D4vd’s legal team received anti-Semitic hate mail in which they wished violence against the Jewish lawyer while defending the singer’s murder case.
D4vd faces a legal nightmare that extends far beyond the courts and his client.
While his defense team was representing him in his ongoing murder case, they received a deluge of vile anti-Semitic hate mail that was absolutely reprehensible.
According to the New York Post , attorneys defending the singer received emails filled with explicit threats and hateful language specifically targeting them for being Jewish.
One particularly disturbing message read: “I’m not surprised you are all Jewish. This is the only race that puts money before morality.”
The email went a step further, wishing for violence against the lawyer’s family and saying “the world should not have fewer Jews.”
This isn’t just an angry person, either. The defense team received numerous messages of this nature, all directed at their beliefs, while they were fulfilling their constitutional duty to provide legal representation.
D4vd, whose real name is David Burke, is accused of murdering 14-year-old Celeste Rivas, who prosecutors say killed her after she threatened to reveal their alleged relationship and jeopardize his music career.
The charges against him include murder, persistent sexual abuse of a child under 14 and unlawful mutilation of human remains. Authorities say he killed her with a sharp instrument, then dismembered her body and kept her remains in a bag in the trunk of his Tesla for months.
The harassment against his legal team raises serious questions about the extent to which some will go to express anger about the case.
Attorney Blair Burke and her colleagues were just doing their jobs, yet they were targeted with anti-Semitic slurs for defending people accused of heinous crimes.
Not only is this harassment of defense attorneys morally wrong, it undermines the entire justice system, which depends on everyone having access to legal representation regardless of the charges they face.
D4vd has pleaded not guilty to all charges, and the Los Angeles Times reports that prosecutors have collected “40 terabytes” of evidence in the case.
Statements from the defense team made it clear they believed the evidence would prove Burke’s innocence, but that didn’t stop the hate mail from coming.
His legal team is now dealing with the stress of a high-profile murder case and the added burden of dealing with anti-Semitic threats just to do their jobs.

