 0:56.6 | Shavon David, Anthony Burke, he was raised in a household where the only music allowed was gospel until he was 13. |
| 1:07.1 | And we know the type of music that he ended up making. |
| 1:10.4 | It ain't gospel. |
| 1:12.6 | But brought up strictly very religious. |
| 1:16.4 | Then the internet blew open the doors. |
| 1:19.0 | And these very non-gospal music started coming out, |
| 1:21.8 | eventually making music about romantic homicide. |
| 1:25.3 | Nobody in his life is reportedly helping him process any of it, really. |
| 1:30.6 | When a kid goes from that level of a sexual and cultural restriction, straight into the unfiltered digital world that apparently he went into, |
| 1:43.4 | and you still, I would imagine, if your family is very |
| 1:47.1 | strictly and staunchly religious, they're probably not changing their belief system just because |
| 1:52.9 | you found the internet or video games. I mean, what does that turn into here? Because he's not learning it from his parents, school, |
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