The Frunk Factor: How Tesla’s Hidden Compartment Complicates the Celeste Rivas Hernandez Investigation
Full Story: https://btuatu.com/at28
The death of 15-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez, whose body was discovered earlier this month inside the **front trunk—or “frunk”—of a Tesla registered to rising musician David Anthony Burke, continues to raise disturbing questions. With the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) confirming her identity but withholding the cause of death pending toxicology, investigators now face the challenge of piecing together a fractured timeline and a crime scene unlike most others.
A Body Hidden in Plain Sight
According to LAPD, Celeste’s body was recovered on September 8, 2025, from Burke’s abandoned Tesla on Bluebird Avenue in the Hollywood Hills. The car had been stationary since August 27, ticketed on September 3, and towed to a city impound lot on September 5. Only after officers reported a foul odor did authorities obtain a warrant to open the vehicle’s compartments. Inside the sealed frunk, they made the grim discovery.
For investigators, the location of the body is as significant as the death itself. Unlike a rear trunk or vehicle cabin, the frunk is a concealed, electronically locked compartment that is not easily visible to passersby. This choice suggests at least some intent to delay discovery.
Cause of Death Still Unknown
What remains conspicuously absent is a determination of how Celeste died. Forensic examiners have yet to declare whether the teenager’s death resulted from homicide, accident, overdose, or another cause. Without that foundation, experts warn, it is difficult to assign motive or culpability.
“Cause of death is the anchor of any investigation,” one criminologist explained. “You build outward from that. In this case, investigators are forced to start from the concealment and work backward.”
A Troubled Timeline
Celeste was first reported missing in April 2024, when she was just 13. Yet subsequent evidence—including doorbell camera footage from September 8, 2024 showing her in a heated confrontation outside her family’s home—suggests she may not have been continuously missing. Family statements and neighbor reports indicate she may have been moving between residences, adding further complexity to the investigation.
The timeline matters. If Celeste died recently, questions focus on her immediate circle and the Tesla itself. If she died months earlier, investigators must consider who had access to the car and when.
Theories Under Review
Authorities are considering three main scenarios:
Celeste died elsewhere, and her body was later transported into the Tesla’s frunk.
She died inside the Tesla, possibly from overdose or environmental conditions, before being moved into the frunk.
Her body was placed in the vehicle after it had been abandoned, using the frunk as a temporary hiding place.
Each possibility carries different implications for intent, opportunity, and responsibility.
Unanswered Questions
As toxicology tests proceed, the case highlights both the vulnerabilities of missing children and the complexities of modern investigations. The “frunk factor”—a compartment designed for convenience—became a tool for concealment that delayed Celeste’s discovery for days, perhaps weeks.
For now, one fact is indisputable: a young girl’s life ended in tragedy, her final days clouded by secrecy. The unanswered questions—when, how, and why—remain as haunting as the discovery itself.