D4vd-Celeste case: LA grand jury reportedly considers evidence
A grand jury in Los Angeles has heard evidence in the death of
Celeste Rivas Hernandez, the teen runaway whose remains were found Sept. 8 in a Tesla owned by recording artist D4vd, according to published reports.
The
Los Angeles Times, citing two law enforcement sources, said the district attorney’s office this month had presented information to an investigative grand jury, a panel that can be convened to subpoena witnesses, secure evidence and recommend charges. It wasn’t clear if the proceedings have wrapped up, but several witnesses reportedly have been called.
Word about the grand jury comes as police persuaded a judge to bar the Los Angeles Medical Examiner from releasing results of Hernandez’s
autopsy. In a court petition related to that decision, a detective refers to investigative efforts as “an investigation into murder.”
TMZ has reported the Los Angeles Police Department considers D4vd and a second individual to be suspects in the death of Hernandez, who is believed to have been 14 when she died.
LAPD Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton said “accountability is coming” and that detectives “are going to get justice for Celeste Rivas,” the L.A. Times reported.
Private investigator
Steven Fischer, who was hired by the singer’s landlord, told “Banfield” last month the Tesla was driven from the residence July 29 to the spot from where the vehicle was later towed and impounded. He said he uncovered surveillance video of the person behind the wheel during that last run and turned the footage over to LAPD.
“You can see the person … they’re wearing something pretty distinctive, and there’s photos that I have from 12 hours earlier of a person at the house wearing the same thing,” said Fischer, who declined to offer more information.